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Just another flower from the Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory at Belle Isle, in Detroit, Michigan.
I highly recommend this place if you are visiting the Detroit area.
Flow Festival 14.8.2010
Photos: Jouni Saarelainen
Festival Report: katosblog.com/?p=3283 (in finnish)
Whenever I can now, I point the camera down and look for the best angle that is not "straight on". The water looked nice here at Potts Falls.
There was a wedding photographer shooting people on the bridge, and as we were leaving the bride actually "scrambled" down the right side of the falls, directed by the photographer. She had flip flops on but I am sure that some of her beautiful white dress must have gotten some dirt or water on it.
Had I been doing watefall photography 17 years ago when Alicia and I got married this is what I would have made her do!
Camera: Canon T2i
Lenses: Tamron SP AF17-50mm F/2.8
Used: 17mm
Post Production: Color correction and Vignetting.
Walking on the lava flow. Much of which is obsidian.
Newberry National Volcanic Monument was designated on November 5, 1990 to protect the area around the Newberry Volcano in the United States. It was created within the boundaries of the Deschutes National Forest and is managed by the U.S. Forest Service. It includes 50,000 acres (20,000 ha) of lakes, lava flows, and spectacular geologic features in central Oregon. These photos are taken from the summit Paulina Peak 7,985 ft, (2,434 m). Just below us are East Lake and Paulina Lake and The Big Obsidian Flow, created 1,300 years ago, covers 700 acres. It is hard to fathom as you drive through the summit area that you are within a 17 square mile caldera at the summit of a 500 square mile volcano, a volcano that remains very active to this day. Newberry is both seismically and geothermally active. Geologists believe the caldera sits over a shallow magma body only 2 to 5 kilometers deep. Visitors see numerous cinder cones (over 400 throughout the area), miles of basalt flows, as well as rhyolite flows of obsidian.
Walking on the lava flow. Much of which is obsidian.
Newberry National Volcanic Monument was designated on November 5, 1990 to protect the area around the Newberry Volcano in the United States. It was created within the boundaries of the Deschutes National Forest and is managed by the U.S. Forest Service. It includes 50,000 acres (20,000 ha) of lakes, lava flows, and spectacular geologic features in central Oregon. These photos are taken from the summit Paulina Peak 7,985 ft, (2,434 m). Just below us are East Lake and Paulina Lake and The Big Obsidian Flow, created 1,300 years ago, covers 700 acres. It is hard to fathom as you drive through the summit area that you are within a 17 square mile caldera at the summit of a 500 square mile volcano, a volcano that remains very active to this day. Newberry is both seismically and geothermally active. Geologists believe the caldera sits over a shallow magma body only 2 to 5 kilometers deep. Visitors see numerous cinder cones (over 400 throughout the area), miles of basalt flows, as well as rhyolite flows of obsidian.
“Seek not that the things which happen should happen as you wish; but wish the things which happen to be as they are, and you will have a tranquil flow of life”
~Epictetus
The Bear rivers flows with great vigor just close to it's source in the Himalayas.