View allAll Photos Tagged Rooting
Ginger is recommended for good health! Good in ginger tea as well as soups.
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Part of the Cliff Gilker Park, a bridge leads one down into the trek that winds through the forest. The paths are wide, and the woodland is filled with interest.
This crazy twisty fallen tree had roots that created an intense natural sculpture. I tried to process it to give it a more purposeful abstract form and definition. Happy Sliders Sunday (HSS)!
I was wandering around the shoreline near the old Dumbarton Bridge in Newark, California, capturing photons bouncing off driftwood when I found this; what appears to be a small piece of root structure from something. Looked cool though.
From my Wild and Weathered Wood collection.
……Another from our Cumbrian trip in October, this was the circular walk around Buttermere - as always one needs to watch ones step!!! as well as watching out for a photo😊 Alan:-).…….
For the interested I’m growing my Shutterstock catalogue regularly here, now sold 99 images :- www.shutterstock.com/g/Alan+Foster?rid=223484589&utm_...
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©Alan Foster. All rights reserved. Do not use without permission.……
This waterfall is located along the trail to Opal Creek in Oregon. I don't know that it's actually called Tree Root Falls, in fact, the falls are not tall enough to merit a name I think. Its the water falling through the tree roots that make it interesting.
Countless times going under this bridge on the Dan Ryan during my life, so much so it is hard to keep track of a count.
Proving the point that 2020 wasn't all bad. Metra work equipment swings above I90/94 at the Root St Wye.
Under an overhang where water had washed away the soil, baring the root.
From my Wild and Weathered Wood collection.
A fern has made its home on an oak branch (which is actually an exposed oak root), overhanging a stream in Staple Fitzpaine, Somerset.
A bright orange mushroom, a Rooting Shank I believe, but could be wrong, pushes its way through the fronds of bright green grass.
Upper Tahquamenon Falls is one of the largest waterfalls in the eastern United States. It is over 200 feet wide and drops 48 feet, making it the second largest in volume east of the Mississippi River, after Niagara Falls. . . Tahquamenon Falls is found in the Tahquamenon Falls State Park in Michigan's upper peninsula and referred to by the locals as "Root Beer Falls". The Tahquamenon River flows into Lake Superior's Whitefish Bay. There is a restaurant onsite at this park due to the remote location and lack of eateries in the area. The restaurant is open all summer and most of the winter. And, as beautiful as this upper falls is, in my view the 'lower falls' are the show stoppers.
The parking lot for the 'lower falls' is located about 3 or 4 miles from this location. The lower falls consists of 5 separate falls. More photos of the lower falls at some future date.
Lensless 4x5 pinhole camera
50mm@f/154
Exposure about 80’s
Ilford Delta 100 Profesional
Kodak HC-110
DsLr DiGiTiZeD
PS
shot with a fujifilm x-s10 and a sigma 150-600mm contemporary telephoto zoom lens, using a fringer ef-fx pro ii smart adapter
Michigan Upper Peninsula
36mm focal length @f/22 - 0.8 sec. @ 50 ISO
Shortly after draining out from a rock tunnel at Sunday Lake, Planter Creek flows over a small rock ridge to form a small yet sudden drop in a scenic wooded scene. Root Beer Falls is so named because rich brown tannin water creates almost a bubbly froth into the creek’s pool below.
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