View allAll Photos Tagged haystack
A photo I took with a borrowed camera (D700), on a nice afternoon on the hills in the Satic village, near Piatra Craiului.
The Haystack Bridge is down, and one can hear horns in both directions. This means there will be a meet in the Petaluma Siding. Not more than 5 minutes later, the two DMU's will meet. Seen here, the bridge is being locked into place across the Petaluma River so that the railroad can safely cross.
©FranksRails Photography, LLC.
Camille Pissarro French, 1830-1903
Haystacks, Morning, Eragny . 1899
Oil on canvas
Signed and dated (lower left): C.Pissarro 99
Bequest of Douglas Dillon, 2003
2004.359
From the placard. Metropolitan Museum of Art
Somewhere between Corley and Maxstoke, I think a recent storm had broken a branch from a tree above this haystack and it made for an interesting picture.
Skyla Haystack ...blonde and a hot stripper @ Southern's Passion Strip Club ... come see her in action! LOL
Murphy’s Haystacks near Streaky Bay, South Australia. Large pink granite boulders. Legend has it that they got their name from a passerby in a coach remarking that they looked like hay stacks from a distance. The owner of the farm was a Mr Murphy at the time and the name stuck. This shot on afternoon, previous shot early morning.
Murphy’s Haystacks are ancient, wind-worn pillars and boulders of pink granite estimated to be over 1,500 million years old. ... SA
Returned to Oregon for 11 days in July. First time back in the PNW in 6 years. And again I don't understand why I continue to live in the midwest. Here are a few captures from our time in Cannon Beach.
Haystack Rock is a 235-foot (72-meter) sea stack in Cannon Beach, Oregon. A popular tourist destination, the monolithic rock is adjacent to the beach and accessible by foot at low tide. The Haystack Rock tide pools are home to many intertidal animals, including starfish, sea anemone, crabs, chitons, limpets, and sea slugs. The rock is also a nesting site for many seabirds, including terns and puffins
-Wikipedia
Afternoon light at Haystack Rock, Oregon's arguably most famous view. Semi-sunny February day with temps in the 60s...what could be bad?
Haystack Rock. Cannon Beach. Oregon.
re-work of a digital image from a scan from a print from a negative from black and white film out of a Holga...
10x10 print as a gift to my wife, partner, soul mate (over-used term, but it's the truth). Our favorite place in the world.
This is a repost. I was going to replace the original photo, but decided just to upload once again.
Haystacks, or Hay Stacks, is a hill in England's Lake District, situated at the south-eastern end of the Buttermere Valley. Although not of any great elevation (597 m, 1,958 ft), Haystacks has become one of the most popular fells in the area.
This fame is partly due to the writings of Alfred Wainwright, who espoused its attractions and chose it as the place where he wanted his ashes scattered. Its summit is interesting and contains a number of attractive rock formations and tarns.
The Western Fells occupy a triangular sector of the Lake District, bordered by the River Cocker to the north east and Wasdale to the south east. Westwards the hills diminish toward the coastal plain of Cumberland. At the central hub of the high country are Great Gable and its satellites, while two principal ridges fan out on either flank of Ennerdale, the western fells in effect being a great horseshoe around this long wild valley. Although lower than its neighbours, Haystacks provides the connection between the Great Gable group and the northern branch of the horseshoe. Immediately to the south east are Brandreth, Green Gable and Great Gable, forming the head of Ennerdale. North west are the well known trio of Buttermere fells, High Crag, High Stile and Red Pike.
The Buttermere- Ennerdale watershed descending from Brandreth is initially indistinct, running north west across a broad plateau. After half a mile it reaches the rocky protuberance of Great Round How (1,817 ft) and then its character changes completely. The watershed narrows to fine ridge, steep enough on the Ennerdale side and rimmed by crags throughout above the head of Buttermere. The beauty of the scene is completed by a succession of rocky tops and nestling tarns, until the high point is reached at the western end. A sharp descent over rock now follows, leading to Scarth Gap (1,460 ft), a walkers' pass between the two valleys. Beyond the ridge rises again to High Crag, a steep climb on scree.
The northern face of Haystacks is topped by crags which giving a soaring curved profile from the settlement of Gatesgarth at their base. On the left in this view is Green Crag, while the highest section, unnamed on Ordnance Survey maps is called Big Stack by Wainwright. Warnscale Beck, one of the feeder streams of Buttermere, runs down beneath Green Crag from its source near Great Round How. There are the remains of extensive quarries on the upper slopes of Warnscale, including Dubs, once served by a tramway from the summit of Honister Pass. Across Warnscale is Fleetwith Pike, a satellite of Grey Knotts.
The summit of Haystacks has a number of tarns. The highest is just below the top, generally referred to as the summit tarn but officially unnamed. Halfway along the ridge is Innominate Tarn, a popular beauty spot with an indented rocky shore and a line of tiny islets. At the eastern end is Blackbeck Tarn, a long slender pool which overflows through a cleft in the crags
The summit sits on a short rocky spine, set at right angles to the ridge. Both ends of the ridge have cairns, that at the northern end being the accepted summit. A lower parallel ridge lies just to the east. The view is excellent, the high points being Gable Crag on Great Gable and the western panorama of Ennerdale Water and High Crag. Crummock Water and Buttermere are also well seen. The foreground picture revolves around Innominate Tarn, lying in full view to the east.
Murphy’s Haystacks are ancient, wind-worn pillars and boulders of pink granite estimated to be over 1,500 million years old.
Set in the middle of a wheat field and surrounded by mallee scrub, they are one of the most popular and photographed attractions on the Eyre Peninsula.
Murphy’s Haystacks are located on the Cash family farm, 39 kilometres south of Streaky Bay and just two kilometres off the main Flinders Highway on the main road into Calca and Point Labatt.
Haystack Rock is a 235-foot (72-meter) tall monolith (or sea stack) on the Oregon coast in the northwestern United States, the third-tallest such "intertidal" meaning it can be reached by land, structure in the world.
A popular tourist destination, the rock is adjacent to the beach and accessible by foot during low tide. Haystack Rock tide pools are home to many intertidal animals, including starfish, anemone, crabs, chitons, limpets, and sea slugs. The rock is also a refuge for many sea birds, including terns and puffins.
~Wikipedia