Vivid Fall Foliage made at the Metcalf Bottoms picnic area,GSMNP
Fall foliage around the Cades Cove campground Great Smoky Mountain NP
View from Clingman’s Dome parking lot.Dead fir was cause by the balsam woolly adelged
Fall colors in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. A few miles inside NC from Newfound Gap
Fall colors starting to show, shot taken just across Newfound Gap In the Smoky Mountains of NC
Yosemite National Park, California, USA
Fall is a wonderful time when nature splashes her foliage with color,taken in the GSMNP
View from the west end of the Foothills Parkway in the Great Smoky Mountains. This view is slowly going away as most of it is outside the park, and they are carving up the hills for homes and rentals
Fall isn’t to be out done by Spring with all the new beginnings and shades of green. For a brief time it bursts into a splendor of warm color just before the dead of Winter.This is the Middle Prong Little River located in the Tremont section of the GSMNP Camera: Canon Rebel Xti… Lens: Canon 28-135mm…. / Focal Length: 44mm… Aperture Priority… / Shutter Speed: 1/2 s… Aperture: f/8… / ISO: 100… Tripod: Bogen…… Bias 0.0 EV… / Filters:Hoya Polarizer… Cable Release… / Format:RAW
Stunning fall color in the hills of Tennessee
Wilsons prom national park….Get down there!!!!
Taken April 14, 2006 with a Fuji E-510 (as shown in the reflection :P). I took this while I was on top of Sulfer Mountain in Banff National Park (Banff, Alberta, Canada) during the winter. There was a little cabin, and it’s interior can be seen inside my reflection in the window. Meanwhile the outdoor activity outside the cabin is reflected around my body. Looking back at this it sorta reminds me of the painting by Edouard Manet “A Bar at the Folies-Bergere” where the world the bar tendor is looking down on is reflected in the mirror behind her. Although not intended, many stories can be interpreted from this; and whatever that maybe, I’ll leave that up to the viewer :) This work has been featured in: / Weekly Them Challenges Actually it’s a funny story; I entered my work into that group to enter it into the Cameras challenge, and it was approved only after the voting had already started. Seeing as this particular group approves work based on the challenges it’s a bit strange that happened. Well I decided to let that go; it wasn’t a big deal. But two days after the challenge closed this work got featured among with the top ten :o)
Mountain Valley in the Cape Breton Highlands National Park
On Christ the solid Rock I stand, / All other ground is sinking sand; / All other ground is sinking sand. / Half Dome – June 2008 /
This is the second version of “This Little Tree”. /
Fall is a wonderful time. Nature shows off some of her most beautiful colors. The air begins to cool and it becomes pleasant to be outside after the scorching summer. Most wildlife becomes more active with winter feeding and mating rituals. Fall is a fabulous time, so get out and enjoy. Take a hike or just find a quit place to relax, but get out and toss your cares to the wind….image taken from the Oconaluftee Valley Overlook on the NC side of Newfound Gap Rd.,GSMNP
Autumns colors are some of the showiest in nature. The warm hues must be intended to raise our spirits before the cold of winter. Nature could also be trying to show us even though they have been green all year and appear to be one; they are many different individuals which are very different. That being different didn’t stop them blending in as everyone else. Regardless of the why the beauty is fabulous. I hope that you are blessed as well as I with fabulous fall color, in your area of the world…..image was taken on New Found Gap Road from the Oconaluftee Valley Overlook, GSMNP…hill to the left appears steep as the road was cut from it
Driving along Little River Road in the Great Smoky Mountains can be an enjoyable experience. Fall is an extra special time to take a trip through its twisting turns as it snakes its way along the Little River. It runs between the “Wye” at Townsend and The Smokies visitor center outside of Gatlinburg. The color at times can be breathtaking. Wildlife though seldom viewed can range from otter to bear, for an added bonus of the wonderful autumn views. Megis Falls and The Sinks are also about mid way thru the drive.
The Little River Road is about 18 miles long. It runs between the Sugarland Visitors Center at the Gatlinburg entrance to the Smoky Mountains and the Wye in Townsend. Once you pass the road going to Elkmont Campground it snakes through the gorge along the sides of Little River. Its one of the more popular drives in the Smokies. Numerous pull offs offer unending possibilities to get out and explore the river. Fall colors can be spectacular. Along the route there is a picnic area, waterfalls, and hiking trails. The road may not be for the timid, not use to mountain roads. In some places you are on the edge of the river on one side and against a rock bluff on the other. It seems narrower than it looks and has room for motor homes to meet, so drive slow and enjoy. It is one of two ways to get to Cades Cove. From it you can also enjoy fly fishing, kayaking or just playing in the water. Tubers often dot the river on the Wye end in summer. Camera: Canon 40D… Lens: Canon 24-105 f/4…. / Focal Length: 24mm… Manual… / Shutter Speed: 2s… F/Stop: 16… / ISO: 100… Tripod: Bogen…… Bias 0.0EV… / Filters:B+W Polarizer… Cable Release… … / Format:RAW
This old tree has been torn apart probably by lighting. There appeared to be some leaves showing above the grass last summer so I believe it’s still alive. I was sitting close to it just enjoying the view one day. I kept being drawn back to it. If it were in the forest it probably wouldn’t be that noticeable. Out there in the open field, it’s seen by all. I thought how a lot of people should be like this tree. Their lives are torn apart by abusiveness and they need to bring it out in the open for all to see. Though torn apart they are still alive inside, but maybe not for long. Sadly though most try and keep it hidden. They try to blend in with everyone else. They go through every fearful minute of life like the tree hidden away in the forest….if you think you know someone that may be being abused point this tree out to them as I have you, tell them the difference in it and the one being in the forest. Sometimes all they need is a little push. Telling about a tree in a field is a way of gently approaching the subject Image taken in Cades Cove, Great smoky Mountain NP
The guy on the right is yours truly taking a break just staring at the meadow. Daughter on the left with the wife getting the credit for this shot. If this one ever sells, I’ll have to give her the profits. LOL Location: Crescent Meadow in Sequoia National Park in California.
May 2009, Rome, Italy A question for the Bubble Jeopardy group! / The winner is : 29Breizh33 ! Congratulations !!!
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