View allAll Photos Tagged haystack
These little haystacks have fascinated me for years because we live in a rural fishing community and no grazing animals are nearby
Sumit tarns - Haystacks.
Grey Crags, Green Gable, Windy Gap, Great Gable and the shoulder of Kirk Fell are viewed here.
Steep cliffs line the trail looking over Haystack Rock - watch your step when taking photos! And be very careful when taking your dog on a hike along this trail.
A few miles in on the Highline the trail climbs up a notch next to Haystack Butte. If you view the larger version of this photo, you can view tiny people making their way up the steep mountainside like a group of worker ants.
Haystack Falls is one of the larger falls along Going-to-the-Sun Road. Haystack Creek, which feeds it, had to be crossed via this disintegrating snow bridge. Unlike the trail carved into the rock ledge at the beginning of the hike, this seemed more than a little sketchy to me.
©2014 Timothy Linn
All Rights Reserved
View looking south along the Oregon coast down the beach with Haystack Rock off to the right.
Canon Beach, Oregon
Haystack Rock near Cannon Beach, Oregon on a clear night with nearly full moon. Was a 30 second exposure, ISO 400, with a Panasonic DMC-FZ35 camera. The moon was to my left at this point. I particularly like the "dreamy" appearance of the surf, the stars, and the reflection of the clouds on the wet beach.
A sweeping, south-facing view of the autumn foliage over Aroostook County. State Route 163 is visible in the lower portion of the photograph, running from west to east.
Pam Norton owner of Haystack Co. is a Artist in metal welding along with a unique antique shop on Highway 2 in Startup, Wa.
Layers of ingredients are added to build an Adventist favorite—the Haystack. The event was created in an effort to break the Guinness World Record for the largest number of people to participate in a haystack potluck. 60th General Conference Session of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, in San Antonio, Texas. ©2015 North American Division of Seventh-day Adventists. Bryant Taylor/NAD
Haystack Rock seen from Cannon Beach. Cannon Beach takes its name from a cannon that washed ashore in the area from the 1846 wreck of USS Shark. The Shark went down in heavy seas off the Columbia River bar several miles north. Cannon Beach, Oregon. (30 December 2019; Nathanael Miller)
Layers of ingredients are added to build an Adventist favorite—the Haystack. The event was created in an effort to break the Guinness World Record for the largest number of people to participate in a haystack potluck. 60th General Conference Session of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, in San Antonio, Texas. ©2015 North American Division of Seventh-day Adventists. Bryant Taylor/NAD
Layers of ingredients are added to build an Adventist favorite—the Haystack. The event was created in an effort to break the Guinness World Record for the largest number of people to participate in a haystack potluck. 60th General Conference Session of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, in San Antonio, Texas. ©2015 North American Division of Seventh-day Adventists. Bryant Taylor/NAD
12 oz. butterscotch chips
6 oz. chocolate chips
14 oz. peanuts
4 oz. potato sticks
Melt chips in double boiler (microwave also works), add peanuts and sticks. Drop on waxed paper to set.