View allAll Photos Tagged Recedes
A line and a circle forming on the ice of a lake. Making sort of a yin/yang shape in black and white.
Pacific Coast, CA
Copyright © Debjit Ghosh Photography.
This photo may not be used in any form without prior permission. All rights reserved.
The ice is finally receding on the little pond at the back of our property. Tried some HDR, but I'm not sure I'm entirely happy with it.
A storm catches some sunset light as it heads eastward out into the Tasman Sea, after dumping on the NSW Far South Coast, a few kilometres south of Bermagui.
Dunes, Plants, Sand Storm. © Copyright 2023 G Dan Mitchell.
Desert plants in late-day sun. backed by dunes receding into sand storm haze.
This photograph is a different “take” on the late-March evening sand storm I photographed earlier this year in Death Valley. The forecast was for afternoon wind, so we were not surprised when the dust started to rise a few miles away from san dunes. I’m often a bit torn in situations like this — operating in the strong winds and blowing sand is not pleasant, but some very interesting photographic opportunities tend to crop up in these conditions. So I went out and got to work.
Fortunately, as I faced the dunes the wind was at my back. Even though the wind was strong enough to make photography challenging, the sand was being picked up from the dunes and blown away from me. The blowing sand, combined with the early evening light, made for some spectacular conditions. The focus in this photograph is on the plants growing on the close dunes. I had visited them a couple of months earlier, and they were mostly quite dried out. But a couple of months later and this years wet and cool spring had brought them back to life.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.
Loch Uidh a'Chliabhain and the Manse Loch in the foreground; beautiful receding layers of mountains in the middle; a stunning dramatic display of crepuscular rays as a cloud obscured the rising sun in the distance.
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The Athabasca Glacier is a large, accessible glacier located in the Canadian Rockies, part of the Columbia Icefield. It's one of the most popular glaciers to visit in North America and is known for its accessibility, with tours offered to walk on the ice. The glacier is currently receding at a rate of about 5 meters per year.
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On the beach at La Fontanilla, Conil de la Frontera, Spain.
The second round of 30C temperatures are arriving. Although water levels are receding. Unlike other parts of the UK we are fortunate in North Wales to have had rainfall since the higher temperatures a few weeks ago.
The Athabasca Glacier is a large, accessible glacier located in the Canadian Rockies, part of the Columbia Icefield. It's one of the most popular glaciers to visit in North America and is known for its accessibility, with tours offered to walk on the ice. The glacier is currently receding at a rate of about 5 meters per year.
© Copyright John C. House, Everyday Miracles Photography. All Rights Reserved. Please do not use in any way without my express consent. As always, this is better viewed large.
A view from Max Patch, on the Appalachian Trail in North Carolina. HDR, highly processed, an interpretation rather than an effort to make it look just like it looked. An effort, instead, to make it look just how it felt.
Explored at #205 on 7-23-11.
As we gazed at the evidence of the receding glacier, I couldn't help but think that our lives are receding as well. I want to have this man's will to not limit myself and never lose the joy of exploring.
After the last couple of days rain, the road is clear again. More rain tomorrow.
Hemyock, Devon, UK.
Water flowing back to the ocean tries to suck some rocks down with it.
From my Stuff in the Sand collection.
Another decade and I suspect this piece of land will be unrecognizable as a different reality slides into the scene.
HSS
MGJNY
3/15/24
Better than 5 feet of snow fell under the Great Divide along the Moffat Road in this storm. The morning investment started trackside for the GJ crawling from tunnel 1 and the big grade down Coal Creek Canyon at Blue Mountain in an at any cost attempt to capture the receding storm light on this first light shortly after sunrise. The snow was well over 2 feet deep here in Arvada, CO.
Deep in thought.
He stood there alone his only companion was the sea.
It was as if he was sharing his silent thoughts with the waves as they rolled in and perhaps in is mind the receding waves would wash away his thoughts.
North Coast, New South Wales, Australia.
Greyhound Beach, Santa Cruz County, California
We are standing on top of the bluff above Greyhound Beach on a late afternoon, watching the Pacific surf roll in and then recede. The people below are sometimes sent scurrying when a wave creeps too close for their comfort.
KCSM AC4400CW 4551 leads CPKC 9-253 South through Davenport, IA. The water is still high but no longer impacting operations of CPKC through town.
Art with texture
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Thanks to everyone that views and comments on my images - very much appreciated.
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Sony ILCE-7RM5
As the tide went down each wave froze on the sand of the beach making interesting designs' great day to go for a photography hike.
Receding tide. Dunstanburgh Castle is a 14th-century fortification on the coast of Northumberland in northern England, between the villages of Craster and Embleton. The castle was built by Earl Thomas of Lancaster between 1313 and 1322, taking advantage of the site's natural defences and the existing earthworks of an Iron Age fort.