Bear’s Den has a very nice waterfall but, as with many brooks and rivers, the cascades up and downstream are attractive and offer some interest as well. A nice fall with a splash caught my eye here.
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The white spray off this waterfall looks remarkably like the fluff surrounding one of the caterpillars I posted today. I never expected to see a parallel between one of your waterfalls and an insect, but when it comes to nature, what do expectations have to do with it? Beyond that, the tannin-tinted water on the left looks a bit like the other caterpillar — it’s a double treat!
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Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and so is imagination. Anything is possible in Nature.
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And it’s a source of endless fascination to see how different eyes behold the same beauties.
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Yes it is. Lori’s comment on my cormorant post is a good example…a mud hole to one is a source of beauty and fascination to another. Taking that another way…it is always educational to see the many different ways photographers compose the “same” scene or subject.
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Nice Steve! Like the color and the movement!
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Thanks, Reed. No matter how many of these you shoot, it always takes a little educated experimenting to get the look you’re after.
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The close view makes this one of your more abstract waterfall photographs.
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In the defintion applying to a small section of something larger yes. Some of the places I visit have been photographed by myself and many other hundreds of times. So going in close for something a bit more intimate offers a lot of new compositional possibilities as well as a unique frozen moment in time.
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When I came across some moving water recently, I immediately thought of your work. Always inspiring.
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Thanks, Annie. I am glad my images make an impression. 🙂
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