View allAll Photos Tagged haystack
Haystack at Chailly, 1865
Claude Monet
Floral interpretation by Liz Greene for Art Alive 2009 at The San Diego Museum of Art
This is Haystack Rock along the Oregon Coast at Cannon Beach. It was amazingly stormy and dramatic this day.
Old postcard given to Gary by our friend Amy. This was mailed in August of 1913, just two weeks after my father was born. This is the biggest haystack we've ever seen. Judging by the size of the horses and humans, I'm guessing it must be 45 or 50 feet tall. Like a four story building, and not even baled. It's just loose hay, piled ever so skillfully.
Danny Summerhill, Tom Danielson, Taylor Phinney (Team Slipstream)
Haystack Mountain Team Time Trial
4/12/08
Boulder CO
Haystack Rock at Cannon Beach, Oregon. The green face of the rock is where the Tufted Puffins have their burrows. Not many such rocks have sufficient soil on them so that these birds can dig burrows.
This was taken at high tide and "only" about 100 meters of sand to the water. At low tide, the water withdraws so that about half the bottom of the rock is exposed.
For this photo I was standing more or less in the front yard where I saw the Red Crossbills. Not a bad view. - but windy. (Alas, I saw no Plovers running around in the grass on the beach.)
I spent a perfect summer day at the Oregon coast last Friday, an outing that included cheese, wine tasting, a waterfall, and a lighthouse. How to top all that fun goodness? With a sunset, of course! In the evening I headed onto the sand at Cannon Beach and made the trek to Haystack Rock. All day, I was unsure whether I'd actually get to see a sunset, as fog kept rolling in onshore. Even ten minutes before this shot, I was worried about those clouds hovering on the horizon. In the end, I had nothing to fear; at 8:43 PM the sun touched the horizon and drowned in the sea, a fitting end to a fantastic day.