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A waterfall downstream of the Mendenhall Glacier, near Juneau Alaska,in Tongass National Forest. Formed by the receding face of the Mendenhall Glacier, the waterfall drops 377 feet (115 m) in two tiers of 99 feet (30 m) and 278 feet (85 m) onto a sandbar in Mendenhall Lake.
An ideal and remote escape away from the busy city life. The sandbar is especially visible during the low tide but is still as enjoyable during the high tide because of the naturally beautiful and crystal clear waters. Although there are no cottages available for tourists and places to dive, the North Sandbar is a worry-free gateway to paradise. ~ www.funsundivetravel.com/island-hopping-philippines/north...
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
iPhone 6 Plus back camera 4.15mm f/2.2
ƒ/2.2 4.2 mm 1/5700 32
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Canon camera purchased this image from me for use in an EOS Camera Brochure published in Europe in 2009. The water is tidal and usually rough and the bar changes constantly. Because of those reasons it was two years before I captured this image.
Vilano Beach ~ Saint Augustine, Florida U.S.A.
Northern Florida ~ Summer 2019 ~ 7/5/19
*[At extreme low-tide the growing inlet sand-bar is visible.]
The sand and silt bars at the mouth of Pitt Lake are becoming exposed by low water during our current Level 5 drought
We spent an amazing weekend away....non-stop activity and beauty all around...and only 3 hours from Sydney.....now we need a holiday from the holiday.
Before we went to Bais-Manjuyod last weekend, I checked the calendar. Unfortunately, the low tides were too high- the lowest of which was 0.6m. It means that the fabulous white sandbar would remain unexposed. We did manage to walk and wade around in waistlevel waters. The photographic possibilities we had last year may have been absent but the dolphin play we witnessed made up for it. And the food prepared by our seaweed supplier was something else too. (Yes, this was also a business trip for me!)
at the Manjuyod-Bais City, Negros Oriental, the Philippines
try living in the middle of the sea at the sandbar of Bais in colloidfarl.blogspot.com/
The black skimmer (Rynchops niger) is a tern-like seabird, one of three very similar birds species in the skimmer family. It breeds in North and South America. Northern populations winter in the warmer waters of the Caribbean and the tropical and subtropical Pacific coasts, but the South American races make only shorter movements in response to annual floods which extend their feeding areas in the river shallows.Skimmers have a light graceful flight, with steady beats of their long wings. They feed usually in large flocks, flying low over the water surface with the lower mandible skimming the water (in order of importance) for small fish, insects, crustaceans and mollusk caught by touch by day or especially at night.
They spend much time loafing gregariously on sandbars in the rivers, coasts and lagoons they frequent.
Source: Wikipedia
The current low water levels are exposing some really nice sandbars on the St. Lawrence River west of Cornwall. This one is located between two small islands south of Croil Island.
An ideal and remote escape away from the busy city life. The sandbar is especially visible during the low tide but is still as enjoyable during the high tide because of the naturally beautiful and crystal clear waters. Although there are no cottages available for tourists and places to dive, the North Sandbar is a worry-free gateway to paradise. ~ www.funsundivetravel.com/island-hopping-philippines/north...
Panasonic DMC-GF2
LUMIX G VARIO 14-42/F3.5-5.6
ƒ/8.0 42.0 mm 1/1250 100
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