View allAll Photos Tagged tangled
how quickly it can all change
it’s like being tangled in roots
only to be freed for a little bit of air
and then it sucks you back in
with only one breath
This particular pond that the Blue Heron frequents has a lot of Water Lily plants that suddenly burst into growth mode as the temperature warms up. In one such instance, this Heron got more than what he bargained for; as he dove his beak into water in order to catch a fish he got tangled up in the weed. At the end he managed to free himself up and went to sit on a floating log to nurse his ego. Richmond Hill, Ontario
Yellowstone National Park
Wyoming
A rare moment here where the visibility was over 50-100 meters.
Please, no posting of group icons.
Parts of the shoreline of Lake Tyrrell are made of tangled remains of mallee trees leading to piles of driftwood. And as this shot shows the still living vegetation nearby. This area was reached by a moderate walk around from the viewing platform. With the lovely FFM group.
OK, so this is never going to compete with images from those Capability Brown type manicured woods found down south :) Nevertheless, quite happy with the composition, given the surroundings. Kind of like un-tangling knots from an acre sized ball of string!! Shot at 200mm wide open to try and dampen down the background a little.
At the start of August I'll have the possibility to visit the Speulderbos in the Netherlands. Have any of the Dutch on here been there? Are there certain areas in the forest that are more interesting than others?
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The beech is not such a common sight in Norway... Larvik has Norway's biggest and the world's northernmost public beech forest. Most of the beech trees there are almost perfect straight lines upwards. Luckily I found this one with a nice buckle in it and interesting tangled roots. The little creek next to it ate away a lot of the soil, giving me the possibility for this lower angle.
All images are copyrighted by EyeSeeLight Photography - Ron Jansen. If you want to use or buy any of my photographs, contact me. It is not allowed to download them or use them on any websites, blogs etc. etc. without asking me.
Jasper National Park
Alberta, Canada
Another way to view my images is on: www.fluidr.com/photos/63888231%40N04/interesting
Higher than normal run-off create a more interesting image than the lower, later season water levels.......
This waterfall is in close proximity to the Columbia Icefields in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada.
In "Explore" June 29 / 2020
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Explore #48 and Front Page on 11 January 2010.
A redux of a picture I posted last August (added a border and sharpened a tiny bit). This one has always been one of my personal favoites :).
v i e w o n w h i t e + F11 for full screen view
v i e w o n b l a c k + F11 for full screen view
Created for TMI March Contest ~ Creepy Crawlies
O, what a tangled web we weave when first we practise to deceive!
I seriously wanted to steal this girl from Angela (Gemini Angel Art) yesterday. She is in town, and we intended to just meet up for a yummy seafood lunch...which somehow turned into a 9 hr oddessy of fun dolly chat, yippity yappin, and ended up at Jillybug Manor...unfortunately, very few photos (not sure how that happened!! LOL) ~ but, this is one of her darling Elfdoll, Tangle, in the garden!
Supersampler + Vivitar UWS + Film tbc...
The results of another double exposure collaboration. This time between myself and the crazy mad and very lovely ~fiona~; who shot the first run through on the roll using her Supersampler. I subsequently shot over it using the Vivitar Ultra Wide & Slim.
We did not plan individual frames, and had no idea what the other would shoot, what camera they would use, nor did we attempt to line up the frames. There are a few occasions when I've felt the need to crop, but not much and not on many from this roll.
More thread coming off a loom at Boott Cotton Mill in Lowell, Mass.
You look at the machinery roaring to life during the demonstration here and think how hard it was for the workers here, but a lot of them looked at it as a good alternative to everything else available to a young woman in the mid-1800s.
Unlike the slaves who picked the cotton, the mill girls who turned it into fabric in Lowell were there by choice and getting paid, and early on they organized for better wages.
"Plant a garden in which strange plants grow and mysteries bloom".
Ken Kesey
Texture by Sarah Gardner
I decided to change my walking route today and am glad I did. These tree roots just begged me to photograph them. I complied.
I may not always have time to thank you all for your visits and comments but rest assured, that I do read them and am very appreciative that you took the time to pop by and see what I see here "North of 7" in Rural Eastern Ontario (North Frontenac Township) or, where ever else I might be with my camera now that I am retired and loving it.
I grabbed the shotgun seat in our bombardiers snow coach and could ask our guide to stop at any point. I would hop out, take a few shots, jump back in and find the rest of the family in the back was still chatting away, sometimes unaware we had even stopped. Yay! Tangle Creek, Lower Geyser Basin, winds through the bobby sock trees and is often shrouded in fog in the early morning.