View allAll Photos Tagged crashingwaves

Crashing waves at Garrapata Beach.

Massive waves crash ashore at Shore Acres State Park, near Coos Bay, OR. Some of these waves send water up to a hundred feet in the air. One of the best places to view the show is near the old tennis courts, north of the parking lot.

 

Tourist Tip: If you see someplace that's wet, don't stand there. It's wet because a massive wave just drenched the area, and there's a good chance another one will hit within a few minutes, often with little warning. Even if you're within the fenced-in areas, be prepared to be hit by the spray from the waves.

Southsea seafront 11/11/11

Seagulls enjoying the crashing waves at West Bexington.

 

Massive waves crash ashore at Shore Acres State Park, near Coos Bay, OR. Some of these waves send water up to a hundred feet in the air. One of the best places to view the show is near the old tennis courts, north of the parking lot.

 

Tourist Tip: If you see someplace that's wet, don't stand there. It's wet because a massive wave just drenched the area, and there's a good chance another one will hit within a few minutes, often with little warning. Even if you're within the fenced-in areas, be prepared to be hit by the spray from the waves.

Harkness Beach, Waterford CT

Things got a little crazy on the North Shore.

Massive waves crash ashore at Shore Acres State Park, near Coos Bay, OR. Some of these waves send water up to a hundred feet in the air. One of the best places to view the show is near the old tennis courts, north of the parking lot.

 

Tourist Tip: If you see someplace that's wet, don't stand there. It's wet because a massive wave just drenched the area, and there's a good chance another one will hit within a few minutes, often with little warning. Even if you're within the fenced-in areas, be prepared to be hit by the spray from the waves.

enjoying the sites at Sir Samuel Smith Park

Waves crash on the shore.

Sorry I have not been around- my computer broke and is still not functioning right, and life has been very eventful the past 4 months. My goal for the next couple of weeks is to upload a majority of my new work.

This photograph is just a fun side project of mine :) enjoy!

 

Black sand beach and crashing waves at Waianapanapa Park on Maui, at mile marker 32 on the Road to Hana.

December 20th, 2014

 

Driftwood piling up against the sea wall in Sidney, BC during a winter storm.

Bar Beach is a few hundred metres to the south. Gilmore Cove is seen here from the Anzac Memorial Walkway.

Ocean City / New Jersey / Beach / Images of the Ocean / July 2010 / Distant Sailboat

Meet my new favorite rock on the Maine coast. With a view of Whaleback Light and waves crashing over it, it's a pretty nice rock.

Massive waves crash ashore at Shore Acres State Park, near Coos Bay, OR. Some of these waves send water up to a hundred feet in the air. One of the best places to view the show is near the old tennis courts, north of the parking lot.

 

Tourist Tip: If you see someplace that's wet, don't stand there. It's wet because a massive wave just drenched the area, and there's a good chance another one will hit within a few minutes, often with little warning. Even if you're within the fenced-in areas, be prepared to be hit by the spray from the waves.

Did anyone get the riddle in the name of this photo? Well I guess I'll have to explain it then.... A triangular prism lets light traveling in a linear (straight) path and seperates the colors and changes the path of the light.... Thats like this one, the straight traveling tide would stay flat and straight if it hadn't been for the rock, which changed the direction of the tide and seperated the water into drops in the air.... but this ain't a physics website, and I'm not a physycist, it was just a name.... Anyway, I took this shot on a random beach in the Caribean that our charter Catamaran parked by, and when I saw the tide crashing up against this rock, I needed a shot.... so there, I got one :)

Massive waves crash ashore at Shore Acres State Park, near Coos Bay, OR. Some of these waves send water up to a hundred feet in the air. One of the best places to view the show is near the old tennis courts, north of the parking lot.

 

Tourist Tip: If you see someplace that's wet, don't stand there. It's wet because a massive wave just drenched the area, and there's a good chance another one will hit within a few minutes, often with little warning. Even if you're within the fenced-in areas, be prepared to be hit by the spray from the waves.

west coast, northern cape, south africa.

Massive waves crash ashore at Shore Acres State Park, near Coos Bay, OR. Some of these waves send water up to a hundred feet in the air. One of the best places to view the show is near the old tennis courts, north of the parking lot.

 

Tourist Tip: If you see someplace that's wet, don't stand there. It's wet because a massive wave just drenched the area, and there's a good chance another one will hit within a few minutes, often with little warning. Even if you're within the fenced-in areas, be prepared to be hit by the spray from the waves.

Massive waves crash ashore at Shore Acres State Park, near Coos Bay, OR. Some of these waves send water up to a hundred feet in the air. One of the best places to view the show is near the old tennis courts, north of the parking lot.

 

Tourist Tip: If you see someplace that's wet, don't stand there. It's wet because a massive wave just drenched the area, and there's a good chance another one will hit within a few minutes, often with little warning. Even if you're within the fenced-in areas, be prepared to be hit by the spray from the waves.

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