View allAll Photos Tagged streams

I was driving home the other day and I saw this stream so I pulled my car over and took some pics. I used a variable ND Filter for this shot so I could do a slow exposure as it was still pretty light out in order to get the water to look "cloudy."

 

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Ridge top view in Gates of the Arctic National Park

   

Stream Adventures. Black Hill Nature Programs, Black Hill Regional Park. August 1, 2020. Photos by Marilyn Sklar, Montgomery Parks.

Bridal Veil and Champagne Waterfall walk from Lemonthyme Lodge

Stream Adventures. Black Hill Nature Programs, Black Hill Regional Park. August 1, 2020. Photos by Marilyn Sklar, Montgomery Parks.

le fleuve de métal

Just after the start of the trail to the falls

Spring stream Hodgsons Mill

 

Taken on a "loop hike" starting and ending at the Bear Lake trail-head in Rocky Mountain National Park.

Taken near Rising Brook.

Manor Estate Stafford UK. 14th February 2013

Their projects have included everything from beautification of what was once the main entrance of the village to sponsoring a bookmobile. Carol Stream, Illinois. (Slide 97)

Castlefields Pleasure Day 2014

#37

pandarakuthu water fall(1), kaliyar, idukki, kerala, india

 

please check my Jeddah special photo stream. www.flickr.com/photos/jeddah_sajith/with/4400951892/

 

Junkyard workshop near Lancaster, CA April 2011

Morning mistress maggie

2011 - Day 306. Nov. 2, 2011.

 

Another shot from yesterday's hike along the Boyne River near Hoggs Falls. The combination of polarizing filter and low afternoon rays breaking through the clouds lent a nice warmth to the scene.

Stream Adventures. Black Hill Nature Programs, Black Hill Regional Park. August 1, 2020. Photos by Marilyn Sklar, Montgomery Parks.

Evening light over the wild flowers around a stream.

Stream Adventures. Black Hill Nature Programs, Black Hill Regional Park. August 1, 2020. Photos by Marilyn Sklar, Montgomery Parks.

Our guides on the Big Ice trek frequently had to use their ice picks to create steps or flatten out areas for us to step onto. At this crossing, we had to step on the rock in the middle and jump across. Our crampons made this difficult because, while they provided superior traction on ice, they could easily slip off the rock. Also in this shot, you can see all the dust and debris that gets blown onto the glacier. The rocks are carried along the surface of the glacier from far above. Sometimes, the debris preferentially melts the ice beneath forming small crevasses that tend to collect more debris and become rivers and small streams.

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