In the Howgill Fells - a view of the top of Cautley Spout
Rollei SL66SE/80mm, Orange filter, T-MAX 100 Professional (Kodak TMX 6052) developed in Ilfosol S 1+9, digitised by photographing the original negative on a light pad - tethered capture and digital development in Lightroom.
The Howgills as a whole lie within the county of Cumbria, although the area remains in the Yorkshire Dales National Park.
"Cautley Spout is England's highest (cascade) waterfall above ground. (Gaping Gill on Ingleborough falls a greater unbroken distance into a pothole, and Hardraw Force has a greater unbroken fall above ground). The broken cascade of falls tumbles a total of [nearly 200m] down a cliff face at the head of a wild and bleak glacial valley that comes down from a high plateau called The Calf. [...] This fall is one of the few cascade falls in England; most are either tiered or plunge falls." (Wikipedia)
In the Howgill Fells - a view of the top of Cautley Spout
Rollei SL66SE/80mm, Orange filter, T-MAX 100 Professional (Kodak TMX 6052) developed in Ilfosol S 1+9, digitised by photographing the original negative on a light pad - tethered capture and digital development in Lightroom.
The Howgills as a whole lie within the county of Cumbria, although the area remains in the Yorkshire Dales National Park.
"Cautley Spout is England's highest (cascade) waterfall above ground. (Gaping Gill on Ingleborough falls a greater unbroken distance into a pothole, and Hardraw Force has a greater unbroken fall above ground). The broken cascade of falls tumbles a total of [nearly 200m] down a cliff face at the head of a wild and bleak glacial valley that comes down from a high plateau called The Calf. [...] This fall is one of the few cascade falls in England; most are either tiered or plunge falls." (Wikipedia)