View allAll Photos Tagged haystackrock
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Please do not add me as a contact without commenting or faving my photos. A non commenting contact is not what I desire. I will not follow a 'non commenter.'
If you add me as a contact please feel free to make any thoughtful comment you wish. Faving a photo will be considered a comment. Thanks for understanding, sharing thoughts and ideas is what I would like to get out of flickr.
After a day to restore body and bike, 63-mile ride from Bandon to Gold Beach. A beautiful day along the coast. Caught up with fellow cyclists that I met in Pacific City.
This is the last haystack I've seen piled up like this. Nowadays they use machines to roll it or have it in cubes. LOL.
A total of 21 vertical frames stacked and stitched.
This image still has those ghost like people resulting of the shorter shutter speed, which I did not bother removing it during the post process. I got lazy.
I still have few images taken at different vantage point.
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Haystack Rock - Cannon Beach, Oregon
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I was so lucky to see the most amazing sunset on the Oregon Coast in Cannon Beach yesterday - this shot was captured just after sunset by some driftwood with Haystack Rock in the background.
October 2003: After taking pictures of the sun setting behind the haystack rock at Cannon Beach in Oregon, we walked up the beach to get to our car. I lucked out when I looked back and caught this view. (03-10-26-2302)
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*** NO MULTIPLE INVITES, PLEASE ***
I turn 58 in a few days and I'm starting to feel it. I've been an empty nester for several years and won't be getting any grandchildren, we've a former president who's called himself a dictator running again and half the country says yes, and the world appears on the brink of a third world war......
and then there is this....
I'd like the world to blow this up as large as they can and stare at it for ten minutes and reflect on what's actually important. For me, it's the infinitely patient woman in the camp chair behind me wearing a trench coat and wrapped in my blanket, the only part of her that is visible is her huge beautiful smile.
Let's stop arguing and start talking, let's stop thinking of ourselves and start thinking of each other. We are only on this planet for a blink of an eye so hugs people, make love not war.
{End of speech, Rich steps down from his soap box and returns silently to his den)
Yesterday was the 33rd annual shove the tree up the angels' arse day so I've got some catching up to do, see ya soon although I may be done for the year or there won't be anything to put under said tree. :)
Pacific City to Newport. 50 miles with one grueling painful climb due to a missed turn. But a wonderful sunny day otherwise.
Here’s one from Cannon Beach, Oregon taken over the 4th of July. We camped at the only campground in Cannon Beach which happens to be privately owned called Wright’s For Camping. It was really clean and a nice spot to camp. The only problem was that our camping spot was right next to the road so make sure you look at a campground map before you book a spot.
“In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven” – Matthew 5:16
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 beauty and mystery of the ocean, fills our lives with wonders, vast beyond our imagination. M. L. Borges, By The Sea
To all the dad's out there, "Happy Father's Day".
Another clip from my recent trip to Cannon Beach, Oregon.
(Best viewed on large - click on image)
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Scott Betz 2018 - © All Rights Reserved
First post in a long while and first from a family road trip to Oregon. Shot straight from the camera on a Fuji X-T1 with a Nikkor 50mm f2.8 using a custom film sim of pushed Ilford HP5. I was scared to shoot only film the whole trip, so wanted to find an alternative to get as close as possible as a back up.
The 2015 Perseid Meteor Shower was spectacular from the Oregon Coast! I shot the meteor shower from Cape Kiwanda near Pacific City, Oregon over the course of three hours. I did manage to get at least one good fireball in the frame and even a really amazing glow on the horizon through the haze behind the haystack rock from a passing ship on the ocean. I was really happy with this composition and scene. Hope you also like it!
For this shot I blended a 225 second shot (ISO 1600, f/2.8) for the foreground and two 30 second (ISO 3200, f/2.8) shots for the meteors seen in the frame.
On this wonderfully moody morning at Cannon Beach, the rock stands tall, its majestic form accentuated by the soft, muted light. A simple yet profound sight that invites contemplation and appreciation of nature's tranquil splendor.
Thanks so much for looking!
Lisa
Pacific City to Newport. 50 miles with one grueling painful climb due to a missed turn. But a wonderful sunny day otherwise.
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 sea birds, including terns and puffins. (Wikipedia) Scanned from a Kodachrome slide.
Cannon Beach was named for a cannon from the US Navy schooner Shark that washed ashore and was discovered on the beach. Print size 13x19 inches.
Aerial panoramic view of Cannon Beach and Haystack Rock in the background.
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This rock formation is an Irregular Basalt Formation that was the result of a lava flow taking place 5 million to 23 million years ago. It is estimated to be 430 feet tall. Often referred to as Oregon's other Haystack Rock in that it is the same as the more famous one located just north at Cannon Beach.
Even being in August it was a very windy day that put a bit of a bite in the air. The waves crashed and the dune grass rattled and whistled.
Pacific City to Newport. 50 miles with one grueling painful climb due to a missed turn. But a wonderful sunny day otherwise.
Haystack, Canon Beach Oregon. Even the name is iconic, people travel the globe to see it and folks like us put it on our list as must haves.
I had always assumed erosion had caused this, but I was mostly wrong. Haystack and it's fellow marvels here on the west coast were sent here via the Yellowstone hot spot. That's right kids, lava millions of years ago was sent to the sea and the movement of the tectonic plates are lifting the basalt towers up to once again bask in the sun. Erosion of the weaker elements gives them their unique and wonderful shapes, this one being the most famous of them all.
Seeing it is worth the trip and Pelican Brewery is within walking distance if your travels were dry...... :-)