View allAll Photos Tagged trailing
I had to clear this one off the trail a short way down so decided it would make a nice bridge only 11 feet long but the water there is 10 inches deep and very slippery rocks so tada a new bridge.
Theodore Roosevelt Lake Bridge
The Apache Trail in Arizona was a stagecoach trail that ran through the Superstition Mountains. It was named the Apache Trail after the Apache Indians who originally used this trail to move through the Superstition Mountains.
The current Apache Trail links Apache Junction (33.4152°N 111.5807°W) at the edge of the Greater Phoenix area with Theodore Roosevelt Lake (33.6725°N 111.1531°W), through the Superstition Mountains and the Tonto National Forest.
Today, the majority of Apache Trail remains unpaved, turning into a dirt road a few miles up from Tortilla Flat, and continuing as such for nearly the full remainder of its length. The section east of Apache Junction is known officially as State Route 88. It is also the main traffic corridor through Apache Junction, turning into Main Street as the road passes into Mesa, and regains the Apache name by becoming Apache Boulevard in Tempe, ending at Mill Avenue. Prior to the completion of the Superstition Freeway in 1992, the Apache Junction portion of the Apache Trail was part of US Highway 60, which was rerouted to the Superstition Freeway once it was completed.
The Trail winds steeply through 40 miles (64 km) of rugged desert mountains, past deep reservoir lakes like Canyon Lake and Apache Lake. The narrow, winding road is unpaved from just east of the town of Tortilla Flat to Roosevelt Dam; there are steep cliff drops and little in the way of safety barriers. The trail requires caution when driving and it is not recommended for large RVs, SUVs, or caravans. Some large RV rental companies in the US do not allow their vehicles to be taken on this route.
(Wikipedia)
Theodore Roosevelt Lake (usually called Roosevelt Lake, sometimes Lake Roosevelt) is a large reservoir formed by Theodore Roosevelt Dam on the Salt River in Arizona as part of the Salt River Project (SRP). Located roughly 80 miles (130 km) northeast of Phoenix in the Salt River Valley, Theodore Roosevelt is the largest lake or reservoir located entirely within the state of Arizona (Lake Mead and Lake Powell are larger but both are located partially within the neighboring states of Nevada and Utah respectively). Both the reservoir and the masonry dam that created it, Roosevelt Dam, were named for U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt who dedicated the dam himself in March 1911. Roosevelt Lake is a popular recreation destination within the Tonto National Forest; the facilities located at this lake are managed by that authority.
Roosevelt Lake is the oldest of the six reservoirs constructed and operated by the Salt River Project. It also has the largest storage capacity of the SRP lakes with the ability to store 1,653,043 acre feet (2.039 km3) of water when the conservation limit of Roosevelt Dam is reached. When the dam is in flood-control mode, the lake can store 2,910,200 acre⋅ft (3.590 km3) of water; however, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers requires all water over the conservation limit to be released from the lake within 20 days.
Roosevelt Lake is located in central Arizona almost entirely within Gila County although a small portion lies in Maricopa County. Located about 4 miles (6 km) upstream from Apache Lake (the next SRP reservoir on the Salt River), Roosevelt Lake occupies about 10 miles (16 km) of the original Salt River riverbed and also extends for about 8 miles (13 km) up Tonto Creek, a significant tributary of the Salt with its headwaters along the Mogollon Rim. The lake covers much of the southern portion of the Tonto Basin, a low-lying area between the Sierra Ancha Mountains, Mazatzal Mountains (including Four Peaks), and the Superstition Mountains. State Route 188 travels along the shore of the lake for much of its length. Tonto National Monument is located 4 miles (6 km) from Roosevelt Dam. Parts of the monument provide views of much of the reservoir.
Fishing is a common recreational activity at Roosevelt Lake. The lake is home to a variety of game fish including crappie, carp, sunfish, flathead and channel catfish, and smallmouth bass and largemouth bass. There was a slot size limit of between 13 and 16 inches for the bass, and only one can be taken per day.
Until recently, Lake Roosevelt also hosted the state's most significant population of the federally endangered southwestern willow flycatcher. Since the lake's rise following heavy rains in the winter of 2005, the population dynamics between this site and the other significant Arizona population (on the San Pedro River) are unclear.
There are several Arizona Trail trailheads in the vicinity. The 800 mile (1,280 km) long hiking trail extending from the Arizona-Mexico border to Utah crosses the Salt River on the State Route 188 bridge that crosses Theodore Roosevelt Lake just northeast of Roosevelt Dam.
The Lake is home to the Grapevine Airstrip, a small general aviation recreational airstrip located a quarter mile from the shore. The airstrip hosts numerous fly-ins a year.
(Wikipedia)
Die Apache Trail Historic Road, auch AZ 88 genannt, östlich von Phoenix rühmt sich großer historischer, kultureller und landschaftlicher Bedeutung. Sie führt über 116 Kilometer von Apache Junction nach Globe-Miami, wo sich die 63 Kilometer lange Gila-Pinal Scenic Road direkt anschließt, die zurück nach Phoenix führt.
Zwischen Apache Junction und dem Tonto National Monument gehört der Apache Trail zu den landschaftlich reizvollsten Routen in den USA. Die abenteuerliche Fahrt ist ein unvergessliches Western-Erlebnis. Theodore Roosevelt sagte bei der Einweihung des nach ihm benannten Staudamms sinngemäß: „Im Apache Trail treffen das Großartige der Alpen, die Pracht der Rocky Mountains und die Herrlichkeit des Grand Canyons zusammen.“
Der Apache Trail folgt einem alten Pfad der Apachen durch die Felsschluchten des Salt River, führt jedoch an der Canyon-Seite höher hinauf, weil der Canyon jetzt teilweise in den Fluten des Salt Rivers und den sich anschließend bildenden Seen ertrunken ist. Kurz nach 1900 wurde er als Versorgungsstraße für den Bau des Theodore-Roosevelt-Damms angelegt. Heute führt er an einer Reihe attraktiver State Parks und kleiner Orte entlang und gewährt Zugang zu den schönen Superstition Mountains.
(usatipps.de)
Der Theodore Roosevelt Lake in Arizona USA ist ein Stausee, der den Salt River und Tonto Creek staut. Stausee und Staumauer wurden nach Theodore Roosevelt benannt. Seine maximale Tiefe ist 74,7 m. Die einzige Stadt am Ufer ist Roosevelt.
Der Stausee war die Voraussetzung für das Wachstum der südwestlich gelegenen Stadt Phoenix (Arizona) zur Metropole.
(Wikipedia)
Four smoke trails from a incense stick. They have been coloured and then stacked together.
Off camera flash fired from the side.
An obvious Santa Fe veteran trails a repainted GP60M after working the Philips 66 Carbon Plant at Collier on the BNSF Stockton Sub. The 011 job is always an interesting daytime move to and from the BNSF Richmond yard.
Locomotive:
EMD GP60 - BNSF 159
Cape Breton's Cabot Trail winds up and down along the headlands and through the mountains of The Cape Breton Highlands National Park of Canada..
I was in the Northern Areas of Pakistan in a small town Gamba near Skardu. The sky was very dark (as there was no pollution in the air) and there was no moon, wind or clouds (thankfully enough). All this make the stars visibility better. I set up my camera and luckily I was facing North (this I came to know later after seeing the results :). You can see that the star trails are forming circular patterns around a central point (aka North Star). This is happening because Earth revolves around its North and South Poles so the stars appear to move. Since I was facing the North, I could see perfect circular patterns formed formed by stars due to Earth's rotation.
View In Black. Press "L"
Waterfront trail in Squires beach, Martin’s photographs , Ajax , Ontario , Canada , August 4. 2021
Staghorn Sumac trees
American Larch tree
Cropped photograph
Teasels
Pickering
Squires beach
Rotary park
Duffins Marsh
Duffins trail
Duffins creek
Wild Carrot
Queen Anne’s Lace
Lake Ontario
August 2021
Discovery Bay
Linden tree
American Basswood tree
Red berries
Wild red berries
Tamarack trees
IPhone XR
Favourites
Clouds
Duck weed in wetlands
Water lilies
Water lily
Goldenrod
Wild grapes
Duck weed
A fallen tree
smaller trees
Shadows
Reflections
Horsetails
Discovery bay
closeup photograph
Martin’s photographs
Ajax
Ontario
Canada
Mushroom
Large Mushroom
wildflowers
Solomon’s seal and
white Dead nettles
River
Dogwood
Unique shaped tree
Ferns
Slime-Trail Snail
A roadside snail making his trial in eastern Izmit.
To buy --- www.redbubble.com/people/tomeoftrovius/works/44736090-sli...
More Photos --- tomeoftrovius.com/photography/
I took the Contemplative Trail at Red Rock Canyon Open Space for part of my evening walk. In several places the trail winds between the rock outcrops. Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Seen on the Pulpit Rock and Pinnacle Loop Trail, part of the Appalachian Trail in Berks County, Pennsylvania.
Another attempt to deal with the conflicting light balance to achieve a more neutral result. On the COPYRIGHT NOTICE - All rights reserved. Please do not use my photographs on websites or other published material without my express written consent. If you choose to infringe my copyright by using my photographs without my written consent you agree to pay £50.00 per day for the use thereof and you agree to indemnify me for any resulting 3rd party claims. Yahoo (flickr) has written consent to use my photographs for Flickr pages
Storms rolled through Northern Colorado yesterday and temporarily cleared out most of the smoke and haze from the wildfires burning throughout the west. I was fortunate enough to be up on Trail Ridge road with fellow sculptor and photographer Dan Glanz yesterday. Great afternoon photographing in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado.
Seen on the John M. Mauser Nature Education Trail System in Lower Mount Bethel Township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
Another of the installations on the Amble Sculpture trail in Northumberland.
This is titled 'Tern Wings' and it's the work of Jon Voss.
The piece was inspired by the wings of a Roseate Tern.
The highly polished metal was looking stunning in the afternoon sunshine of a late summer's day – I really liked it!
Closed in 1962 and line closed in 1968, The Former Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midlands Junction Railway
I love walking these trails when the trilliums are in bloom. It happens every year in spring. (it was early may this year) I often find them in large patches, but in this particular area, they always seem to take over the forest floor. After doing a little reading, I wonder if it's because there's lots of ants in this area.
"Large-flowered trillium has a fascinating seed dispersal mechanism - its seeds are dispersed by ants through a process called myrmecochory. Attached to the outside of the seeds is a fleshy structure called an elaiosome. The elaiosome is rich in oils and proteins. Ants carry the seed to their nest and feed the elaiosome to their larvae. The remaining seed is discarded in the ant's nutrient-rich waste pile. This symbiotic relationship benefits the ant, which gets a food source, and benefits the plant because the seed is dispersed, is protected from rodents, and is placed in a nutrient rich area in the ants nest where the seed has a greater likelihood of growing."
w. dappled light fern shadow, on the Gale Creek Trail.
July 31, 2024
Polaroid Impulse AF, Polaroid 600 B&W film.
Mesa Verde National Park, this was such a short trip and trying to see all of this beauty and explore in six hours was simply not an option.Once we were on the trail we realized this was 2.6 miles over and under and squeezed in between rocks,on the outer edge of the canyon, .A marvelous place to explore IF THE TIME ALLOWS! We weren't even half way in before we realized this wouldn't happen today ,and the gates were closing in twenty minutes! A first on the next visit! Sturdy climbing shoes a must NO FLIP FLOPS!
Thanking all of you who have sent well wishes our way for my husband.Another surgery scheduled tomorrow morning so his breathing will be improved!
Our three day stay has been 10 days today...life has been a bit topsy turvy with work and two hour trips daily..please keep us in your thought s and well wishes my friends,will visit later...
Today's proyect required lots of patience.
First I should say that I live near two airports (VNY/BUR) the nearest one is local and the second one with domestic flights, right outside my terrace I could hear when Airplanes are passing over my apartment, few months ago I was shooting car trails, the ones when you leave your shutter open for couple of seconds and you see the back/front lights of a car leaving a light trail, today I did the same concept but now using Airplanes instead of cars.
1) Setup my camera on a tripod using my Canon 40D with a 24-70 mm wide open I framed right on top of the building next to mine, I prefocused and leave it in manual focus, fired a couple of test shots until I was satisfied with the exposure, so the ideal setting was:
30 seconds at F/5.6, 100 iso and lots, lots of patience.
I started shooting at 6:17pm and the last shot was taken at 9:55pm ( There was not air traffic at that time, and since I had my window open I was freezing in my living room that's why I wrapped everything up few minutes before 10 pm)
Some of the light trails are from big and small planes, also a few choppers where flying around so I was paying attention to what was happening outside my window.
One thing I noticed is that the aiplanes heading to BUR (longest trails) they were flying at the same altitud, is like and invisible road, at one moment I saw 5 airplanes passing with a diference of minutes between each plane.
The white little spots are star trails.
2) at the end of the project I opened all 24 images in photoshop and place them one on top of the other in layers, then I started with the top layer and changing each layer to 'lighten' in the layers blend modes, then I merged all layers to get this final image.
I'm pretty happy with the result I migth go near BUR and spend the night shooting from a different perspective one of this nights.
last but not least... if you like it feel free to comment, share it and fav it!
Best!
Follow my updates on www.twitter.com/jcolivera
Shortly after sunrise while hiking out of the Grand Canyon along the Tanner Trail. The Tanner Trail begins at Lipan Point and descends sharply before traversing the Cardenas Butte. A second major descent is then encountered (the top of which is where this picture was taken). Below the 2nd descent, the trail maintains a good gradient all the way to Tanner Beach on the Colorado River.
Seen on the John M. Mauser Nature Education Trail System in Lower Mount Bethel Township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania.
The Aucilla Sinks trail is a portion of the Florida National Scenic Trail. It's gets its name from the Aucilla River, which is not a traditional river at all in this area but instead a series of flowing sinkholes and river rises, with the river constantly disappearing and reappearing above the Earth's surface. A karst landscape covered with a variety of pine and tropical vegetation add character to this unique trail. With its interesting landscape and water features this section of trail would likely be one of the more popular in Florida if not for its extremely remote location off US98 between Tallahassee and Perry, FL.
Tonight's view on a trail in the Matanuska Valley, Alaska. The puddles should be snow. Have a good one!