View allAll Photos Tagged Snowdrift
...combined. The coyotes were playing on the drifts last night, note the tracks lower right hand corner.
Searching for snow capped mtns today.If Snowdrift Ridge doest have snow , weve got probems.The reason its called Snowdrift Ridge is it white most of tthe time.
This is the east side of Snowdrift Ridge.From Georgetown we look at the west side of Snowdrift Ridge
Closeup stock photo of a snow drift with textures and contours. In the upper right portion of the image a snow shelf hangs over the rest of the drift, which is slightly shaded by the overhanging snow. The snow's texture is shown well in the brighter area of the drift and there are well defined lines in the shaded areas.
I have wanted this shot for years. I have been here when the cattle were in this field, just not the right locations.
I know they are not all steers. I didn't look under the hood to get an exact number
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Minimalist Monday: A single leaf fluttering in the snowbank. I watched as the wind blew but never dislodged it!
Snowdrift River, near Lutsel K'e NT 25 Mar 2025. This place is jumping with ciscoe in the spring, gave the place its Dene name.
Taken from near the top of Jaggers Clough on Kinder Scout. Through the clearing mist can be seen the long ridge stretching out to Win Hill.
A slide scan from 1986 taken on a Rollei 35LED on Barfen 100 slide film.
EV 561 clears some snow as it crosses Frederick Rd on its way to the wye in Martinsburg, PA. The Cargill plant is in the background. February 2019
More snow up on Bare Bones Road.Now the wind is blowing the drifts are blocking the road very quickly.The farmer up there told me today that he'd just pulled an Australian in an Audi from a drift.The Australian was on his way to Manchester airport to catch a flight home.He was following Sat. Nav. instructions and oblivious to the wind and snow.
Got lucky & found some color with white Snowdrift i the background.
Too bad the white stuff disappeared so quickly.
This is the drift in front of that black car, looking along its spine. It was not put there by plows or shovelling--the wind alone did this, using snow from fresh storms several times a week. Look carefully and you can make out the tracks of a cat cresting the ridge in front of the windows.
All of our snow has been gone for a few days now, melted by mild days and washed away by heavy rains. Rather amazing drifts often form on our small deck, which we don't bother to clear any more.
Evidence of our recent bonkers weather. Poppy standing below one heck of a drift on the track beside South Head near Hayfield.
(Not the best quality shot.......was going dark and its hand held).
Lots of photos to sort through of a memorable adventure with the sun setting on one side of the hill and the moon rising on the other.
It's quite an intense experience standing in the maelstrom that is a snowdrift, as it's forming. This was at a Lomonds Hills roadside in Fife today.