View allAll Photos Tagged Mudding
This was the place we were staying near Addo. It is a mud hut built using traditional methods, with all the modern amenities inside. We managed to blag this luxury hut.
And this is what the ground looked like after some nice passers-by dragged us out of the mud with a chain.
Goshen, CT.
Amish men inspect horse buggies ready for auction during the Annual Mud Sale to support the Fire Department in Gordonville, PA.
Ah yes, the universal human urge to play with mud, nostalgie de bouie, so to speak. I don't know why I posed the sand pinacles in the foreground; probably some misguided artistic impulse. I just thought it was cute to have the baby playing with its own mud pies in the foreground, and the grownups in the middle ground essentially doing the same thing.
Mud Island in Memphis, Tennessee.
The Mud Island Riverwalk "is an exact scale model of the Lower Mississippi River flowing from its confluence with the Ohio River at Cairo, Illinois 954 miles south to the Gulf of Mexico."
A view of the portion representing Cairo, Illinois and the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers.
See More: Lower Mississippi River Adventures
"You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty." - Mahatma Gandhi
The name of Yellowstone National Park's "Mud Volcano" feature and the surrounding area is misleading; it consists of hot springs, mud pots and fumaroles, rather than a true mud volcano. Depending upon the precise definition of the term mud volcano, the Yellowstone formation could be considered a hydrothermal mud volcano cluster. The feature is much less active than in its first recorded description, although the area is quite dynamic. Yellowstone is an active geothermal area with a magma chamber near the surface, and active gases are chiefly steam, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide. However, there are some Mud Volcanoes and Mud Geysers elsewhere in Yellowstone. One, the "Vertically Gifted Cyclic Mud Pot" sometimes acts as a geyser, throwing mud up to 30 feet high.