Reservoir 

1004 creative works found

  • Reworked photo previously removed. / Just increased the contrast to highlight the father and his 2 sons and the beautiful sunset on the Glenmore Reservoir. / I’ve always liked this shot and felt it deserved a better fate than its last showing.

  • Taken at Anderson Ranch Reservoir in Idaho. One of my favorite places to go on a photo shoot.

  • A lone angler casting his line into Loch Fruid in the very early morning.

  • Nikon D80 / 18-135 / Format: Raw / f/20 / Shutter: 1/4 sec / ISO 200 Monksville Reservoir / Ringwood, NJ

  • There are five lakes close to where I live (within walking distance) .... the lake is known locally as ‘the wee north dam’ .... I fished for trout here as a boy with my father and sometimes friends. Often we would have caught brown or rainbow trout and lit a campfire and cooked the fish for supper right next to the forest that surrounds each lake …. these are fond memories and when my wife and kids were passing this evening after having had dinner out at a restaurant in a nearby town (Larne), I couldn’t resist but to stop and take a pic or two … funny thing was that I almost tripped over a girl and her tripod/camera sitting at the riverbank in my haste to get the perfect pic … I guess she got that one … I just got this one … it will have to do until I get a new SLR (I really want a CANON 5D Mk11) ... but havn’t convinced my wife enough that I need one … mmmmmmm but I will wait until she really wants something and remind her that if she can have what she wants then perhaps I can have my upgrade … hee hee … well its only but fair don’t ya think ;-)

  • Dead tree on the shore of Lower Rivington Reservoir at sunset.

  • Watercolour done on Bockingford 140 LB (not )

  • Dennis is my mates Staffordshire Bull Terrier, seen here paddling in Roddlesworth reservoir, Lancashire. It was like a millpond till he jumped in! Nikon D80 Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens ND4 grey-grad Featured in the Cats and Dogs group MAR 2009. / Featured in the Paws and Claws group NOV 2009. Runner up in the ABPT owners challege – Dogs and their Surroundings SEP 2009.

  • All images are the copyright of the artist – / © Charlene M. Aycock / Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. / All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, manipulating, redistributing displaying, modifying, distributing and/or selling any image without prior written consent/contract from the artist is strictly prohibited and subject to any and all legal remedies. It is also against copyright laws to upload any of my images, writings, or art to PHOTOBUCKET, FACEBOOK, TWITTER, MYSPACE, FLICKR, or any other internet sight. A MONETARY SETTLEMENT for any unauthorized use, and prosecution in a US Federal Court, as well as Court Cost will be assessed. I used my Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT 350D, with EOS Lens 18 – 55mm. / BEST VIEWED LARGE. This is Anderson Reservoir in Southern Idaho. We use to live at the end of this picture. In the background is Steel Mountain and the storm on the horizon. This lake is over 200 feet deep in spots, and has hot springs under it as well. This is my country, my favorite place. I lived here for almost six years, and I hope to again someday. This area is very rural and rugged. The closest grocery store is about fifty miles in the town of Mountain Home. / Sold a 16X24 mounted print on 11/20/2009. / Featured in: Beautiful group, and in #1 RedBubble artist group.

  • Ringwood, NJ / March 2009\

  • THE SUN SETTING OVER THE RESERVOIR EAST OF FINDLAY, OHIO. STRAIGHT FROM THE CAMERA EXCEPT FOR SPOT REMOVAL AND RESIZING. CAMERA: FUJI FINEPIX S2 PRO / LENS: SIGMA 28-80 MM AT 28 MM / EXPOSURE: 1/3 SEC. F~22 AT 100 ASA

  • Straight to DVD. Five criminal corks thrown together for the perfect liquor store heist. Except one of them is not quite what he seems. Certificate 17 and a half.

  • Roddlesworth is the name of a hamlet in the parish of Withnell in Lancashire, England. It lies on the road connecting Preston with Bolton. / The name is first encountered as Rodtholfeswrtha (1160), meaning “the homestead of Hrothwulf”. Nikon D80 – SIgma 10-20mm lens at f-11 – ND4+ND2 grey-grads Featured in the Natural Colour and Light and First Things groups MAY 2009. / Featured in the Lakes & Inland Waterways group MAY 2009.

  • Hetch Hetchy Valley is a glacial valley in Yosemite National Park, California Camera: Hasselblad 500 C/M / Film: Ilford HP5+ Book Available: / WILDERNESS, by Stephen Mark /

  • This photo was taken on the Hungry Horse Reservoir in northwestern Montana. There is a beautiful campground, hidden from the main road. 10/12/09 – Featured in the FORESTS Group.

  • Please View Large Wikipedia © Haweswater is a reservoir in the English Lake District, built in the valley of Mardale in the county of Cumbria. The controversial construction of the Haweswater dam started in 1929, after Parliament passed an Act giving the Manchester Corporation permission to build the reservoir to supply water for the urban conurbations of north-west England. At the time, there was public outcry about the decision, as the valley of Mardale was populated by the farming villages of Measand and Mardale Green and the construction of the reservoir would mean that these villages would be flooded and lost and the population would have to be moved. In addition, the valley was considered one of the most picturesque in Westmorland and many people thought it should be left alone. Originally, Haweswater was a natural lake about four kilometres long, almost divided in two by a tongue of land at Measand; the two reaches of the lake were known as High Water and Low Water. The building of the dam raised the water level by 29 metres (95 feet) and created a reservoir six kilometres (four miles) long and around 600 metres (almost half a mile) wide. The dam wall measures 470 metres long and 27.5 metres high; at the time of construction it was considered to be cutting-edge technology as it was the first hollow buttress dam in the world, being constructed using 44 separate buttressed units joined by flexible joints. There is a parapet, 1.4 metres (56 inches) wide, running the length of the dam and from this, tunnelled supplies can be seen entering the reservoir from the adjoining valleys of Heltondale and Swindale. When the reservoir is full, it holds 84 billion litres (18.6 billion gallons) of water. The reservoir is now owned by United Utilities plc. / Prior to the valley being flooded in 1935, all the farms and dwellings of the villages of Mardale Green and Measand were demolished, as well as the centuries-old Dun Bull Inn at Mardale Green. The village church was dismantled and the stone used in constructing the dam; all the bodies in the churchyard were exhumed and re-buried at Shap. Today, when the water in the reservoir is low, the remains of the submerged village of Mardale Green can still be seen as stone walls and the village bridge become visible as the water level drops. / The Manchester Corporation built a new road along the eastern side of the lake to replace the flooded highway lower in the valley, and the Haweswater Hotel was constructed midway down the length of the reservoir as a replacement for the Dun Bull. The road continues to the western end of Haweswater, where a small car park has been built; this is a popular starting point for walkers who want to climb the surrounding fells of Harter Fell, Branstree and High Street. The Haweswater valley is the only place in England where golden eagles nest. There is an RSPB observation post in the remote valley of Riggindale, where the pair have their eyrie. A pair of eagles first nested in the valley in 1969 and the male and female of the pairing have changed several times over the years, during which sixteen chicks have been produced. The female bird disappeared in April 2004, leaving the male on its own. However, the RSPB are hoping a replacement female will be drawn to the area. / Lake District writer and fell walker Alfred Wainwright had this to say on the construction of the Haweswater dam in his Pictorial Guide to the Far Eastern Lakeland Fells: “If we can accept as absolutely necessary the conversion of Haweswater [to a reservoir], then it must be conceded that Manchester have done the job as unobtrusively as possible. Mardale is still a noble valley. But man works with such clumsy hands! Gone for ever are the quiet wooded bays and shingly shores that nature had fashioned so sweetly in the Haweswater of old; how aggressively ugly is the tidemark of the new Haweswater!”. Lake District National Park Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70mm Google Maps

  • Meldon Reservoir, near Okehampton, Devon within the Dartmoor National Park. What a glorious hot day it was today for the 10th October. Nikon D40 18-55mm

  • Shot on a meet up with fellow bubbler Bradley shawn Rabon in the lovely peak district national park and Derwent reservoirs / Derwent Reservoir is the middle of three reservoirs in the Upper Derwent Valley in the north east of Derbyshire, England. The River Derwent flows first through Howden Reservoir, then Derwent Reservoir and finally through Ladybower Reservoir. Between them they provide practically all of Derbyshire’s water, as well as to a large part of South Yorkshire’s and as far afield as Nottingham and Leicester. / Derwent Reservoir is around 1.5 mi (2 km) in length, running broadly north-south, with Howden Dam at the northern end and Derwent Dam at the south. A small island lies near the Howden Dam. The Abbey Brook flows into the reservoir from the east. / At its peak the reservoir covers an area of 70.8 hectares (175 acres) and at its deepest point is 34.7 metres deep. / Shot with a Nikon D300 and Sigma 10-20mm lens / f18 / 1/5 sec / ISO 200 /

  • Shot on a meet up with fellow bubbler Bradley shawn Rabon in the lovely peak district national park and Derwent reservoirs / Derwent Reservoir is the middle of three reservoirs in the Upper Derwent Valley in the north east of Derbyshire, England. The River Derwent flows first through Howden Reservoir, then Derwent Reservoir and finally through Ladybower Reservoir. Between them they provide practically all of Derbyshire’s water, as well as to a large part of South Yorkshire’s and as far afield as Nottingham and Leicester. / Derwent Reservoir is around 1.5 mi (2 km) in length, running broadly north-south, with Howden Dam at the northern end and Derwent Dam at the south. A small island lies near the Howden Dam. The Abbey Brook flows into the reservoir from the east. / At its peak the reservoir covers an area of 70.8 hectares (175 acres) and at its deepest point is 34.7 metres deep. / Shot with a Nikon D300 and Sigma 10-20mm lens / f22 / 1/10 sec / ISO 100 /

  • November 2009 / October 2009 / Shot at Derwent Reservoir in the Peak District national park, Derbyshire. / Shot with a Nikon D300 and Sigma 10-20mm lens. / f 18 / 1/6 sec / ISO 200 /

  • Ringwood, NJ Nikon d80 / manual / 18-135 mm / Raw I re-posted this image as I deleted it by mistake. / Featured in the Group: NJ Scenery

  • Ringwood, NJ / December 2009 ”...On their blotter of fog the trees / Seem a botanical drawing—” / – Sylvia Plath Nikon D300 / Manual / 18-200 mm / Raw Featured in the Group: New Jersey – What’s Your Exit? / Featured in the Group: Art By Bubble Hosts

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