View allAll Photos Tagged Streaming
As the sea retreats, the sea water returns creating beautiful streams along the beach. I found this as I took a morning stroll along Skegness beach.
It's been many years since I've spent autumn in California, so naturally I've been traipsing through the mountains and enjoying the changing colors. I've heard raving comments about the color out in the Eastern Sierra this year, but alas I haven't made the long drive out that direction. Here is some aspen color (and perhaps some cottonwood too?) closer to home along Cold Stream in the Truckee area.
There were some Jeffrey pines nearby which smelled like vanilla!
Along Cold Stream near Truckee, Calif.
A view of the mill stream as it exits from beneath Hawks Mill.
I do like the reflections thrown up by the water under those arches!
Looks like the black bellied Dipper has gone ... the rill stones have been removed!
A stream makes its way down Rocky Valley near Tintagel in Cornwall. Water effect using KASE filters and long exposure.
Archive diving from a trip to Rocky Mountain National Park.
I would still like to get my hands on the individual that stole that camera.
A quiet stream of slow flowing water at Bonshaw on PEI offered a sense of quiet and calm. The summer sun and shadows conspired to add to the magic.
The River Glyme is a river in Oxfordshire, England. It is a tributary of the River Evenlode. It rises about 1 mile (1.6 km) east of Chipping Norton, and flows southeast past Old Chalford, Enstone, Kiddington, Glympton and Wootton, Woodstock and through Blenheim Park. At Wootton the Glyme is joined by a tributary, the River Dorn. The Glyme joins the Evenlode just south of the park near Bladon.
The Glyme is dammed at Cleveley, Kiddington, Glympton and Blenheim. At Blenheim, "Capability" Brown used the river to form the lake in front of Blenheim Palace.
The upper part of the Glyme Valley around the river's headwaters is a Site of Special Scientific Interest.[1]
The Glyme Valley Way is a footpath that follows almost the entire course of the river.
The river's name is derived from the Brittonic for "bright stream".
Photomanipulation combining a close-up water stream from the Glen Artney area of Patapsco Valley State Park near Baltimore, Maryland (USA), along with wood paint bubbles.
This photo is offered under a standard Creative Commons License - Attribution 3.0 Unported. It gives you a lot of freedom to use my work commercially as long as you credit and link back to this image on my Flickr page.
Flickr resolution: 1800 x 1200 px
Also available for download at 5000 x 3333 px on my Patreon page, an ever-growing collection of high res images for one low monthly subscription fee. You can find this specific photo at the following post:
The waterfall called Seven Sisters are one of Geirangerfjord's spectacular attractions. Large view. It's seven streams of water looks great from any angle (see comments field). One of my old uploads received an unbelievable amount of views today, it turns out it appears on today's Flickr blog under the heading "Dance Floor".