Ice river winter 

530 creative works found

  • landscape photo of a frozen lake during sunset

  • Misty view of Prague’s bridges

  • This past winter was exceptionally cold and the morning I photographed the ice in the river was five below zero degrees. It was lightly snowing and I stood on a bridge to take the photograph. The picture lends itself well to a black and white scene depicting, for me, the austerity of that morning. The ice was moving very quickly and the sound of the miniature ice bergs rubbing up against each other added to the chill. photographed from the Vermillion, Newcastle bridge on the South Dakota, Nebraska border. This image was awarded “Best of Show” in a juried exhibition hosted by the Yankton Area Arts.

  • This is one more shot of Niagara in winter. It is a digital illustration from a polaroid print.

  • Current views: 108 In the little village of Kirklington, Nottinghamshire, England, the snow and freezing conditions firmed the rivers water enough to walk on it in certain places. It was unfortunate that not all the water was so solid. Still, it created this beautiful swooping design on top of the frozen water. I love the way that something as simple as a snow fall can transform the ordinary into the artistic. Every season has is beauty and this is winter’s. / This photo is straight from the camera. It’s “As Is” Canon EOS-1Ds Mark ll / 28-300mm zoom lens / f/10 / 1/500 / ISO 800 / exposure bias 0.33

  • Shot Jan 3, 2009 / in Gothenburg, Sweden / “as is” with Panasonic DMC-FZ28

  • 2/8/09 – Top Ten in Let’s Have Some Fun with Snow challenge – Rural Around the Globe group – Thanks!!! 1/12/09 – Featured in Hunting and Fishing the Great Outdoors – Thank you Hosts!!!!! A fisherman hauling an eye-catching fishing hut out on the St. Lawrence River. Clayton, New York – taken February 2008. The locals ride all over the frozen river with snowmobiles and four wheelers and set up fishing huts. GONE FISHING / PATRIOTIC ICE FISHERMEN /

  • A little river under snow in winter

  • This is the base of Looking Glass Falls in Pisgah National Forest in Transylvania County, NC, USA. This was taken late in the day on January 17, 2009. It had been very cold for several days. I love all of the ice in the water in this one.

  • Shot with Nikon L18 edited with Serif PhotoPlus X2 / V / © 2008 Rebecca Bryson. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized use prohibited. My work does NOT belong to the public domain. It may not be used in any way, shape or form without my prior written permission

  • Harrisburg PA at night with the Susquehanna River becoming choked with ice. It was a clear, cold and beautiful night for taking a series of photos to merge into this HDR image. The bridge is the one that made national news roughly a dozen years ago when flooding waters and huge ice floes tore one complete section away. Taken with a Canon 40D and a Canon 24mm f/2.8 lens. Speeds for the shots were mostly about a second an ranging around f/3.0 bracketed.

  • This small grove of trees stood out against the slanting sun that stopped me in my tracks. The scene was there. The light was right. This is the result. / Enjoy a large mounted print of this photograph to enjoy the almost 15,000,000 pixels used to create it.

  • A PERSPECTIVE ABOUT OLD BARNS / He said,” you couldn’t get paint that beautiful”, for a new country home he’s building down the road. Only years of standing in the weather, bearing the storms and scorching sun, only that can produce beautiful barn wood. / It came to me then. We’re a lot like that, you and I. / Only it’s on the inside that the beauty grows with us. / Sure we turn silver gray too… and lean a bit more than we did when we were young and full of sap. / But the Good Lord knows what He’s doing. / And as the years pass He’s busy using the hard weather of our lives, / The dry spells and the stormy seasons do a job of beautifying our souls that nothing else can produce. / And to think how often folks holler because they want life easy!

  • A PERSPECTIVE ABOUT OLD BARNS / He said,” you couldn’t get paint that beautiful”, for a new country home he’s building down the road. Only years of standing in the weather, bearing the storms and scorching sun, only that can produce beautiful barn wood. / It came to me then. We’re a lot like that, you and I. / Only it’s on the inside that the beauty grows with us. / Sure we turn silver gray too… and lean a bit more than we did when we were young and full of sap. / But the Good Lord knows what He’s doing. / And as the years pass He’s busy using the hard weather of our lives, / The dry spells and the stormy seasons do a job of beautifying our souls that nothing else can produce. / And to think how often folks holler because they want life easy!

  • When the huge sea inlet known as “het Zwin” gradually silted up, the Belgian city of Bruges founded a number of cities further downstream along the Zwin to act as an advanced harbour and outpost for the city. One of these is Damme, founded in 1168 at the place where a dam in the water created a new harbour. After the silting up continued, that city lost its role as a major harbour to the city of Sluis, located further near the North Sea Coast. This town still has a monumental gothic town hall with a belfry as a symbol of its former status. Later the city lost all importance as a harbour, but remained an important fortress at the border between the independant Netherlands and the Southern Netherlands, occupied by Spain. The cities massive city walls and gates are a reminder of those troubled times. The city itself is almost entirely modern as it was destroyed at the en of the second world war. Allied forces tried to dispose of the German occupational force by bombing the entire town to splinters. The germans dug themselves into the ancient walls and survived mostly unharmed. Nevertheless, the town was rebuilt in a modern style, but with traditionalist leanings and the result is that it is still quite nice looking place that neigher looks like a fake remake of the prewar town, nor like a cold, grey place like so many places rebuilt after the war.

  • This wonderful little icy creek, gently flowing through this gaping canyon, spoke volumes about it’s older cousin that had raged through here to cut this canyon eons ago. The scene was there. The light was right. I composed the photograph and took it. I hope you enjoy it, as it’s one of my favorites. / Enjoy a large mounted print of this photograph to enjoy the almost 15,000,000 pixels used to create it.

  • The translucent ice, and blue light reflected off the water of the creek, make this one of my favorite photographs. / Enjoy a large mounted print of this photograph to enjoy the almost 15,000,000 pixels used to create it.

  • Enjoy a large mounted print of this photograph to enjoy the almost 15,000,000 pixels used to create it.

  • Laukaa, Finland.

  • Scroll down for another image of this beautiful Cow Moose and her darling calf From my collection: / Emerquinox ~ The Spirit of Alaska ~ Alaska North Star Winter Scenics Emerquinox is a word I coined when I combined the words Emerge and Equinox. This magnificent Cow Moose and her young calf were photographed near North Pole Alaska, which is about a twenty minute drive from Fairbanks Alaska on Badger Road. Did you know more than one Moose is still Moose? Many Moose, or two Moose, or one Moose, it is always Moose. Just thought you would want to know that. :) I have many more images of this beautiful Cow Moose and her yearling calf as they permitted me to watch and photograph them for over an hour. Many of my viewers seem to perceive I am standing on the ground within arms length of this 1200+ lb Moose!! I wish for everyone to know and understand that I remained in my truck watching her with her adorable calf for well over an hour. And while she did approach me as I remained in my truck watching her, (with my engine idling and heater blowing as the temps were subzero!) once she decided I was no threat to her, she seemed as curious about me as I was about her and her darling calf! The Cows are very protective of their young, and the Bulls are aggressive and unpredictable as well. And I would advise everyone to never approach a Moose. She is a ‘resident’ Moose, and she and her calf live in the deep forest surrounding my home in the wilderness when I lived in Alaska near North Pole. She is wild, and certainly not tame, as someone asked. A Cow Moose will kill you if you come between her and her calves. Cows are generally not hunted, and she is simply accustomed to being around humans since she is one of several generations of Moose born in this area. With an abundance of Diamond Willow (their favourite) and other tender shoots along the roadways, and the remnants of summer gardens, they simply brush off the snow with their noses and browse. She has no need to migrate. There are many many more in this area. They are elusive however, and nocturnal for the most part, so it is always a thrill to see one! It is only in winter when one sees them struggling to survive the deep winter browsing during the “daylight” hours. And then too, in winter it is dark for so many hours so the night is extended! Most people think of Alaska as The Land of the Midnight Sun. That is true only for a short time in a very brief summer. In winter Alaska is The Land of Perpetual Darkness. The calf’s first winter is the most precarious. This calf is experiencing her first winter. I can see that she is a female calf by her fine feminine sex characteristics. The male calves are larger and masculine. During summer it is generally late evening, dusk, during the night and early morning when one sees the beautiful Moose browsing and foraging in the forests and along the rivers and roadways. ~ Sharon Mau The moose (Alces alces) is the world’s largest member of the deer family. The Alaska race (Alces alces gigas) is the largest of all the moose. Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / My images do not belong to the public domain. / Reproduction is strictly prohibited. / All rights reserved Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi / Shooting Date 20 January 2008 /

  • Best viewed large! I don’t want to take away from the image that Les put up of our trip to Heally Falls so I’ll put this other view of the location up instead of a similiar shot to his….which is gorgeous by the way, go have a look at his site…you’ll see! ;p Heally Falls, near Campbellford, Ontario, Canada.

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