View allAll Photos Tagged Madison
A mother and slug shove a string of cars up and over the hump at the Terminal Railroad of St. Louis' Madison Yard. Leased former IC&E GP40-2s from Helm Financial can be seen sitting in the background.
Interested in purchasing a high-quality digital download of this photo, suitable for printing and framing? Let me know and I will add it to my Etsy Shop, MittenRailandMarine! Follow this link to see what images are currently listed for sale: www.etsy.com/shop/MittenRailandMarine
If you are interested in specific locomotives, trains, or freighters, please contact me. I have been photographing trains and ships for over 15 years and have accumulated an extensive library!
Madison Creek Falls is near the Elwa River and Pt. Angeles. I had a great day of photographing with Partick Rodruquiz and Steve Egbert. Our main focus was to make it up to Olympic National Park and Hurricane Ridge, but we enjoyed this waterfall along the way. Thank you for your warm visits my friends!
This banner is something that Madison had to make for her first communion. It had to represent what first commmunion meant to her. She did all the work herself. If she needed anything she asked and we got it for her.
Angelic @ Access + Giveaway!
Calling all angels ✨ We just dropped 2 brand new hairs and they are everything! Both styles are long with soft subtle layers that gives effortless and angelic vibes - inspired by Madison Beer. Hairbase is fitted for Lelutka Evo X & Genus heads only! Hair originally comes in black with optional color hud sold separately.
Want this hair for free? Enter the giveaway on instagram, flickr, and facebook by reposting and commenting your inworld user! 📦
Now available @ Access! Link in bio 💌
Having experienced snow coach problems 2 miles into the park on the first day of our Yellowstone workshop, we felt fortunate to have a bit of some color on our first stop along the Madison River!
Camera Nikon D800
Exposure 0.02 sec (1/50)
Aperture f/16.0
Focal Length 14 mm
ISO Speed 400
Exposure Bias +1/3 EV
View the entire Yellowstone Set.
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
View of the Madison River in Yellowstone National Park obtained with a IR converted camera. The conversion uses a standard 720 nm IR filter. The Raw conversion was done in Capture One and the Red and Blue channels were swapped in PS.
Impossible Project film. Walked by this place a few times and knew the photo I wanted to take before I took it.
Scenes of the East Wharf Beach Gazebo.
See my other Madison scenes at flic.kr/s/aHsjXWgU8A
Getty Image - www.gettyimages.com/search/photographer?photographer=Phot...
Sunlight pierces the mist along the Madison River in Yellowstone National Park while a Bald Eagle is seen perched high in a tree on the right.
View the entire Yellowstone Set.
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
Four minutes before the sun disappeared below the horizon behind me, the light was dropping quickly. Owen Conservation Park, Madison, Wisconsin, USA, January 8, 2025, 4:37 PM.
this view of the Madison River was taken in Montana, shortly before it flows into Yellowstone National Park. i was lucky enough to spend a day there flyfishing; i can't wait to get back!
out now at the Fifty!
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Fifty/2/129/777
head/skin- Lelutka/Gloom
Eyes- Avi-glam
Clothing- Cheezu
The Madison River flows towards it confluence with the Jefferson and Gallatin Rivers in Missouri Headwaters State Park near Three Forks, Montana. The photo was taken near the place where late in July 1805 Lewis and Clark made camp during their trek exploring the Louisiana Purchase. The Headwaters of the Missouri National Historic Landmark lies with in the State Park and is part of the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail.
The History of the Three Forks Area with the Lewis and Clark Expedition is summaried by the National ParkService on their site about the Missouri Headwaters National Historic Landmark: On July 25, 1805, the expedition finally reached the headwaters of the Missouri River. It was here that Sacagawea had previously been kidnapped by the Hidatsa during a raid on a Shoshone camp. Clark, who led a scouting party ahead of the main body, wrote, “we proceeded on a fiew miles to the three forks of the Missouri those three forks are nearly of a Size, the North fork [Jefferson River] appears to have the most water and must be Considered as the one best calculated for us to assend middle fork [Madison River] is quit as large about 90 yds. wide. The South fork [Gallatin River] is about 70 yds wide & falls in about 400 yards below the midle fork. those forks appear to be verry rapid & Contain Some timber in their bottoms which is verry extincive.” Lewis arrived two days later and wrote, “beleiving this to be an essential point in the geography of this western part of the Continent I determined to remain at all events untill I obtained the necessary data for fixing it’s latitude Longitude &c.” They spent several days exploring the area and making observations while the company hunted, rested, and refitted. Initially uncertain, Lewis and Clark determined the Jefferson River their best route forward in anticipation of meeting the Shoshone and gaining their assistance. Clark camped at the forks again on July 13-14, 1806, while enroute to the Yellowstone River valley during the return journey.
The confluences of the Three Forks of the Missouri join along the boundary between Broadwater and Gallatin counties, about three miles northeast of the town of Three Forks and within the Missouri Headwaters State Park.
Reference: www.nps.gov/places/three-forks-of-the-missouri-mt.htm