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Cangas de Onis - Asturias

Still flowing, despite the best efforts of LA water managers years ago to completely drain the Owens River basin; fortunately, wiser heads have prevailed and some water is allowed to flow naturally, even if only to reduce dust storms in the Owens Valley.

 

The peaks of the Eastern Sierra Nevada in the background soar to more than 14,000 feet (4,300 m) in elevation, while the floor of the Owens Valley is 4,500 feet (1,400 m), making it one of the deepest valleys in the continental United States.

 

If you look closely, you can see one red tent and several cars by the side of the river; most likely fishermen.

 

Have a great week! Thanks, as always, for stopping by and for all of your kind comments -- I appreciate them all.

 

:copyright: Melissa Post 2014

 

All rights reserved. Please respect my copyright and do not copy, modify or download this image to blogs or other websites without obtaining my explicit written permission.

Down river from Five Sisters Falls-Belize

River Tweed is one of the most famous rivers in Scotland not only for its beauty but for its Salmon as many a fisherman will tell you. Can you spot the duck?

Sunderland bridge in County Durham. This ancient bridge used to carry main traffic over the river Wear until a newer bridge was built nearby. England

© All Rights Reserved

 

Budapest - DSC_3109_10_11_tonemapped

NorthEast Greece.

The Nestos (Greek: Νέστος) or Mesta (Bulgarian: Места), is a river in Bulgaria and Greece. It rises in the Rila Mountains and flows into the Aegean Sea near the island of Thasos. It plunges down towering canyons toward the Aegean Sea through mostly metamorphic formations. At the end, the main stream spreads over the coastal plain of Chrysoupolis and expands as a deltaic system with freshwater lakes and ponds forming the Nestos delta.The length of the river is 230 km, of which 126 km in Bulgaria and the rest in Greece.

From the bicycle bridge near the road to Alpine Meadows.

 

Happy Tuesday! Thanks, as always, for stopping by and for all of your kind comments, awards and faves -- I appreciate them all.

 

:copyright: Melissa Post 2017

Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved

©2003 ~ 2013 STCPhoto

 

Blue river - a misty morning on the Dodder at Orwell Bridge, Dublin

 

I'm still waiting to get my glasses back from the opticians....and really can't see to read and write type so I will just be faving.

A quiet shot as the River Dove flows gently through Dovedale in Derbyshire. More green than water in the shot however.

 

THANKS FOR YOUR VISIT AND FOR TAKING THE TIME TO WRITE A COMMENT IT’S MUCH APPRECIATED AND SO MUCH MORE INTRESTING THAN JUST GIVING A FAVE

 

Continuing on the VIA Rail series.

Things I have learned as a photographer: I can be a very patient person when it comes to trying again and again to get my shot right. I am not a very patient person when it comes to waiting over 30 seconds for an exposure to finish, however. I wanted a water-like-glass effect for this outlet of the Boise River in Veterans Memorial State Park, so I broke out the ND3.0 filter, but even with the ISO pumped up to 200 or 320, the exposures were taking 60-90 seconds, and I was having a difficult time focusing or composing my shot even with Live View.

 

So, I switched to my ND1.2 filter (see, I did say I've become a patient person!), but not only did 6 seconds not seem enough, but the colors seemed a lot more washed out, so I switched back to 3.0 and resigned myself to taking the filter on and off to compose/focus (hashtag patience). But when I was looking at the photos on the computer, not only could I not see a difference in the water smoothness from 6 seconds to 90 seconds (a useful discovery!), but I liked the composition from the ND1.2 shot a lot more. The washed out colors were still not ideal, but some processing took care of that.

  

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Sundown on the Pine River at 9 Mile Road.

The River Dart runs through Totnes, Devon, I had a little time to walk along side of it.

 

Happy Thursday

Scenes from the banks of the River Severn in Shrewsbury, Shropshire

© Luxgnos Photography / Brian Callahan 2011 All rights reserved.

 

Please View On Black

 

This is the beach that is part of the Rock River resort that has the great mill and garden off Route 28, west of Paradise in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

 

Here is a link to the highway view:

www.flickr.com/photos/shinsanbc/6232387859/in/photostream

Brilliant green moss and foliage lines the river bank of the Nestucca River in Oregon's Coast Range. The Alder and Maple Trees line and bow over the river forming a tunnel. That's what really caught my eye for this scene. I recently launched a new webiste. If you'd like to check it out, here's the link: danshermanphotography.com - I'm pretty proud of it!

I love the little rivers in the Netherlands, they look a little like Florida ;-)

Mid-autumn imaging at Rum River Central Park in Anoka County, Minnesota.

This is a view of St Mary River as it flows by our campsite near Glacier National Park. It is a joy to relax and watch the light and weather change here. Taken on a very windy evening.

The Routeburn River, Mount Aspiring National Park, New Zealand, April 2016.

The Neelum River (Hindi: नीलम नदी, Urdu: دریائے نیلم‎‎), or Kishanganga (Hindi: कृष्णगंगा नदी, Urdu: کرشن گنگا ندی‎‎), is a river in the Kashmir region of India and Pakistan; it starts in the Indian city of Gurais and then merges with the Jhelum River near the Pakistani city of Muzaffarabad.

The Neelam River originates from Krishansar Lake in the vicinity of Sonamarg and runs northwards to Badoab village where it meets a tributary from the Dras side and runs westwards along the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir. It is fed by many glacial tributary streams on its way. It enters Azad Kashmir in the Gurez sector of the Line of Control, and then runs west until it meets the Jhelum River in Muzaffarabad. The Neelum River is 245 kilometers long, it covers 50 kilometers in Jammu and Kashmir and the remaining 195 kilometers in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

There are different kinds of fish found in abundance in the Neelum River. As the river almost entirely runs across the Line of Control, being the main cause for Kashmir conflict there is a feeling of uncertainty among the inhabitants, many of them have emigrated to safer places, which has left the river banks scarcely populous and kept the river in perfect conditions for growth of fish. The most famous among the different variety of fish found in Neelum River are:

 

1- Brown trout (Salmo trutta)

2- Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)

3- Snow trout (Schizothorax plagiostomus)

4- Shuddgurn

5- Anyour

© Copyright Robert Friel

 

Another one from Sunday. The snow simplifies the view and the reflections give it more interest - I think

Highlights are my favourite windows of light in the fall.

 

Special thanks to coyrooster for the matte.

 

better view

Just a quicky on the way home from work tonight

Snake River as it cascades along the Rockefeller Parkway,Wyoming

Taken in West Virginia neat Smoke Hole Caverns.

Although the light was bad and the sky was grey I found this river quite interesting. via 500px ift.tt/2klLlip

winding its way through the Jackson Hole valley, at the base of the Grand Tetons Range

 

Chosen as the cover photo for "The Best of Beautiful Earth" November, 2013

 

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