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Walking along the trail to the paint pots in Kootenay National Park British Columbia. The color is from the ochre beds.
A re-edit of a photo I took over 15 years ago with my then-new Canon EOS 30D DSLR and its "better" kit lens, the EF-S 17-85mm F/4-5.6 IS USM. Revisiting the image, I made adjustments and applied a lookup table in Luminar 4 then I loaded it into Photoshop for some further tweaking.
The sun came out this morning after yesterday's storm. This is a panorama of two images of a local stream.
MTA Chair & CEO Janno Lieber, MTA Chief Construction & Development Officer Jamie Torres-Springer, LIRR President Rob Free, and MTA Chief Accessibility Officer Quemuel Arroyo reveal improvements made to the LIRR Valley Stream station on Friday, Dec 19, 2025.
Conductor.
(Marc A. Hermann / MTA)
In a broken wall the party finds a stream of sulphur that pours poison into the air. A black pudding lives in the stream and attacks the party.
Timber Creek runs through Funks Grove, in Central Illinois. It begins just a mile or so from my house, and ends where it empties into Sugar Creek, a creek that runs directly through Bloomington, Illinois. The course through Funks Grove is spectacular. You'd swear you weren't in Illinois, that's for sure. It's more like the Smoky Mountains or Vermont. It splashes and gurgles as it rushes past fallen trees, sand bars, and rocks in the stream bed. I've seen bobcat tracks at this location, along with countless whitetail deer, raccoon, and other wildlife tracks. The bird population is varied, and there are rare species of wildflowers here as well. This spring, this whole area was covered with bluebells. Now it is covered with leaves. And the stream still flows.
A beautifully contrived 'wild' stream especially given the fact that this is a comparatively newly constructed landscape. The stream extends from the waterfall to the forecourt pond.
Olympic National Park
Long exposure of a stream near Crescent Lake created interesting effects with the water (see the ghost?).
This stream or brook runs across Wheatley Wood from south to north. It is fed from somewhere near the A127 and flows through a culvert under the railway line. I believe it joins the River Crouch north of Rawreth.