The IQ is simply superb on #2. Very good! #3 as well. It seems you are very deft with your PP process... able to extract the maximum from the source. Or, is the Lumix 70-300 THAT good? Or probably a combination of the two plus a good sensor. Nice. Time of day (light) is perfect, too. My only good-natured niggle (since I am a pano guy)... is... I would have taken one more frame (to get the top of the peak) and then stitched the two together! LOL. Well done as-is! :-)
I know...my little paws were frozen at this point and it was the end of a walk...I should have. It's easier with an mft camera 'cos you get 4:3 framing !! Just have to go back again...
We are finally getting some snow in the Cascades, so I hope to get up to the mountains this month. Or even next month. Our winter/ski season usually extends into mid/late March. When we have really big snow years (few and far between these days) the ski areas will close per the usual schedule (March/April). But in those instances when it is a big snow year, there is a tradition that they will open-up for one day on the Fourth of July. Ski in your shorts with no shirt! But just the highest elevation ski area (base @ 3912 ft / 1192m; summit @ 7012 ft / 2137m). Fun! Here's a pic from last winter (cell phone)... looking west from the Summit House with Powder Bowl in the foreground, the Silver King just to the left, Mt. Rainier in the distance (right), and Mt St. Helens in the far distance (left). Powder Bowl is challenging (the chairlift, C6 Campbell Basin, is on the "back side" -- you can't see it from this vantage point). Many years ago (1990's) we would hike into the south backcountry and ski the face of Silver King (both powder and ice conditions). At my age now... I probably wouldn't dare do it. Especially ice.

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