please log in to view this image This impressive photograph is the result of 3,559 frames, 260 hours of exposure time and telescopes located on three continents.
Not too far from home and they have some caravan parks to accommodate boomers with vans .......... yeah!
please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen View from the border: the wall dividing the US and Mexico – in pictures The structure, variously known as the border fence or border wall, is not continuous and only covers sections of the almost 2,000-mile boundary between the two countries. It consists of a series of obstructions designed to discourage illegal entry into the US The serpentine border wall that separates Mexico from the US ends abruptly on the outskirts of Fort Hancock. Photograph: Daniel Ochoa de Olza/Panos Pictures Photographs by Daniel Ochoa de Olza Thu 6 Nov 2025 12.00 GMT Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen The border wall comes to a sudden stop in a desert landscape near the town of Mexicali in Baja California Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen The setting sun illuminates a mountain that creates a gap in the border wall near Mexicali, Baja California Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen The serpentine border wall that separates Mexico from the US ends abruptly on the outskirts of Fort Hancock Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen Crosses mark the graves where unidentified people, some of them migrants who tried to cross into the US, are buried near Tijuana Share View image in fullscreen The border fence between Mexico and US suddenly ends at the Pacific Ocean Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen An open ‘door’ along the border fence between Sonora state in Mexico and Arizona in the US. The fence is made of interconnected steel slats Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen A very short segment of the border wall in the Altar desert appears to serve no clear purpose. Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen A section of the border wall on a hill in the Guadalupe canyon Share View image in fullscreen An open gate in the border wall Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen Jacumba, California. Here, the steel border fence ends suddenly, allowing people to cross between the US and Mexico Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen The fence ends on a hill above Tijuana Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen A cactus grows inside a car tyre on a road that runs parallel to the border wall in the Altar desert Share View image in fullscreen The wind lifts a dust cloud at the end of the wall on the outskirts of Fort Hancock Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen The border wall stops in the mountains outside of Tecate, Baja California Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen Guadalupe canyon Share please log in to view this image View image in fullscreen The wall ends abruptly as it reaches the Tinajas Altas mountains, Camino del Diablo Share US news Mexico Americas US foreign policy US immigration News Opinion Sport Culture Lifestyle Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning Sign up for our email About us Help Complaints & corrections Contact us Tip us off SecureDrop Privacy policy Cookie policy Tax strategy Terms & conditions All topics All writers Newsletters Digital newspaper archive Bluesky Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Threads TikTok YouTube Advertise with us Search UK jobs Tips Accessibility settings Work for us Back to top © 2025 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. (dcr)