View allAll Photos Tagged haystack
Low tide is a swell time to be at Haystack Rock, because of all the sea critters you can see in the tidal pools and around the low portions of the rock.
I've been wanting to take a picture of a haystack for a while...(I don't know why) . Going up to a gig in Cayuga I saw some.
July 7th, 2007.
Looking south along Cannon Beach towards Haystack Rock. As we drove south along the coast, we stopped and spent a little time in Cannon Beach, walking the beach and looking at the shops. I can see why it is a popular vacation destination.
Haystack Rock, home to an impressive variety of birds and marine life, is a designated marine garden and a wilderness area. Volunteers with the Haystack Rock Awareness Program offer interpretive tours, educate visitors and act as stewards of the 16.5 million-year-old sea stack.
»Local guardians of Haystack Rock look for backup [The Oregonian]
Photo: Steven Nehl/The Oregonian
Small tarn on Haystacks looking towards Pillar. This is where Alfred Wainwright chose to have his ashes scattered after walking all the hills in the Lake District. If you manage to get up there, you will understand.
Horizontal control disk HAYSTACK on the first floor of the tower. Viewed through a hole in the second floor.
Haystack building was an art, the finished stack had to shed the water, the sape being formed by placing each sheaf (grain still in the head on the stem tied in a bundle) so that the centre of the stack became higher. The sheaves were tossed onto the stack from a waggon by pitchfork.
Northern Grampians and Mt Zero behind several large haystacks, off Dooen school Rd to the north of Horsham
Postcard made by Josephine.
Haystack Rock, one of the most beloved attraction of the Oregon Coast is located at Canon Beach, Oregon. It can be seen towering 235 feet out of the ocean. The areas around Haystack teem with many varieties of marine life. Delicate sea creatures inhabit the surrounding rocks. A few of the bird species that find a home on Haystack Rock are the western gull, tufted puffin, and cormorant.