08 Ogos 2014
Bill Gates treats his family to a Mediterranean vacation
- World's richest man is vacationing with his family off the coast of Sardinia, Italy
- Is renting superyacht for $5million-a-week that cost $330million to build
- Was photographed also enjoying jet-skiing with his wife and three children
Bill Gates vacations exactly like you would imagine the richest man in the world should.
First
up a relaxing game of tennis in the morning before being helicoptered -
not ferried - back to the superyacht you and your family have chartered
to the tune of $5 million-a-week.
Then,
an exuberant jet ski around the $330 million boat with wife Melinda and
children Rory, Jennifer and Phoebe, moored off the billionaires
playground of Porto Cervo, Sardinia.
The
Microsoft founder and philanthropist - worth $76 billion - has taken
time away from his busy schedule to relax with his family - renting The
Serene, the 436ft yacht of Stolichnaya vodka magnate, Yuri Scheffler, as
a luxurious base.

Style: Bill Gates returns to The Serene, the
$330 million yacht he has chartered for $5 million-a-week. Currently
moored off the coast of Sardinia, Italy

Boating: The helicopter carrying Bill Gates
approaches to land on The Serene -the world's 9th largest yacht - this
week during the billionaire software pioneers vacation


Tough start: Bill Gates serves in his tennis
match in Sardinia as he works up a sweat in the morning as he vacations
with his family

Return: Keeping fit allows the 58-year-old to
travel the world for his philanthropic ventures - such as working to rid
the world of malaria


Smiles: The billionaire, who has a fortune of
$76 billion and is the richest man in the world, seemed to enjoy his
tennis match in Sardinia


Deft control: Bill Gates was playing to win during his tennis game in Sardinia this week
Beaming
as he played his shots during his tennis game, Bill obviously had no
need for a more traditional boat to get back to the huge yacht his
family is aboard.
Walking
with his entourage from the courts to his aerial transport, Bill was
flown back to his yacht, christened The Serene, where he changed into a
wet suit for a jet ski with his entire family.
Boasting
not one, but two helicopter landing bads, because, let's face it one is
never enough, The Serene can play host to 24 guests in 12 staterooms,
which includes a master suite, one VIP stateroom, seven double cabins
and three twin cabins.


Stroll away: The billionaire walks away from the
tennis courts at the billionaires playground of Porto Cervo, which
became a resort when the Aga Khan purchased land along the Sardinian
coast in the 1960s

Just bring your racket: Bill didn't need to
bring much with him for his tennis match seeing as it was only a short
hop from his yacht to court - via a helicopter

Your ride: Bill Gates gets ready to get inside
his helicopter that will take him back to his rented yacht. In the past
he has said that he does have guilty pleasure purchases - such as his
own private plane

Can you take me to my yacht? The richest man in
the world would have no problems finding a landing spot on his rented
yacht - it has two helipads

Get comfortable: The billionaire prepares to sit
down to be helicoptered back to the 436ft long yacht. When asked to
reveal a secret about himself which no-one would expect, Gates said:
'Playing Bridge is a pretty old-fashioned thing in a way that I really
like. 'I do the dishes every night - other people volunteer but I like
the way I do it.'

Ready to go: Bill Gates prepares for take-off to
be returned to his $5million a week yacht moored of Porto Cervo in
Sardinia. In an interview earlier this year, Gates said he oesn't plan
to stay at the office for days at a time as he did in his younger days
when he had 'energy and naivete' on his side

Approach: This wider shot shows the
green-grassed landing pad that the Microsoft billionaire's helicopter
waited for him on. Gates held the title of 'richest man in the world'
for 15 out of the past 20 years, but he was succeeded- briefly- by
Mexican telecommunications magnate Carlos Slim Helu for the past four
years

Luxury: While most would settle for a boat to take them back to their yacht, Bill Gates decided to go large
With
52 crew, The Serene also boasts a hanger for the helicopter, a seawater
swimming pool, submarine hanger, a cinema and onboard WiFi.
LUXURY FIT FOR A BILLIONAIRE: THE $5 MILLION-A-WEEK BOAT CHARTERED BY BILL GATES
The Serene was built in 2011 for the owner of Stolichnaya vodka, Yuri Scheffler.
She is 436ft long and comes complete with a sundeck that has a wet bar, a wood fire pizza oven and a Teppenyaki grill.
She is capable of traveling 6,000 nautical miles on one tank of fuel, which is the same as traveling from London to New York and at least half way back again.
Her most impressive feature are her two helipads, but the luuxrious yacht does not shirk on features.
She also has an indoor climbing wall and a dedicated children's playroom to keep infants occupied.
She also has a fully equipped spa and club and three external swimming pools and one indoors.
Boasting an underwater viewing room, The Serene also has space or a large submarine able to reach a depth of more than 330 ft.
She is 436ft long and comes complete with a sundeck that has a wet bar, a wood fire pizza oven and a Teppenyaki grill.
She is capable of traveling 6,000 nautical miles on one tank of fuel, which is the same as traveling from London to New York and at least half way back again.
Her most impressive feature are her two helipads, but the luuxrious yacht does not shirk on features.
She also has an indoor climbing wall and a dedicated children's playroom to keep infants occupied.
She also has a fully equipped spa and club and three external swimming pools and one indoors.
Boasting an underwater viewing room, The Serene also has space or a large submarine able to reach a depth of more than 330 ft.
The opulent yacht also has a gym, swimming pool and two jacuzzis on deck.
The
Serene also has a full library, health spa, underwater viewing room,
nightclub and indoor climbing wall for the Microsoft billionaire and
family to enjoy.
It
has a cruising speed of 15 knots and is able to travel 6000 nautical
miles on a full tank - which is almost the distance from London to New
York and back again.
Indeed, the Gates family have been vacationing off the coast of Porto Cervo for years.
Every August the coastal town off the coast of Sardinia becomes a literal billionaires playground.
Originally
owned by the Aga Khan, who bought up 50km of coastline almost as a
private beach in the 1960s, Porto Cervo is now undergoing a mini-boom
since he sold it to a consortium of bankers in the early part of the
21st century,
It is where Princess Diana spent her final days before her fated trip to Paris.
Former
Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and ex-British prime minister
Tony Blair have spent time relaxing in the sun there.
Now dotted with Louis Vuitton and Gucci stores, the coastline is the perfect spot for the richest man in the world to unwind.
However,
they may be the children of the world's richest man, but Rory, Jennifer
and Phoebe probably should enjoy this vacation while they can - because
their father is not leaving them any of his $76 billion fortune.
Back on the boat: Bill Gates aboard The Serene with his wife, Melinda

Which wetsuit? Bill Gates looks for suitable gear to wear for a jetski while his son, Rory, runs past him

Family fun: Bill Gates, wife Melinda, daughter,
Phoebe, son Rory and daughter Jennifer (being pulled from water) prepare
to get wet off the coast of Porto Cervo

Adventure: The Gates family get ready to jet ski
aboard the $5million-a-week superyacht The Serene which the billionaire
is renting from the owner of the Stolichnaya vodka brand


Rested: Melinda Gates walks the decks of The Serene later that day while her husband prepares to head out again for a jet-ski
In
a rare insight into his personal life in March, the Microsoft founder
and his wife, Melinda, opened up about how they are raising their
family.
The
couple, speaking at a TED conference in Vancouver, said their children
will be encouraged to make their own way in the world without the help
of billion-dollar trust funds.
Gates
said that instead of money, they had given their two daughters and son a
good education so they can learn how to rely on their own abilities
rather than their parents' fortune.
'You’ve
easily got enough money despite your vast contributions to the
foundation to make them all billionaires,' conference organizer Chris
Anderson said.
Luxury: The Serene has the ability for two
helicopters to land on deck - the circular pool seen in the middle of
the boat can be transformed into a helipad

Opulence: The state room of The Serene is capable of hosting huge parties and guests of billionaires

Super: The Serene cost $330million and boasts
space for 24 guests and 53 crew and was delivered to its owner,
Stolichnaya tycoon, Yuri Scheffler in 2011
But,
according to Wired, Gates responded by saying: 'They won’t have
anything like that. They need to have a sense that their own work is
meaningful and important.'
'You’ve got to make sure they have a sense of their own ability and what they’re going to go and do,' he added.
Anderson
likened raising three children in the world's richest family 'to a
social experiment without much prior art' before asking the couple, who
run the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, how they had decided to raise
their family.
'We
want to strike a balance so they have the freedom to do anything but
not sort of a lot of money showered on them so that they can go out and
do nothing,' Gates said.
He
added that they have told their children most of the fortune would be
left to their charity, which tackles poor health and poverty.

Beach day: Microsoft founder Bill Gates later
made his way to a beach near Porto Cervo, Sardinia, with his wife,
Melinda. The husband and wife married in 1994 and now run the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation in Seattle

Heat: Bill Gates used a boat to get to the beach
after earlier transporting himself from his tennis match to his yacht
via a helicopter. His foundation has assets worth $37.1 billion, thanks
in part to contributions of shares from his mentor, American
'uber-investor' Warren Buffett
06 Ogos 2014
More blingtastic and vulgar than ever! It's that month when super rich Arabs flock here for an orgy of spending
- 'Ramadan Rush' sees Middle Easterners fly in to end fasting with indulgence
- They team Eid celebrations with spending outrageous amounts of cash
- Last year credit card processor Worldpay handled £73m from the shoppers
- Nightly supercar parades rev up outside Harrods and Harvey Nichols
The
Middle Eastern owner of the gleaming white Rolls-Royce doesn’t even
glance at the double yellow lines as he parks over them outside the
famous green-and-gold frontage of Harrods in London.
He
is on his way to the store’s exclusive French cafe Ladurée, where
outdoor tables are packed full of stylish men speaking Arabic and
smoking, while glamorous women stand chatting in niqabs or brightly
coloured scarves with jeans and stack-heeled designer trainers.
And
as a parking warden fixes a £60 ticket to the perfectly polished
windscreen of his car — a Phantom Drophead Coupé with a Saudi Arabian
number plate — he doesn’t even flinch, simply continuing the animated
chatter with friends.

Ramadan Rush: Jordanians (from left) Zizi, Shahed, Janat and Fatima hit Knightsbridge in London for a spree
Striking gold: A heavily modified
Range Rover that looks like a bar of bullion, worth £150,000. With
gold-rimmed, carbon-black alloy wheels and wrap-around tinted windows,
this golden bullet is powered by a 5.0 litre 500bhp V8 engine and will
accelerate from rest to 62mph in just 5.4 second, with a top speed of
around 140mph
After all, the car is worth £350,000, making the fine small change for a man of his means.
Besides, these wealthy men and women are here in the UK with one main objective — to spend outrageous amounts of cash.
It
is late Thursday afternoon in the first week after Ramadan — the
month-long Muslim fasting period that emphasises self-control and
moderation.
When
it ended last month, it heralded not just the traditional fast-breaking
Eid celebrations, but also the now infamous ‘Ramadan Rush’, which sees
thousands of super-rich Middle Easterners flying in from countries such
as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar.
They have one intention: to see off their month of fasting with major indulgence.
That
means retail therapy on an eye-watering scale — and experts expect the
post‑Ramadan splurge to last throughout August, not just in London, but
all over Britain. The French ban on burqas, worn by women from some of
the Middle East’s richest families, means the number of post-Ramadan
visitors to the UK is even higher.
Last
August, credit card processing giant Worldpay dealt with more than
£73.2 million from Middle Eastern shoppers — a figure estimated to rise
by 25 per cent.
Exuberant spending was certainly on display when the Mail visited London’s most expensive shopping destinations.
In
the jewellery and watch departments at Selfridges on Oxford Street, we
watched as one Middle Eastern man tried on an £18,000 limited-edition
Hublot watch, while others clustered around £23,000 diamond-studded
Piaget timepieces.
In
Chopard’s discreet private room, reserved for the wealthiest customers,
a group of three burqa-wearing ladies — exquisite eye make-up and
pristinely manicured nails peeping through the black fabric — examined
necklaces that retail at upwards of £6,000.
Big spenders: These shoppers load up on designer labels while shopping in the capital today
By
far the most coveted items are designer handbags and shoes, which are
plucked from the shelves like pick-and-mix. Women shopping in groups of
twos or threes, perhaps with children in tow, will snap up armfuls of
luxury accessories worth anything from £1,000 to £87,000.
When
we visited Harrods, a robed and veiled woman was handing over her
credit card to pay for two classic Chanel 2.2 handbags, costing £3,090
each, while young girls wearing headscarves picked up £2,300
denim-studded shoulder bags and pink quilted clutch bags — a bargain at
£1,690.
It was the same story at all the luxury accessories departments.
In
Dolce & Gabbana, twenty-something Middle Eastern shoppers tried
£1,050 limited-edition handbags against their robes, one smiling woman
instantly snapping up two. There was also lots of interest in Yves St
Laurent’s latest wheeze: tiny handbags in an array of bright candy
colours that are just begging to be collected, at a comparatively modest
£1,300.
‘Customers
often buy more than one colour because they can’t choose,’ the
assistant reveals, as one young shopper, with the blue version already
hanging over her black abaya cloak, handed over her card to buy the same
bag in pink.
Gucci,
too, is in on the act, with a £510 evening bag in a choice of bronze,
gold, black and red. ‘They’ll buy all four at once,’ the assistant
shrugs. ‘It happens all the time.’
Another
Harrods worker told us: ‘I’ve seen a 14-year-old buying a crocodile bag
for her mother. She paid the £12,000 price tag in cash.’
‘Some
of our customers came across literally the day after Ramadan ended,’
says Adhum Carter, a partner at Pocketlife, a concierge firm for high
net-worth individuals, which has bases in Dubai, London and Switzerland.
‘They
love to stay at top hotels like the Dorchester and Brown’s, and many
keep family flats here. They do a lot of shopping themselves, but they
also like to use the services of personal shoppers.
‘Sometimes they might ring up and just say: “I’ve got a budget of £20,000, you know my taste, just get some stuff.”’
Not
surprisingly, retailers fall over themselves to accommodate these
lucrative customers in exquisite comfort. At Bond Street jeweller
Boodles, staff are given training in cultural nuances, and a private
area allows women to try on jewels without their faces being seen.
Among
the Middle Eastern customers’ favourite lines is the Wonderland
collection, costing from £30,000 to £300,000, specifically designed with
their market in mind. More elaborate than other ranges in the Boodles
collection, it features brightly coloured precious stones.

Light touch: Don’t let the subdued
shade of this Bugatti Veyron fool you - the sculpted £1 million hypercar
is powered by an 8-litre W16 engine, producing 1,000bhp. Put your foot
down and it’ll hit 230mph in 30 seconds

High roller: With a £6,000 gold-plated
Spirit of Ecstasy ‘Flying Lady’ at its prow, this bespoke £225,000
Rolls-Royce Wraith is spectacularly finished in Madeira Red and English
White. It makes 0-62mph in 4.2 seconds
‘Where
British shoppers might buy just one piece, the Middle Eastern customer
might buy a whole suite,’ explains Boodles managing director Michael
Wainwright, who might be forgiven for having something of a spring in
his step.
Bouncing
along the road behind Harrods, two twentysomething Saudi Arabian girls
are thrilled with their handbags, purchased moments before but already
slung over their shoulders.
But
Lama Obi’s £1,840 caramel leather Prada tote and her friend Deema
Alakeel’s blue Balenciaga Padlock mini, £875, are just the start of
their month-long shopping trip, they tell us with a giggle. ‘I love
London — the weather, the restaurants, everything,’ smiles Lama.
For
Lama Al Qheliwi, 21, also from Saudi Arabia, it is choice that gives
our shops the edge: ‘London is much better than Paris or Milan.
Yesterday, I stocked up on Acqua Di Parma perfume [£63] and Monica
Vinader jewellery, which aren’t available at home. Altogether, I’ll
probably spend £10,000 to £20,000 shopping.’
Another
group of seven elegantly robed women dangle an impressive collection of
designer handbags — including an Yves St Laurent Betty (£1,385), a
Chanel Boy (£2,850) and a Bottega Veneta shoulder bag (£2,185).
Many
luxury stores such as Harrods, Selfridges and Harvey Nichols extend
their opening hours during July and August. ‘Gulf clients like to shop
late because they wake up late,’ an assistant in Versace explains. ‘They
come here before going out for the evening.’
At
Westfield shopping centre in West London, extra Arabic-speaking
concierge staff are laid on for Ramadan and Eid, and the upmarket
boutiques often employ Arabic-speaking female staff.

Money spider: This two-seater Ferrari
458 Italia is covered in a blue web ‘wrap’ and costs £160,000. The 4.5
litre V8 engine develops 570bhp, taking it from rest to 62mph in just
3.3 seconds

Rise of the machines: Built in
Austria, this £80,000 Terminator-style KTM X-Bow supercar is open to the
elements. When its 2.0 litre Audi engine is specially tuned, it can go
from rest to 60mph in three seconds
There,
we observed groups of Middle Eastern shoppers being ferried around the
air-conditioned mall in chauffeur-driven electric red buggies laid on by
the centre.
‘It’s
been a busy start,’ says Myf Ryan, marketing director for Westfield UK
And Europe. ‘Middle Eastern tourists take advantage of the concierge
service because they buy a lot. To carry around all those bags is just
not an option.’
Back
in Knightsbridge, Sara Ali, 35, and her sister Batool, 20, are shopping
on Sloane Street. ‘We’re on holiday with our children and our family,
but without husbands because we want to do a lot of shopping and it’s
boring for them,’ says Sara.
‘We’ve been in Harrods, Harvey Nichols, Bicester Village, and my best buys are from Dior — belts, accessories, wallets.
‘Why here? The weather maybe, and it’s more unique, more expensive things that I’d prefer to buy here rather than in Dubai.’
The
wealthiest shoppers often fly in an entire entourage to help them with
their shopping and partying, including bodyguard, chauffeurs and, of
course, cars. In the evenings in Knightsbridge and Mayfair, fleets of
so-called ‘supercars’ zoom through the streets, including a gun-metal
grey bespoke Oakley-modified Porsche 918 ‘hypercar’ valued at an
astonishing £900,000.
There’s
also a £480,000 customised Lamborghini Aventador in dark chrome, a
£170,000 modified Porsche GT2 and countless Ferraris, Bentleys and
Mercedes.
They delight the assembled ‘carparazzi’ — supercar fans who flock here for the annual display.
Many
of the vehicles have been customised, with bespoke modifications made
for members of the Kuwaiti, Qatari and Saudi royal families on a
money-no-object basis.

Mighty Merc: This six-wheel G63 AMG
6x6 is the largest civilian sports utility vehicle built by the German
firm Mercedes. Powered by a vast twin-turbocharged 5.5-litre V8 bi-turbo
engine, the beastly motor costs £370,000

Red bullet: The brushed-metal bonnet of this Maserati Granturismo MC Stradale tips the price over £150,000
‘What
the drivers really want is individual one-offs,’ says Jon Oakley, owner
of one company trusted with such alterations, Oakley Design. ‘They’ll
have their names tooled into the exhaust and bodywork and so on.’
Drivers
can use foreign registration plates for only six months at a time, so
those who keep a car here for occasional visits snap up personalised
British plates — though even these are somewhat pricy.
A
company called Prestigious Plates is offering EMII RAT for £35,000, as
well as KUW 4IIT, E9 YPT and YAII AA (for yalla, the commonly used
Arabic phrase for ‘let’s go’).
Meanwhile, for mini-sheikhs, Harrods’ toy department offers a £29,895 Mini V8 Roadster and £39,900 mini Hummer for kids.
Of
course, all these visitors need somewhere to stay between shopping
trips, and the swankiest five-star hotels across the capital, from the
Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington to The Langham in Regent Street, have
seen smart Middle Easterners booking up to 80 per cent of the rooms.
Not
that they handle the bookings themselves, of course — it is staff and
high-level concierge companies who take care of everything, making sure
their clients can fully enjoy the London lifestyle.
‘A
lot of them find it more fun here,’ says Mr Carter. ‘When they’re in
their mid-20s and at home with their families, they don’t get room to do
much; they are under strict guidelines. But here, they have freedom.
‘This
year we’ve made lots of club bookings for upmarket places like
Annabel’s. Clients agree to spend at least £40,000 in the venue so they
waive the membership requirement.’
Rumours
abound, too, of the generosity of Middle Eastern visitors. Steven
Skippen, a shoeshine at the Hilton Park Lane for the past 14 years, has
polished the footwear of the King of Jordan and the Sultan of Brunei,
and says his Middle Eastern clientele are ‘extremely generous’. One Arab
even presented him with a £1,500 pair of Berluti shoes — his ‘absolute
top favourite brand’.
And
it’s not only adults’ footwear that he tends to. Every day, there’ll be
a succession of Gucci and Louis Vuitton-clad kids who love nothing more
than to jump into his chair.

Any colour you like: A Bugatti Veyron,
hand-built at the firm’s boutique factory in Molsheim, north-eastern
France, where the well-heeled customers can pick all variety hues to
match their lipstick or nail varnish

Green with envy? This lime green Mercedes-Benz CLS 63 AMG Coupe stands out from the crowd at £82,000
He
knows his Arab customers’ tastes in footwear well. In fact, rather
surprisingly, Clarks is often among their favourite brands.
‘They
like Louis Vuitton and Gucci, obviously, but in the Middle East, Clarks
is promoted so well that when visitors come to London they rush there
and buy loads of shoes. One of my clients from Bahrain says: “Oh, yeah,
Clarks are the best shoes.” I haven’t the heart to tell him they are
not. Primark bags are flowing through this hotel, too.’
But
it is high-end designer goods that remain the biggest lure. Sisters
Sara, Noura and Hessa Saud from Saudi Arabia are staying at the
exclusive Grosvenor House Hotel on Park Lane with their family for one
month.
Twenty-year-old
Sara confesses: ‘Saudis are shopaholics, and at home, everything sells
out really fast — so here we have a lot more choice. We like the items
that are a big hit on the catwalk.’
It’s
not just the retail sector raking in cash from Arab visitors. After the
strict period of Ramadan fasting, female visitors also like to indulge
in high-end beauty treatments, too.
Dr
Aamer Khan, co-founder of the Harley Street Skin Clinic, says: ‘[During
Ramadan] women can’t have injectables because they can’t take anything
into their body. Following Ramadan, we get an influx for Botox and
fillers and non-surgical injectables.’
Meanwhile,
as dusk falls in Knightsbridge, the Ramadan Rush continues. The nightly
supercar parade is revving up outside Harrods and Harvey Nichols, while
chauffeurs drop off their high-spending female passengers, who are
whizzed through the hotel entrances by slick doormen.
A good night’s sleep is essential. They need to recuperate in time to carry on their spending tomorrow.
05 Ogos 2014
Watch the birdie: Eagle-eyed
- Photographer Christian Kneidinger, 50, captured images in Linz, Austria
- He was trying to focus on colours but after a closer look spotted the 'bird'
- Centre of pink moth orchid shows an optical illusion of animal in flight
- Showed other visitors at Botanical Garden who could not believe it
- Said he was surprised and 'never expected to see something so magical'
An eagle-eyed photographer has captured these incredible pictures of an orchid that looks just like a bird.
Photographer Christian Kneidinger, 50, was taking pictures in a botanical garden in Linz, Austria, when he realised he was looking at something special.
Initially the software engineer was trying to focus on the colour of the flowers but after an hour he took a closer look at the pink moth orchid and noticed an optical illusion of a bird in its centre.

The optical illusion of a bird can be seen in the pink moth orchid found at Botanical Garden in Linz, Austria

Photographer Christian Kneidinger from Austria could not believe his eyes when he captured the images
‘I showed other visitors what I had captured, but no one could believe it. Everyone was so surprised, even when I showed them the orchid,’ he said.
‘I was trying to get some beautiful pictures of some beautiful plants. I never expected to see something so magical.’
‘I came by the bird completely by chance. I thought I was seeing things, but it felt so real.
‘I knew I had to capture it before it disappeared and I'd think my eyes had been deceiving me.’
Mr Kneidinger, who lives in Austria, used a DSLR 5D Mark III camera with a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8L lens and a Macro IS USM lens to capture the stunning pictures.
He said: ‘I looked through the finder of my DSLR and I noticed that it looked like a bird - I was really surprised.

Mr Kneidinger said he showed it to other visitors at the Botanical Garden in Linz, Austria, who couldn't believe it

He used a DSLR 5D Mark III camera with a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8L lens and a Macro IS USM lens for the image

Christian Kneidinger, 50 (pictured), said: 'I never expected to see something so magical¿
‘Looking at it through the camera monitor didn't have the same feeling as in real life, so I took my video LED light that I use to brighten shadows.
‘I placed the light behind the flower and reduced the intensity, and I got what I expected. It was amazing.’
The orchid, scientifically known as a Phalaenopsis, was found among the 10,000 various plants at the Botanical Garden in Linz, which houses five greenhouses full of exotic floras.
‘It shows how beautiful these flowers are and how nature is at one,’ added Mr Kneidinger.
‘I try to go with open eyes everywhere I go and I try to use different views.
‘I take time watching for my desired object and sometimes, like now, something unexpected happens.’
Saudi tourist flies in to London
- Modified Range Rover the latest supercar spotted in West London
- Motor is painted gold and features large bumpers and vent on the bonnet
- It is thought car's rich Saudi owner had it shipped over for his holiday
- Follows series of sightings of expensive cars in the Knightsbridge area
The supercars parading through London's streets reached a whole new level of extravagance this week when a wealthy Arab rolled his gold Range Rover into town.
The 'Mystere' is a £150,000 version of the famous British vehicle which has been given an overhaul by German tuning house Hamann.
The car's normal design has been replaced with a customised body-kit which includes oversized bumpers and a bonnet vent.
Scroll down for video
The £150,000 'Hamann Mystere' is one of the most flamboyant vehicles yet to be seen in the capital

It is thought the Range Rover's Saudi owner brought the car over with him for his summer stay in London
Its Saudi owner has also opted for the luxury off-roader, which is fitted with 23-inch alloy wheels, to be kitted out with a black and gold wrap.
Its Saudi owner has also opted for the luxury off-roader, which is fitted with 23-inch alloy wheels, to be kitted out with a black and gold wrap.
The car, with the registration plate '666', has been flown over to the UK by its Saudi owner and is parked outside the expensive Wellesley Hotel in Knightsbridge.
A top-spec Range Rover costs £100,000 - with Hamann charging around £50,000 for the 'Mystere' conversion.
It is one of a number of flamboyant cars which have arrived in London for the summer season, when Middle-Eastern millionaires escape the desert temperatures for a holiday in the UK.
One local resident said: 'Range Rovers don't normally stand out because there are so many of them in London, but this one is different.'
'You can't miss it. It is amazing that the owner, who must be quite rich, decided to have it wrapped gold coloured. It is so eye-catching, but I don't think it will be winning any style awards.

The luxury off-roader was spotted in the car park of the Wellesley Hotel in Knightbridge, opposite Hyde Park

It comes after this ornately-painted Lamborghini Aventador was spotted in the area last summer

The 4x4's gold finish is similar to this Bugati Veyron which was parked outside the Dorchester last year
He added: 'It was parked next to a Rolls-Royce Ghost, and you hardly noticed the Roller. It is not often that a Rolls-Royce looks like the understated car.'
Last year, residents of West London complained the capital was being inundated with supercars, which they claimed were leading to unruly driving.
Petrol-heads were seen driving round wealthy areas of the city in Lamborghinis, Ferraris and Bugattis and attracting bands of camera-carrying youngsters, known as the Carparrazzi.
Channel 4 made a documentary about the drivers, called Millionaire Boy Racers, after local residents called for a clampdown.
In 2010, a £1.2 million Koenigsegg CCXR and £350,000 Lamborghini Murcielago were clamped outside famous department store Harrods.

The supercars, like this Lamborghini, are regularly seized by police for over suspicions about their insurance

This bright pink Rolls Royce was among the expensive cars spotted in London last summer

Local residents say their lives have been made a misery by the supercars like these driving around the district
Crowds of tourists watched in disbelief as a traffic warden first ticketed then clamped both vehicles, which were believed to have belonged to the oil-rich Qatari royal family.
It was the first summer in which the so-called 'invasion of Arab supercars' was noticed on London's streets, with a £1 million-plus Bugatti Veyron and a £500,000 Mercedes Benz McLaren SLR, both chrome-finished and with Middle Eastern plates, spotted outside the Berkeley Hotel in Knightsbridge.
It is believed wealthy Arabs from Qatar, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia relocate to the capital in the Middle East's hottest summer months and compete over who can show off the most expensive vehicle.
Experts said insuring some the supercars on London's roads can cost more than £50,000-a-year, with a £15,000 excess.
Last summer, a £350,000 purple and orange Lamborghini was seized by the police after the driver was pulled over, again outside Harrods, because of police concerns about his insurance.
Weeks later the same car was seen back on the streets, but was given a parking ticket just days after police handed it back to the owner.

A policeman talks to the owner of a blue Maserati on a double red line route during the Channel 4 show

This gold and white Bugatti put two Porsches in the shade when it parked outside Harrods last summer

These supercars - a Lamborghini Murcielago and a Koenigsegg CCXR - were seen in Knightbridge's Sheraton Park hotel last summer
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