View allAll Photos Tagged Runoff

I slowed the shutter speed as much as possible on this one after the wave had crashed over the rock. I'm quite pleased with the effect in the bright light, although obviously an ND filter would be better......(on my shopping list).

Lots of water this year. On US 550 a few miles south of Ouray, Colorado.

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Normally reserved for the spring runoff, this little secondary stream filled up great yesterday with the rainwater received from Tropical Storm Arthur.

Québec, Québec - juillet 2014.

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Jotunheimen National Park

St Louis River at Jay Cooke State Park near Duluth, MN

Exposed granite bedrock of the Rouge (Red) River (aka Riviere Rouge in Quebec). During the spring runoff Mary would be under several feet of water. The Canadian Shield, also called the Laurentian Plateau, or Bouclier canadien, is a large area of exposed Precambrian igneous and high-grade metamorphic rocks that forms the ancient geological core of the North American continent

The title is either related to the snow, or the fact the storm chased us off the trail. You decide.

This is another shot of the runoff from Excelsior Geyser but this time the sun was shining brighter and I captured more of the orange color on the bank of Firehole River

The orange area is typical of geyser runoff. You see it a lot along the Firehole River.

There is a river of spring runoff beside the portage trail from Killarney Lake to Freedom Lake. There are several cascades and the water is very fast and fierce.

This is the last of the cascades just before it flows into Freedom Lake.

 

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Runoff in the mountains

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This is the storm drain on the beach and as we'd had some rain in the night, there was a trickle of water making it's way out to sea.

 

Visiting this spot a few weeks ago and this was a trickle. A good rainfall certainly changed that.

Chalk Creek is a 27 mile-long tributary flowing east out of the Sawatch Range southwest of Buena Vista, Colorado between Mt Antero and Mt Princeton. The headwaters of the creek are located near the Continental Divide above St Elmo, one of Colorado's famous ghost towns. The creek flows into the Arkansas River near the village of Nathrop.

© 2021 Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott

 

Weeks of rain finally let up as the sun broke through, though not before the water levels had risen everywhere and the spring runoff in intense. I used a ten stop ND filter on Sony's newest lens - the Sony FE 14mm F1.8 G Master - to slow the movement of the water and to create a contrast between the static elements (bridge and large rocks) and the flow of the water. I really like the end result. Here's the linkage to my coverage of this amazing new lens from Sony:

 

Text Review: bit.ly/14GMReview

Definitive Vid Review: bit.ly/14GMdef

Standard Vid Review: bit.ly/14GMvid

Image Gallery: bit.ly/14GMPics

  

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Another drone viewpoint I had fun playing with in Utah was the straight-down shot. Here's an example showing the exquisite erosion patterns produced by rain runoff at Goblin Valley State Park.

 

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after several days of hard rain

“Remember that you don't choose love; love chooses you. All you really can do is accept it for all its mystery when it comes into your life. Feel the way it fills you to overflowing then reach out and give it away.”

- Kent Nerburn quotes

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Runoff water from the Laughton Glacier cascades down the mountain.

1986 Lomo Compakt Automat, Kentmere 400 bulk loaded from 100-ft roll. No filter. D-76 for 8 minutes at 68f.

During and after a storm with significant rainfall our driveway here in Virginia becomes a storm gutter of sorts. This "stream" ends in the puddle that is pictured in my previous post. (see the second image below showing the tire ruts, one of which is highlighted in this image) I placed my D700 into the 1/4 inch water resting on the ground with the front of the lens millimeters off the waters surface to capture this image. A great makeshift tripod. The water tight seals have worked so far. Don't try this with one that isn't weather sealed! :)

  

I was enthralled with the runoff areas of the Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park.

 

It was its own version of valleys and streams on a much smaller scale.

East Pine Creek, in the Wallowa Mountains of north-eastern Oregon.

With the wet winter and recent high temperatures, the melting snow and heavy rains have resulted in streams of water finding their own way down the mountainside.

 

1986 Lomo Compakt Automat, Kentmere 400 bulk loaded from 100-ft roll. No filter. D-76 for 8 minutes at 68f.

The Carp River near the Marquette Mountain ski hill.

With temperatures trending upwards (to above seasonal) in the coming week, it won't be long before the Rideau Canal Locks open to pleasurecraft traffic.

 

This view looks north toward the Ottawa River, with the Alexandra (Interprovincial) bridge, which leads to way to La Belle Province, Québec.

 

A river tumbles its way into a valley along the road between Vik and Voss and the fjord region of Norway.

 

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