Man river 

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  • Craig’s Hut on Mt Stirling in the Victorian High Country was built for the filming of The Man From Snowy River. / Lost only recently in the fires that swept the High Country an major effort is now underway to rebuild the hut. / The hut and it’s location with it’s magnificent views has become a major tourist attraction for both 4wd enthusiasts and the touring public. / This image of the hut was taken about 10 months before the fires swept through.

  • Standing at the bottom of the Snoqualmie falls getting wet.

  • While my scanner is on the blink I’ve been going through some of my photos taken while in Shanghai, China in 2006 and found a few with potential. I don’t think I’ll upload too many as photography isn’t one of my strong points, but it is fun to see what you can do with an image in photoshop. This one was taken while in a river traffic jam, our driver was a real character!

  • Person meditating on the Ganges River in Varanasi, India.

  • www.cathleentarawhiti.co.nz She caught him down by the river. The lovely Ceciel and Pieter Dress supplied by - / Mystique Costume Hire / 233 Anglesea St / Hamilton / ph 07 83 83 505 1000+ views People/Portraiture HDR Photography Macro Photography Architecture Collaborations Skyscapes Animals/Birds/Insects Street Art Street Photography Everyday Objects Seascapes/Rivers/All Water Summer Photography Odd/Unusual Flowers/Plants/Trees Landscapes New Zealand Abstract Humour Black and White Photography

  • Tree trunk and roots, I saw a creature shouting to let him out you may see nothing but a tree trunk, or you may see something else!! captured this down by the river the other day..

  • Just a very relaxed shot of Jaimie. /

  • Family history is a wonderful past time, searching and collecting data about relatives long gone and this provides the skeleton but its the stories and places that put the skin on the bones and this is what I find most exciting. We often find that we think we know a person but its not until they’re gone that we realise we knew very little about them at all. I knew my Mum was born on the Manning River in NSW Australia, I knew she came from pioneering families of the area, I have all that information but what I didn’t have was the stories to go between the dates. She always told me they lived on a dairy property at the ‘head of the Manning’ – but where? I have spent many trips up and down this river but never finding the spot I recall visiting as a child, somewhere beside a river, on a dirt track … there was an old house and my mother was crying, remembering days gone by. Where was this place? All my relatives who may have known have now gone but I kept searching, putting pieces of the jigsaw together … and then I had a break through. Mum often spoke of Bundook and I recall the word Cundle but always assumed it to be Cundletown which was near where some of her relatives settled. Bundook was certainly in the area of the head of the Manning but still I couldn’t identify the spot until I picked up some newspaper indexes that listed Mum’s sister being involved in an accident around 1920 at Westwood. So we set off to explore. We passed through Mt George (top meat pies there at the general store/pub), crossed the Manning River and climbed the hill, following the dirt track across lush green paddocks … then swinging to the right we followed an even narrower dirt track, still hugging the river then crossing it again. Here we found the prettiest valley, with Angus dairy cows hugging the river and wandering freely along the road, then climbing just above the river we found “Westwood Park”. On top of the hill was an old farm house that overlooked a river flat and I knew it was here, this was home to my Mum, her parents and siblings … where they ran their dairy cows … “I had to help milk 40 cows each day before school” was ringing in my ears … as my eyes filled with tears and I gazed at the view I knew … this was “home”. The image shown is on the road to Cundle Flat, just after the first river crossing from Mt George.

  • Hudson River / Nyack, NY / January 2009 Nikon D80 / 1/125 sec / f/3.5 / ISO 100 / Focal Length: 18 / Raw Featured on Red Bubble’s Home Page / Featured in the Group: Who Needs Color for Beauty? / Featured in the Group: The Art of Intrigue / Featured in the Group: Friends of Bangor and North Down Camera Club / Featured in the Group: Nirvana / Featured in the Group: Reaching Freedom Companion Work: Winter Spirit

  • An old boat holding rainwater, moored amongst the mangroves along the Manning river, Cundletown, N.S.W. Australia. NikonD40 on auto. If you like this / Click Here for other Riverscapes / Click Here for other photos taken at Cundletown

  • Featured in Night Photography and Color and Light The sun setting on the beauty of the Fraser River estuary is almost trumped by the lights of the huge Delta coal port in this image captured near the mouth of a great river. Image captured at Delta, British Columbia, Canada, with a Nikon D2Xs, ISO 200, F20, 13.0s, Nikkor f12-f24 mm lens at 22.0 mm on a Gitzo tripod.

  • This shot of the walkway under the Victorian Arts Centre was taken in the pre-dawn darkness on a winter morning in 2007. I was actually on the other side of the river when I took the first shot, across a formal horizontal plane, with the golden reflections in the dark water. Then I thought a strong diagonal would be an even better representation of the graceful architecture and the mellow pools of light. So I walked across Prince Bridge until I had the angle just right – and realised that the dark surface of the Yarra was the perfect foil for what I wanted to achieve. You can actually see the reflection of the three perimeter lights reflected in the inky surface of the river. This area is built from classic bluestone, quarried locally in Victoria and a strong influence in the colony’s early architecture. I was lucky with this shot, because the flooring, arches and walls produced muted tones resembling liquid gold. Shot without a tripod. I do not crop, enhance or post-edit my images in any way. Shot with a Pentax K10D, using an 18-55mm lens. F 3.5, 1/4 sec, ISO 400, focal length 28mm. Featured in IMAGE WRITING, August 2009. PentaxK10D3-9511

  • My Website River of Dreams In the middle of the night / I go walking in my sleep / From the mountains of faith / To the river so deep / I must be looking for something / Something sacred I lost / But the river is wide / And its too hard to cross And even though I know the river is wide / I walk down every evening and stand on the shore / I try to cross to the opposite side / So I can finally find what Ive been looking for In the middle of the night / I go walking in my sleep / Through the valley of fear / To a river so deep / Im a searcher for something / Taken out of my soul / Something Id never lose / Something somebody stole I dont know why I go walking at night / But now Im tired and I dont wanna walk anymore / Hope it doesnt take the rest of my life / Until I find what it is Ive been looking for In the middle of the night / I go walking in my sleep / Through the jungle of doubt / To the river so deep / I know Im searching for something / Something so undefined / That it can only be seen / By the eyes of the blind / In the middle of the night Im not sure about a life after this / God knows Ive never been a spiritual man / Baptized by the fire, I wade into the river / That is running to the promised land In the middle of the night / I go walking in my sleep / Through the desert of truth / To the river so deep / We all end in the ocean / We all start in the streams / We’re all carried along / By the river of dreams / In the middle of the night Billy Joel

  • Shot with Nikon D90 / 3 Exposures +/- 2 stops Edited in Photomatix/Photoshop CS4 Shot from across the road from my place in Taree, NSW during a stormy overcast day.

  • River Arno / Florence / Italy / July 2009 Nikon D300 / Manual / 18-200mm / Raw Featured in the Group: I Love Italy / Featured in the Group: Visions of Italy /

  • The movie Man From Snowy River featured this hut where Jim Craig lived.

  • Ancient cypress tress line the limestone shores of the clear waters of the Guadalupe River in Gruene, Texas near New Braunfels. GUADALUPE RIVER. The Guadalupe River rises in two forks in western Kerr County. Its North Fork begins just south of State Highway 41, four miles from the Real-Kerr county line (at 30°06’ N, 99°39’ W), and runs east for twenty-two miles to its confluence with the South Fork, near Hunt (at 30°04’ N, 99°20’ W). The South Fork rises three miles southwest of the intersection of State Highway 39 and Farm Road 187 (at 29°56’ N, 99°35’ W) and runs northeast for twenty miles to meet the North Fork. After the two branches converge, the Guadalupe River proper flows southeast for 230 miles, passing through Kerr, Kendall, Comal, Guadalupe, Gonzales, DeWitt, and Victoria counties. It then forms the boundary between southern Victoria County and Calhoun County and between Calhoun and Refugio counties before reaching its mouth on San Antonio Bay (at 28°26’ N, 96°48’ W). The Guadalupe’s principal tributaries are the Comal and the San Marcos rivers. Its drainage area is about 6,070 square miles. The upper Guadalupe flows across part of the Edwards Plateau. Near the river, high limestone bluffs support bald cypress, mesquite, and grasses. The Balcones fault line, which the river crosses near New Braunfels, marks the transition to the coastal plains. Sections of the upper and middle reaches of the river are suitable for canoeing, but a number of small waterfalls prevent uninterrupted navigation of the entire river. The lower Guadalupe is generally much quieter and has more sand bars that lend themselves to camping and day use. Excerpt from Texas Online Handbook

  • The hut built as a set for the movie, Man From Snowy River, location Mt Stirling, Victorian High Country

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