View allAll Photos Tagged tidal
This is a close-up photo of seaweed submerged in a tidal pool that is reflecting overhanging blades of grass. The image has been mirrored and copied twice to be symmetrical. The detail is best seen full screen.
The relatively narrow passages of Puget Sound create strong tidal currents. Because of variations in topography, some places have stronger ebb currents and others have stronger flood currents. On the whole I think the ebb currents may be slightly stronger than the flood currents due to the fact that many creeks and some largish rivers also dump into the Sound.
WP_20141201_16_17_29_Fused_CO
Incoming tide trickling over rocks.
It was only a little cascade so I had to get very, very close!!
5 seconds
zero image 2000 pinhole camera
map project P14
The precise origin of Carew Mill is uncertain. It is possible that a mill worked by a leat running from the Carew River pre-dated the building of the causeway which retains the huge tidal millpond. Documentary evidence indicates a mill of some kind existed as early as 1542. Records show that in 1558 John Bartlett leased the mill for the sum of 10 sovereigns per annum.
The present building dates from the early 19th century and indeed one of the two mill wheels carries the date 1801. The term “French Mill”, often used about Carew, may be a reference to the use of French burr stones.
Activity finally ceased in 1937 and from that time onward the building lay derelict. Tie bars were later fitted to the south side to save the now splitting structure.
Renovation was carried out with the aid of funds from the Historic Buildings Council of Wales, Pembrokeshire County Council and Pembroke Rural District Council. This work was completed in 1972 and received an award in The Times Conservation Award Scheme. The National Perk Authority acquired the lease of the mill in 1984 and has continued with restoration and improvement work, including the provision of the reception area and audio-visual facilities. It is hoped that the south wheel will at least be able to turn some of the auxiliary machinery on a regular basis in the future.
Another photograph from a shoot at Middleton, South Australia. I don't think I'll ever get sick of this beach.
Just minutes before everything went completely grey! I have no clue about the function of this piece of machinery, probably a tidal marker, but right now it is serving as a place for seagulls to rest!
For some reason I believe this composition amazingly accompanies the picture: www.youtube.com/watch?v=sU6gRM_576Q&feature=related
Another beach abstract of Brancaster beach, North Norfolk, UK.
The patterns the current created around the pebbles reminded me of comet tails...
Shortly after a very high tide near Leasowe, Wirral, UK.
Camera- Olympus E-510
Exposure- 60 seconds
Aperture- f/19.0
Focal Length- 18 mm
ISO Speed- 200
ND 10 stop filter
Mural entitled "Tidal View" by ER. aka @everydayresearch for Mural Mania 2024, seen at 701 South Main Street in South Bend, Indiana.
Photo by James aka @urbanmuralhunter on that other photo site.
Edit by Teee
Facebook : Aegir Photography
500px : 500px.com/photo/151422251/tidal-mirror-by-glenn-crouch
Colour bomb sunrise at Catherine Hill Bay, on the central coast of NSW, Australia.
Nikon D800 & Nikkor 16-35mm, Breakthrough 6 Stop filter. PP in PS CC using Nik Software and luminosity masks.
This part of the beach is only accessible when the tide is out. This tidal pool was dead calm even without the 4 sec exposure. You can see right over the Firth of Forth too. Lee 0.6 soft grad used.
This is my kind of photography, an image close to my heart. I don't think it has the 'punch' a lot of my other work does, but thats ok, because I much prefer this style of work, personally! I do love my other work, but this is more of an image true to myself than some of the others Ive produced. It was a beautiful evening :-)
Fantastical Landscape. Or imagine whatever you can to describe this stuff in my old favorite tiadal pool.
To see the whole, varied collection of my photos of this ever-changing tidal pool, visit my album, That Protean Tidal Pool: www.flickr.com/photos/jerry-rockport/albums/7217772030227...
Nikon D800 | Nikon 16-35mm f/4 | Singh-Ray Daryl Benson 4stops reverse GND | LEE 0.9 GND Soft
Taken at the southern end of Cathedral Rock, Kiama, NSW, Australia.
Thanks for viewing, hope you like it.
Tidal Zone, Second Beach, Olympic National Park, Washington
I was fortunate to have low tide the other evening at sunset allowing me to venture far out along the rocks to the tidal pools usually deep under water. I caught these starfish clinging on as waves constantly battered the rocks.
It's raining hard today, so I am planning on catching up on some processing and then working the rain forests when the weather chills out a bit.
Washington, DC
Capital Weather Gang: D.C.-area forecast: Fall lovers rewarded today, Matthew’s influence on weekend looks minor
The Dollart or Dollard is a bay in the Wadden Sea between the northern Netherlands and Germany, on the west side of the estuary of the Ems river. Most of it dries at low tide. Many water birds feed there.
Ein Priel ist ein natürlicher, oftmals mäandrierender Wasserlauf im Watt, in der Marsch und in Küstenüberflutungsmooren.