View allAll Photos Tagged Trickling

A section of Bridal Veil Creek in the Columbia River Gorge.

Lone tree overlooking The Three sisters at Glencoe

soothes the soul. Together with the winding stream and the late Spring wild flowers, this was a magical sound and scene for me, while Marnie was close by my side. A little peace in a hectic life.

 

~ Edited slightly in Topaz Studio with frame added in PicMonkey ~

 

Thank you for taking the time to have a look and for your faves and comments my friends.

 

Have a lovely early summer ahead and wherever you are, take the time to enjoy the natural world around if you can !

 

Many, many thanks to you all for helping my picture into Explore on 25th May 2023 :-)

   

“I never do enjoy my breaks, long or short...I look forward to them intensely, but as soon as they begin, I can feel them starting to end. I feel the temporariness of my freedom, and find it hard to concentrate on anything other than the sensation of it trickling away.”

― Sophie Hannah, The Wrong Mother

 

Taken at: Luane's World

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Le%20Monde%20Perdu/136/204/23

My daughter and I made it over to central New York in the Ithaca area where they just happen to be having the worst drought there in 14 years. Needless to say the waterfalls there are very 'parched' ;)

 

We still enjoyed a great hike there in Buttermilk Falls State Park ... very cool rock formations and water carvings. The low flow really revealed a lot of the details that you might not see. In addition, the low flow created some whirlpools too. It was nice taking in these scenes as Fall spins in ... even if just a trickle pace there in New York.

 

Heading to Pennsylvania tomorrow.

Leica M6, Voigtländer Ultron 28mm 1:2.0, Ilford HP5 400

Not sure if this is actually in Ardnamurchan or just a few miles outside of it approaching from the direction of Fort William? It was such a charming little idyll that we (my husband and I) were unanimous that this was the perfect spot to enjoy our packed lunch.

 

Created using: Topaz Labs, and Topaz Studio

Trail in the Great Smokey Mountains.

Spring Creek cascades through a rocky stretch just before meeting the South Fork of the Yuba River. Water is a precious element in California, made especially so by our recent drought conditions. Creeks like the one above, have been reduced to a mere trickle, if they haven't completely dried up. It's becoming more common to see wild animals enter the populated areas in search of water.

 

Nevada County CA

Lake Creek trickles through vibrant autumn foliage in Laurence S. Rockefeller Preserve. The preserve is nice little refuge within Grand Teton National Park--a place where one can go to get away from the crowds, and there's 1,106 stunning acres to do it upon.

 

Grand Teton National Park WY

(apparently only visible from the top 😅)

 

Shot with a Beseler "Color Pro 50 mm f/2.8" (enlarging) lens on a Canon EOS R5.

Guide Falls just south of Burnie, Tasmania. All the brochures will show you this waterfall in all its glory - a raging torrent of water engulfing the cliff face and pounding the narrow stream below it. That's not what I found when I visited though ... just a light trickle of gently falling water.

We are in a mild drought -- not too unusual for this time of year. The entire mill stream flushes through this conduit at high speed when water levels are up (especially with spring meltwater). Charlie, if he could defy the torrent, would be neck deep.

 

I hope all are having a fine week.

Im not sure if you would even be able to shoot this shot with more water in the river... but I guess a bit more of a flow would work better... you would need gators though as I was standing up to my ankles in water taking this shot... And it would defo be better first thing in the morning... the afternoon light was too much and as you could see I could do nothing but let the sky blow out... I appreciate some people have it in their skillset to blend exposures together and I can do it for a static landscape using the HDR tool in affinity... but it doesnt work for moving water shots... so I just stick to single exposures! I'll give it another go in the future with more water as I liked the composition ... something a little different from the usual Glencoe shots!

Wall Street, Arches National Park, Utah.

Summer slowly trickles into the high country. Thanks for looking and have a fine day!

 

Photography by Karen Meadows

The recent days of drizzling rainy weather, has left the local soil saturated.

 

Water continues to seep down to sea level... slowly making it's way to the edge of Tanilba Bay.

 

It meanders across the sand.

 

Local birdlife come to drink the fresh water, before it joins the salty waterway.

 

  

Nice little spot in South East Alaska, Near Juneau.

Waterfall from melting snow

Near Trail of the Cedars

 

Glacier National Park, Montana, USA

FInal take on this little scene. Jackson Falls, Tennessee, USA, June 2022

 

Best viewed large. All rights reserved

A creek enters the Rio Viejo through this waterfall. By the end of the dry season the waterfall will be reduced to a trickle.

shot with a fujifilm x-s10, a 0.71x focal reducer and a vivitar 24mm f2.8 (tokina) lens

shot with a fujifilm x-s10, a 0.71x focal reducer and a vivitar 24mm f2.8 (tokina) lens

Another angle of the same waterfall I posted a while ago from Blue Mountains Botanical Garden

Our trip to Sedona in January was cloudy rainy snowing - just about everything but sun! But the weather did present the opportunity to shoot waterfalls around the normally-dry washes and stream beds. Always something to point a camera at around Sedona.

Glacier National Park, Montana, USA

Not the fastest flowing waterfalls, but its a tranquil place.

shot with a fujifilm x-s10 and a tamron adaptall 2 sp 80-200mm f/2.8 (model 30A) lens

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check out my thoughts on the lens here

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check out the fujifilm film simulation used here

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Melted ice and snow flow into the ocean

 

Southeastern Alaska, USA

Last year the Glade Creek was flowing a lot more heavily. One of the beautiful things about photography in nature: It's different all the time.

Another photo from the fall when the waterfall had only a trickle left.

Cibolo Creek after the flood. 20161112BoerneDxLr29

heavy rain and snow turned all the dry washes into temporary flowing streams alll around Sedona. Clouds made the light tough, so I had to focus on other opportunities such as small waterfalls and streams in the red rock.

Had a lovely few days away and we enjoyed our visit to the woods

I've barely posted anything recently, as I had no new images to share. Then our internet went down, so apologies for not getting chance to comment on your images. Hopefully I'll get through them over the next few days.

We spent most of a day here and came across some lovely woodland scenes, I think I ached all over when we'd finished due to the rise and fall of the terrain.

There's a hosepipe ban on in Yorkshire and you can easily see why from the trickle thats flowing here.

Somewhat of a different location from what I usually capture by the sea and I must admit it was quite difficult balancing the exposure

Black Beaver Falls, framed by fall colour. Agawa Canyon, Algoma, Ontario.

 

PLEASE: Do not post any comment graphics, they will be deleted. See info in my bio.

Taken at Gleniffer Braes near Paisley in Scotland.

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