View allAll Photos Tagged haystack

Shot on iPhone 5.

In the past year or so, Flickr mates Neil and Perry both took some very cool shots of round haystacks. I knew I wanted to take a picture of them in Tasmania - just so I could be a member of their club (not that my pics are in the same class).

My first attempt at great light - but afterwards I noticed powerlines I hadn't seen before that ruined it. So ducked out in the rain today to get this.

haystacks and monastery

Explore - Jan 21, 2009 #118

Cannon Beach, Oregon

Haystack Rock Monolith

Seaside OR USA

4 Frame Panoramic

3 exposure per frame

HDR

12 shots total

Canon T2i

Sigma 18-55mm

ISO 100 f/8

Photoshop

Oloneo PhotoEnigine

Topaz Plugins

 

Purchase my photos here

I used the High Pass filter here.

Hasselblad

Canon Beach, OR

April 2010

Haystack Rock and Needles, Cannon Beach, Oregon

Haystack Rock is a 235-foot (72-meter) sea stack in Cannon Beach, Oregon.

Haystack Rock and Cannon Beach, Oregon

Here's a nameless tarn at the summit of Haystacks. On the left is Ennerdale, the remotest valley in England. High Crag is in the cloud line while the path on the right will lead you down to Buttermere.

 

Even if the summit is busy there's always little corners of Haystacks in which to enjoy the peace, quiet and solitude.

 

pinhole

zero45

kodak bw400cn

6x9 film back

 

june 2010

Close to home.

Walk round the village

Cannon Beach, Oregon, USA

NWP 1501 heads West over Haystack Bridge with 7 cars. After the bridge didn't lock into place at first and after it locked, the 1501 heads West quickly so S.M.A.R.T. can continue testing.

 

©FranksRails Photography, LLC.

One of the stops, from my trip this past weekend, was Cannon Beach, Oregon. This is a picture of Haystack Rock. Shot with the sony A7riii and the Olympus OM 35mm lens.

Haystack Rock is a 235-foot tall monolith on Oregon's northern coast and the third-tallest such structure in the world.

 

Composed of basalt, Haystack Rock was formed by lava flows emanating from the Grand Ronde Mountains 10 to 17 million years ago. The lava flows created many of the Oregon coast's natural features, including Tillamook Head, Arch Cape, and Saddle Mountain.

 

Haystack Rock was once joined to the coastline but years of erosion have since separated the monolith from the coast.

 

Three smaller, adjacent rock formations to the south of Haystack Rock are collectively called "The Needles".

 

We logged nearly 600 miles in 72 hours trying to see beauty the state of Oregon has to offer and barely scratched the surface.

Cannon Beach and Haystack Rock are pretty amazing, and apparently, it's a good place to surf too.

Cannon Beach - Oregon

Haystack rock @ Cannon Beach, Oregon, last Friday night 4/11/08, right at sunset. Windless night, the stars, the moon, the sound of the ocean. What a beautiful sunset. What a wonderful night. I am privileged to see such beauty.

 

After this photo, I walked to where my wife and son were having a beach fire. Sitting there, watching the stars...it all came together.

15 frame panorama, 195mb original.

Man stripped to waist stacking bales

Cannon Beach, Oregon

 

October 28, 2015

 

©Dale Haussner

Poetography ... a weekly inspiration This week's theme is Remember....

Font: Learning Curve Pro Regular

Treatment: JixiPix - Simply HDR B&W 17 adjusted

 

Live this day as if it will be your last. Remember that you will only find tomorrow on the calendars of fools. By C.S. Lewis

  

This was taken on one of my trips to the Oregon Coast and I remember how beautiful it was that day and the wind was fairly light...

We hiked up the old trail on Mt. Si. While the new trail is reported to be the most heavily hiked trail in the State of Washington with approximately 100,000 a year, the old trail is far less traveled. We scrambled up an additional couple hundred feet on the enormous rock formation on the summit popularly called the "Haystack". I have hiked up Mt. Si many times but had never been up on the Haystack, so it was a thrill to do this. The couple on the bottom right of the image give you a sense of the dimensions of this space. The fog was rolling in and out and within moments of taking this photograph, the clouds enveloped the Haystack.

The much visited Murphy's Haystacks near Streaky Bay on the Eyre Peninsula.... Lovely chat with the farmer whose land they are on too.... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphy%27s_Haystacks

The iconic Haystack Rock at Cannon Beach on the Oregon Coast.

I updated this photo January 22, 2015 using Lightroom to try to bring out more detail.

Haystack Rock, Cannon Beach, Oregon.

JPEG created from RAW.

f/22 1/5 iso 100 18mm.

A pano stitch. with Haystacks on the left and the High Stile range at first light.

Lens: Minolta MC Tele Rokkor 100mm f/2.5 Panorama

1501 finally highball's across Haystack

View on Black

 

I've seen this gorgeous rock in many photos. No matter how many different ways I look at it, there's something compelling about it. Not only is it a wonderful subject, Haystack Rock is the first subject that creatively inspired me, and it was one of my first 10 exposures, ever taken since purchasing my first camera. Coming back here ignited an all too familiar flame, within a special place in my heart.

 

Twitter | 500PX | Google+ | Facebook | Jesse Lopez Photography

Cannon Beach, OR

I have a free trial of Adode Creative Cloud so playing around with Photoshop and Lightroom.

 

Space Cowboy by Kacey Musgraves - Is this about me or is about someone else that's the mystery I guess!!!

 

You look out the window while I look at you

Saying I don't know would be like saying that the sky ain't blue

And boots weren't made for sitting by the door

Since you don't wanna stay anymore

 

You can have your space, cowboy

I ain't gonna fence you in

Go on, ride away in your Silverado

Guess I'll see you 'round again

I know my place, and it ain't with you

Well sunsets fade, and love does, too

Yeah, we had our day in the sun

When a horse wants to run, there ain't no sense in closing the gate

You can have your space, cowboy

  

After the gold rush, there ain't no reason to stay

Shoulda learned from the movies that good guys don't run away

But roads weren't made to not go down

And there ain't room for both of us in this town

 

So you can have your space, cowboy

I ain't gonna fence you in

Go on, ride away in your Silverado

I'll see you around again

'Cause I know my place, and it ain't with you

Sunsets fade, and love does, too

We had our day in the sun

When a horse wants to run, ain't no sense in closing the gate

So you can have your space

  

Star trails over Haystack Mountain on the Navajo Nation, McKinley County, New Mexico. This must be seen at full size, on black. 245 photographs comprise this layered star trails shot over a 1.5 hour time frame.

 

See on black: www.flickriver.com/photos/34068123@N07/4586372069/#large

  

Murphys Haystacks consists of two separate though clearly related groups of large granite pillars and boulders standing near the crest of a broad domical hill, here called Oakfront Hill, just to the west of the Streaky Bay - Port Kenny Road, some 30km northwest of Port Kenny on the west coast of South Australia.

 

The origin of the granite rocks, or inselbergs is fascinating. Made up of pink (some call it red) Hiltaba granite, so named after a sheep station situated some way north-east, the haystacks have stood on top of the earth in their present form for nearly 34,000 years.

 

"Murphys Haystacks" were named after Denis Murphy, who was born at Inchor, Ballyagran, Country Limerick, Ireland on March 25, 1858.

 

He arrived in South Australia on the ship "Nebo" in 1882 and spent several years working at Peterborough and Yongala before taking up land at Calca.

 

He named the property "Oakfront" after his mother's home in Ireland and worked with his brother Jeremiah, who took up the property Drinanvale in the Koolkanna area.

 

The Murphy brothers cleared their land (the first cleared land in the district) using a log attached to two teams of bullocks.

 

Denis Murphy claimed to have been the first man to cart and ship wheat from the bay of Port Kenny, which was then known at Murphy's Landing

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