View allAll Photos Tagged streaming
Scott Hesse, guitar, during the live stream of a Jazz Performance in the Black Box of the Doudna Fine Arts Center on the campus of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois on August 28, 2020. (Jay Grabiec)
This is an ephemeral stream that flows from a small wetland on top of a massive bedrock ridge that is largely forested with sugar maple. Water flow is reduced to a trickle or more often nothing in between rains. At this point, the stream is beginning to flow over a cliff that drops about 50 meters. The stream does not reach the bottom, at least not on the surface. Instead, it flows under the rocky debris (talus slope) that has accumulated at the base of the cliff.
seen from far above nature makes perfect sense, in a quiet, eternal way. In the rain season the waters flow stronger through rivers and everything else is just green. Here's a place man has learned to respect, it's the Chapada dos Veadeiros National Park.
vista de cima a natureza faz comleto sentido, em uma atmosfera quieta e eterna. Durante a época de chuva os rios do cerrado correm mais forte e vigorosos e toda vegetação exibe um verde profundo. Um lugar que o homem aprendeu a respeitar: Parque Nacional da Chapada dos Veadeiros.
Handmade wooden bridge over a semi-frozen stream on a blustery winter day.
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Photograph © by Regan Photography (2014). All Rights Reserved. This photograph should not be used on websites, blogs or anywhere for that matter without my explicit written permission.
I found this stream to be fairly photogenic with all the leaves around and the direction the light was hitting it.
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More from our trip to Tallulah River with Image Doctor Photograph Restoration and Scott Evans. Not sure if I like the black and white or color better. Thoughts?
Watershed Ambassador Peggy Monkemeier discusses the results of the stream flow measurements with participants.
Stream Assessment Training
Great Swamp Watershed Association
November 10, 2013
It rained today so I thought I'd head out to one of the forest reserves which has a waterfall. However, when I arrived it was threatening to rain again so I did not venture out to the falls. Instead I headed for the streams. This is the first of a handful that I managed to shoot before it started to drizzle.
Comment for improvement is much appreciated. Thank you
Let this be a warning for everyone, streams can attack! :)
When I was snow shoeing through the Fells after the blizzard, I headed back to the area where I photographed the stream a few weeks ago. Parts of the stream were showing, but most of it was hidden under the snow.
When I was hiking over to a spot with a good view of the stream flowing into Quarter Mile Pond, I mis-guessed where the stream was flowing, I stepped down, and the ground disappeared out from under me, and found myself standing in the stream, with one foot stuck on top of the other. All the way to the bottom of two feet of snow
It took me a couple minutes to figure out how to free myself, but after I did, I grabbed this shot while laughing at myself how dumb I was.
I'll get the photo I was trying to take uploaded tomorrow.
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