View allAll Photos Tagged mesa
The Blue Mesa Overlook, in the Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona. The Petrified Forest is a small national park, but it contains some really unique landscapes (like the Blue Mesa and the Painted Desert). Definitely worth a stop if you're driving by on I-40.
Y fue la mesa 4, y en realidad ... fuimos durante toda la cena, cuatro ...
Nikon D3
Nikon 85mm AF-D 1.4
© Manuel Orero
All rights reserved
Todos los derechos reservados
Cualquiera de las imágenes publicadas en este Flickr, estan registradas. El uso sin consentimiento por mi parte de ellas, reportará la denuncia al registro de propiedad intelectual.
Any of the images published in this Flickr are registered. Use without consent on my part of it, will report the complaint to the registration of intellectual property.
© All Rights Reserved.
About 14 centuries ago the Anasazi indians settled in the Mesa Verde, CO area. They built these magnificent cliff dwellings were they resided for several hundred years. Then about 400 to 500 years ago they just vanished.
This is a small slice of the Spruce House. As you can see there is a small amount of snow present. I like to go in March or April when the tourist season is down.
View large for best details.
farm3.static.flickr.com/2677/4028577773_be410209d3_o.jpg
Colorado, USA
Thank you for your comments and views.
If you need one of these for your yard I know where you can get one. Val Vista & Main Street in Mesa, Arizona.
This shot pretty well exemplifies why I like to carry a quality compact camera as my second camera in the field. My main camera was locked in place--I had spent my time in total darkness composing the shot using my headlamp and long exposures, and about 20 other photographers had subsequently shown up so moving the tripod at that point wasn’t practical! Once the light did start to appear (and the details became visible), having a quality compact at my side gave me the flexibility to walk, crawl, and slither around capturing much more spontaneous and creative compositions.
That said, it’s frankly still a miracle this shot is in focus... given it’s still dark and I’m hand-holding the shot! Had to take the ISO up to 1600 to do it, which is sketchy at best with the Canon S90. But because the foreground is silhouette and the sky is fairly texturally uniform, noise reduction could be liberally applied in post without impact the image too much.
The iconic sunrise shot. It is easy to see why this is such a popular location--lovely looking into the valley through the arch!
The trail around the mesa is actually a hiking trail.
Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or other media
without my explicit permission.
© All rights reserved
Contact: julesp88@yahoo.com
After a difficult uphill hike - two steps forward, one step back - along the loose scree of the Caineville mesa, I had finally gained enough height to look over the otherwordly formation below me. The setting sun cast a wonderful yellow glow as my eyes kept following the countours below me, back and forth, over and over. A meditation of just me, and this strange land below.
The Mesa Arch located in Canyonlands National Park in Utah at sunrise on a very cold extremely windy day in December 31, 2011. _DSC1392A
Spring Break in Canyonlands, Moab, and Arches National Park was a lot of fun. Waking up and heading to a sunrise this good was a highlight of the week.
Moonrise over Grand Mesa in western Colorado.
This is a cool place if you can get to it - at 10,000 ft the air is just a bit clearer than at lower altitudes. Also means that you got to go slow on any hikes, less oxygen up there :)
The 'shadow of the earth' was almost florescent below the mountains, you can get some great light up so high...
Looking through Mesa arch in Canyonlands National park, Utah. Oh, it was cold that March morning :) This is a hand blended HDR to reveal detail in this high dynamic range scene.
Camera Canon 5D mark 2
Lens Canon TS-17
Focal Length 17mm
Aperture f/16
ISO/Film 160
Follow me on 500px.com for my latest work: