Man made by Charles Hamilton and artisan stonemason Josiah Lane in 1766,
I think it looks very natural.
These are of the Wausaukee River in Marinette County Wisconsin. Taken on January 10, 2012. It was a beautiful day, around 35 degrees F.
Nikon D300 6 sec., f32, 3 stop ND filter & CPF. Nikon 75-300mm @ 165mm
Nikon D300 6 sec., f32, 3 top ND filter & CPF. Nikon 75-300mm @ 190mm
Nikon D300 6 sec., f32, 3 stop ND filter & CPF. Nikon 75-300mm @ 230mm.
pgr
Loc: Alabama
jimber wrote:
These are of the Wausaukee River in Marinette County Wisconsin. Taken on January 10, 2012. It was a beautiful day, around 35 degrees F.
Wow! I love your pics...very nice.
Stevebutler wrote:
Man made by Charles Hamilton and artisan stonemason Josiah Lane in 1766. I think it looks very natural.
I completely agree. Quite striking!
Oh, Dam
Nikon D300
Uncropped: 4288X2488
Micro Nikkor 16-85 @16mm
iso: 200
0.5 sec at f/16
After hours of walking in the Laurel Highlands, a friend and I happend upon this man made dam- no idea why it was still there. There was no access road.
There were huge trout in the reservoir above and a bench offered a place to sit and regain lost energy.
The water was cool and clear and offered a great reason to remove the hiking boots and take a moment to appreciate the gentle current.
Then on with the backpacks loaded with camera gear and tripods and on with the shoes and socks.
It is named "Jones Run Mill Dam" - Somerset County, Pennsylvania - about an hour east of Pittsburgh and is near the highest point in the state. It would appear as though there was once a mill here and I would assume there was a water wheel. What you see is a secondary growth forest. Currently there is no evidence of the mill, no roads, or railroad tracks. There is a path that crosses a stream several times and leads to the area you see in the image or to the reservoir above.
The growth of the secondary forest was the result of sparks from one of the trains that went by and destroyed the primary growth forest. No train would have traversed the damn because it is way to narrow.
I am not a fisherman, but the trout in the reservoir are much larger than any fish I ever saw while living in Central Texas. The clarity of the water is magnificent.
Lithia Creek in Ashland Oregon
mark.r
Loc: Port Talbot South Wales
What great waterfalls very nice.Mark
Haveago
Loc: Swindon, Wiltshire. UK.
mark.r wrote:
What great waterfalls very nice.Mark
I agree with Mark these pictures are great.
Baz
Just today. On 285 near Bailey, CO there is a creek. The colors probably would have been better last week.
Canon T1i with my Tamron 28-200.
F22, ISO 100, 1 Second. About 6:ish.
One way
the other way
These were taken in Marinette County Wisconsin, way back in the woods. May 6, 2012 it was an overcast day with a slight drizzle of rain.
15 sec. f22 CPF ISO 200 Nikon D300
13 sec. f22 CPF ISO 200 Nikon D300
10 sec. f22 CPF ISO 200 Nikon D300
jimber wrote:
These were taken in Marinette County Wisconsin, way back in the woods. May 6, 2012 it was an overcast day with a slight drizzle of rain.
Very nice and vivid colors-- but I feel they need a little more exposure. JMHO. Thanks for sharing!
Some white water shot in the Berwyn mountains - well high peat moors in mid-Wales. All part of a 200 feet high series of cataracts coming down a steep escarpment. The Welsh name is Pistyll rhyd-y-meinciau.
All from a Manfrotto using avariety of lenses on a Canon 40D
1/8 @f22 ISO100 28mmf1.8
1/5 @f22 ISO100 135mmf2.8
1/30 @f22 ISO 200 28mmf1.8
1/10 @~f16 ISO 100 50mm f1.8
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