View allAll Photos Tagged roaring
In Rocky Mountain National Park, from the 2018 archives.
Happy Waterfall Wednesday! Thanks, as always, for stopping by and for all of your support -- I greatly appreciate it.
Please take care and have a happy holiday season.
© Melissa Post 2020
The Kootenai River is 485 miles long and runs from Western Canada through Idaho and Montana. During its journey, it rapidly gathers momentum, dropping 90 feet over a one-mile distance creating the largest free-flowing waterfalls in the northwest, Kootenai Falls. This special place was the sacred home to the Kootenai Indians. The crystal clear waters carve through rocky, rugged landscape and provide food and water for an abundance of wildlife.
Roaring River flows from deep in the King Canyon parks wilderness, then crashes down a narrow chute into a pool.
The power and sound of the waterfall changes through the year.
mermaid and a man are embracing ecstatically,
surrounded by the roaring sea ... observed by the jealous sky ...
;-) ...
ƒ/5.6 14.0 mm 1/500 100
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Roaring Fork River near Carbondale, Colorado...cloudy day occasionally giving way to breaks in the overcast.
This waterfall roars from the spring flooding, yet very few hear it. There are many places in nature that are often overlooked and go completely unnoticed. The what may appear to be glamorous things in life show all their glory and their reward is already given, but hidden treasure like this has a great reward when it is found and the reward to the one who finds it is great!
Please continue to enjoy my fall series in beautiful Muskoka Lakes, Ontario
Please press L for better viewing. You can also visit me at www.azimaging.ca and www.500px.com/azimaging I may not respond to you all, but all comments are highly appreciated
www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWSqv-xsc5o
I want to thank teupy for being my amazing model check out his page lots of great work!! Thank you again hugs!!! <3
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BEST VIEWED LARGE... on the flickr slide show...........
A down low perspective of the massive waterfall in Southern Washington...
Happy Waterfall Wednesday :)
Getting ready to take a ride through the redwoods in the hills above Santa Cruz.
Roaring Camp Railroad in Felton, California.
I guess that is what I like about the sea
It reminds me of feelings
Roaring like this
The noise can be incredible
Crashing waves
This time there was no wind
Just the underlying rest of the storm
Still in the sea
That is us, isn't it
We keep stuff inside
Stuff that needed to be said out loud
Injustice
Being treated with no respect
Mean words from others
Even mean actions from others
All the scars we get
Maybe we act mean towards others because we don't deal with the people that actually was mean to us in the first place
All what we endure
And we just keep them inside us
Doesn't do us any good at all
So important to react
Out of respect for yourself
You grow you know, when you are standing up for yourself
Because that is your job
Luckily there is calm sea too
We all love the reflections and serenity that goes with the calmness
I guess that is what most of us want for ourselves too
Maybe that's why we love water
Water feeds us, nourish us
We can see all sides of our personality in the water and we respect that
We actually love it
Just as we should love ourselves
Just as we should do the honor of respecting ourselves
That's my recipe for nourishing myself
Maybe it will be the recipe for others too
When we do love and respect ourselves, then others will too
It all comes from you
A quartet of Alco Century six-axles roar past one of the abandoned signal bridges scattered along the line as they head East out of Scranton on a freezing January morning with the Pocono turn in tow. East of Dunmore, PA
Usually, more clouds rising off this mountain, but its amount changes often and a photographer must take what is given.