View allAll Photos Tagged icicle
Macro of little icicle, 1cm, hanging on a fence.
"Winter giveth the fields, and the trees so old,
their beards of icicles and snow."
Quote - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
And fences are given their frozen tears ;-))
HFF everyone!
The patterns of icicles are always good. Reminded me of my youth when we would grab them off the side of a garage and have sword fights with our friends! I think I was a Pirate in my previous life!
Happy Mono Monday!
I was pleasantly surprised by the vibrant turquoise in the icicles this morning. I haven't been out here in late winter before. I imagine this effect increases as the frost builds up. One of my favorite places close to home.
☼My works are often BEST VIEWED LARGE ☼
Playing with roof Icicles.
Silhouette tree=PNGWING
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Just when we thought the snow and ice was finished in what is now known as the warmest winter recorded, a little cold spell with some sub zero temperatures have provided us with an Easter Winter landscape, and after picking up some fallen icicles planting a Spring Icicle Garden, Happy Easter!!
Icicles formed from splashes under a fallen tree over the Tenaya Creek.
First week of February, 2020
Mirror Lake Trail,
Yosemite Valley,
Yosemite National Park
California, USA
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Collective 52 Photo Project. Week 49/52 ''Ice''
Last Winter was exceptionally cold here in Thessaloniki Greece. This image was taken in a public garden where the water usually cascades over a wall. The garden is close to the sea, which normally means it is slightly warmer.
idag såg jag att istapparna som hängde var borta men där var nya istappar som står uppåt istället, det såg lite komiskt ut .
I've never before seen icicles in Soda Dam on the Jemez Creek -- what a treat!
The Soda Dam is made of travertine, calcium carbonate precipitated from groundwater. There are currently 15 springs and seeps in the Soda Dam area with a maximum temperature of 48 degrees C. The springs that precipitated the travertine discharge from a strand of the Jemez fault zone that runs through the area. The Jemez fault predates the formation of the Valles caldera.
The maximum age of the travertine deposits that make up the Soda Dam is 7000 years. Older deposits in the area have been dated at 480,000 to 1 million years old. This is about the same age as the Valles caldera.
About 35 years ago, the State Highway Department dynamited a hole in the dam in order to build the current road and the plumbing of the hot spring waters was disrupted. Because of the disruption, the Soda Dam is now slowly disintegrating.