This was taken at Sheep River Falls, Alberta when several kayakers came through. Some portaged around the falls. A couple of them made the jump.
I took several pictures of water streaming over the ice and rocks of the Kootenay River, and the colours and textures of this particular rapid made a stunningly elemental composition. There is something about the movement of water over rocks and ice that always reminds me of the raw power of winter in the Rocky mountains. Photographed with my Canon Rebel XT and 15-55mm lens.
A juvenile Leafy Sea Dragon (Phycodurus Eques) under the deteriorating jetty at Rapid Bay, South Australia. Until you get used to it, its very difficult to spot the dragons amongst the weed. They can be regularly seen at a number of sites around Adelaide. Browse By Category / Underwater / Panoramas / Adelaide and South Australia
Shooting along Tremont, we Finally have some water in our rivers, due to a very nice rain season for the year, definitely beats last year of 2007’s drought. / I was playing around with shutterspeed on this showing a new photographer friend of mine from Ohio what the different settings produce. I am trying to get Lou here on the bubble, I didnt warn him about the addiction tho :) / Great thing about digital, we can experiment all we want, and just delete if we dont like. So I am always up for experimenting, especially when my subject isnt taking off in the woods. I shot this in shutterspeed priority / SS set at 1/4th of a second / F-stop at F29 / ISO at 100 / Focal length at 187mm / Exposure Comp at -0.3
Russell Falls in Tasmania Click on the photo and see the larger view on this one! Thanks for visiting! / I really appreciate your comments.
Had a day out taking a few waterfall details, trying to capture the speed and flow of the River which was full of brown/peaty flood water.
Keila Cascade was shot a in the Estonia.
Seastar (Pentagonaster dubeni) under Rapid Bay Jetty, South Australia. Browse By Category / Underwater / Panoramas / Adelaide and South Australia
Chimney Rock, NC. E-510. 100mm. 1 sec @ f16. iso 100.
A fine autumn day on the Ontonagon River in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.
This night photo was taken at Niagara Falls, New York. The camera used is a Canon EOS Rebel XTI. Manual settings used are F/5.6, 0.8 sec, ISO 400, focal length 55 mm. / Shot as is no editing. / Featured 12/16/08 in Alphabet Soup. Thank you hosts. / Top 10 in the best of W challenge in Alphabet Soup. Thank you for your votes. / Featured 12/22/08 in the All Water in Motion group. Thank you hosts / Featured 2/17/09 in the Canon DSLR group. Thank you hosts. / Placed in top 10 of the Waterfalls challenge 6/2009. Thank you for your votes.
Canon EOS 30D A solitary Granite Boulder standing defiantly against the force of a fast flowing river. Scotland has magnificent landscape and views, virtually, everywhere you look but I do tend to see the intimate shots that buried within them. I love detail that nature can show and reveal to you. / This image is one such example. This granite boulder was standing defiantly (hence the name) against the fiercely rampant waters of the River Findhorn, high in the highlands of Scotland. It is one of those marvels that I just love to see – isn’t nature amazing?
Outside of Asheville, NC
Taken under the Rapid Bay Jetty on the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia
This is the end of the rapids at the bottom of Raleigh Falls. I had to crawl down in a ditch and around a culvert to get this picture. A long shutter speed helped smooth the flowing water. Olympus E-3, 70-300 F4.0-5.6, Hoya ND 8 (3 stop neutral density filter)
Featured in Style! Class! Elegance! Excellence! – March 21st, 2009 Incredible rapids photographed in Rennie, Manitoba Canon Powershot G6, f/4, 1/500 sec, ISO-100.
Murray River before the swell. / Dwellingup / Western Australia
This is one of my favourite shots. Taken just outside of the small town of Humbug, California (also known as North Bloomfield for some unknown reason!) the creek is named by the early gold miners who didn’t find as much gold here as they thought they would. Others did tho and Malakoff Diggins is the results – beautiful as it is nasty from the toxins in the ground and the mountainsides ripped in half by hydrolic mining. The colours here are completely natural. The sky was an awesome blue and the leaves on the trees reflected in the water with it making this wildly colourful location. Slow shutter speed supplied the ‘slippery water’ look.
Lines drawn in time / bending like Dali’s clocks / Fluid, soft and languid / running away never to return / Never to return / Never to return. - The Canon 5D and the Heliopan polarizing / filter strike again. f22, 4 sec exposure, ISO 50, White Balance Mode: Shade / shot on a windy day
Another day spent in the beautiful Tarkine wilderness sees me covered in mud and possum poo, happily exhausted and with a bundle of wonderful images to work with. Tarkine Wilderness Lodge Project
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