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Haystack by Irene Becker © All rights reserved
Zaovine, Tara National Park, Serbia.
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The iconic sea stack that dominates Cannon Beach. I stood here watching the fog alternately roll in and then dissipate as the daylight faded. Definitely a highlight of my PNW trip!
Haystack blue morning
Haystack rock having a blue morning. View from hotel room on a cold cloudy rainy morning at the Oregon coast. Off in the distance you can see the morning fog creeping up the coast.
Cannon Beach, Oregon - Oregon Coast (of Haystack Rock)
Sony a3000 + SEL55210 @ 55mm f/4.5 1/80 second
#landscape #oregon #Nature #NaturePhotography #LandscapePhotography #oregoncoast #Morning #sea #coast #ocean #beach #waves #rocks
A local field with it's yield of hay from this years crop.
The clouds where looking menacing and sure enough,it pelted down just as I got back to mycar.
Here's Haystack Rock, the most iconic coastal landscape along the Oregon Coast.
This was the very spot that I had my first "keeper".. =) The very first spot that I visited when I first moved to Oregon, and the very first spot that made me gasp in wonder.. So thought I'd toss this up.
Hope you all had a great weekend. And it's been a looooooooong time since I last went out shooting.. Next weekend, Yosemite and Mono Lake! Woohoo!!!
Out for a few weeks - so thought I'd throw up another of the rock. Looking forward to being back and seeing your streams.
Haystacks is the common English title for a series of impressionist paintings by Claude Monet. The principal subject of each painting in the series is stacks of harvested wheat (or possibly barley or oats: the original French title, Les Meules à Giverny, simply means The Stacks at Giverny). The title refers primarily to a twenty-five canvas series which Monet began near the end of the summer of 1890 and continued through the following spring, though Monet also produced five earlier paintings using this same stack subject. A precursor to the series is the 1884 Haystack Near Giverny.
The series is famous for the way in which Monet repeated the same subject to show the differing light and atmosphere at different times of day, across the seasons and in many types of weather.
The series is among Monet's most notable works. The largest Haystacks collections are held at the Musée d'Orsay and Musée Marmottan Monet in Paris, and in the Art Institute of Chicago. Other collections include the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Metropolitan Museum and Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo, and the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris. The Art Institute of Chicago collection includes six of the twenty-five Haystacks.
Other museums that hold parts of this series include the Getty Center in Los Angeles, the Hill-Stead Museum in Farmington, Connecticut (which also has one of five from the earlier 1888–89 harvest), the Scottish National Gallery, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Kunsthaus Zürich, Tel Aviv Museum of Art and the Shelburne Museum, Vermont. Private collections hold the remaining Haystacks paintings.
"The tarn is the location where Alfred Wainwright's ashes were scattered. He had expressed this wish in Fellwanderer: The Story behind the Guide Books:
'Every day that passes is a day less. That day will come when there is nothing left but memories. And afterwards, a last long resting place by the side of Innominate Tarn, on Haystacks, where the water gently laps the gravelly shore and the heather blooms and Pillar and Gable keep unfailing watch. A quiet place, a lonely place. I shall go to it, for the last time, and be carried: someone who knew me in life will take me and empty me out of a little box and leave me there alone. And if you, dear reader, should get a bit of grit in your boot as you are crossing Haystacks in the years to come, please treat it with respect. It might be me.'"
Murphy's Haystacks are granite outcrops left after erosion. Thought to be in this form for at least 100'000 years. They are big and impressive!
Picture credit to my wife Sharon, a beautiful composition I think.
This was taken a while back when we made a little trip to the Oregon coast... A very popular destination, Haystack Rock...
We were disappointed to see this view completely fogged in on our trip down the Oregon coast, but the weather was better on the way back,.
Buttermere from Haystacks 2-8-17
Out on DofE expedition today. This was shortly after meeting the group at Scarth Gap, and shortly before two hours of rain.
Copyright © 2016 AzmanAbdullah Photography. All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce this image on websites, blogs or publications without expressed written permission from the photographer.
Thank you.
I’ve put together a little video of the day I took this photo, and others. Some nice timelapses and landscapes, drone footage and a beautiful day out. If you want to check it out youtu.be/vLhzZkYUtQ8
www.flickriver.com/photos/cliffzener/
This ones from quite a while back. I have only had really good shooting conditions here a few times in more than a year. Talk about lousy timing.
July of 2008
© Stephan Kochling
The sun was setting and illuminated the mist at Haystack Rock. A nice slow wave came up right into the middle of the shot.