This kicks butt, the desighn in those walls are just outta this world. This is a treat to the eyes. I added it to my collection.......Thank you almighty photographer from the GODS.....lol ;)
Wow Jen, your angle here on this capture is right on! It isn't easy to capture the depth and the feel of a slot canyon but you have managed to do it and do it doggone good! The color here is breathtaking. The rocks striations appear to swirl...now that is what I call cool! The way the sunlight/light is dancing through the slot is incredible. If i get this in the voting booth, it is a definite ten from me & I don't give those out very routinely at all.:) Good job my friend. Thank you for sharing this with us :~)
Wow Jen, you go places I can only dream of going. Maybe next time in Phoenix on business, you can take me to some of these neat places.
You have certainly made a beautiful place even more so.
Thanks for sharing and rest assured that it looks great on my desktop.
The emotions, the tears, of wasted years, wash over me like a cold wind out of the north. I tremble and shake, with each breath i take, and there's no one around me that cares. Dwight.
This is what I was waiting for... Incredible rocks, all the textures, all the subtle shades of browns and beiges. You captured this very well for our enjoyment. Thank you for sharing. It is great we can admire such sceneries here in Caedes, cause I doubt I will ever visit it myself.
I'm in awe. The lines, the colors, the shadows...just all of it, truly amazing. I am an avid hiker and can imagine squeezing through...and feeling blessed for it. Thanks for sharing with us.
-My Gallery-
The virtue of the camera is not the power it has to transform the photographer into an artist, but the impulse it gives him to keep on looking. - Brooks Anderson
I can not believe I have never commented on this one Jen. It is great as the score indicates. It is even better than that. I guess I wasn't here in '06. lol Better late then never.
A flash flood in here? And we're standing here with a camera, tripod and no raincoat? Oy gevault! There is an attraction west of Rapid City, South Dakota, called Thunderhead Falls. Around 1900, miners were digging a horizontal shaft to create a gold mine when instead they struck the bottom of Rapid Creek. So today visitors can walk 600 feet into the mountain to see a 30-foot waterfall roaring out of the ceiling. I remember taking my young family in there nearly 30 years ago and it definitely did roar, at the waterfall the temperature dropped about 20 degrees from the 80 degrees at the entrance, and there was a definite mist in the air from the falls. I remember thinking how short our life would be if the roof caved in behind us... much the same as if we were in your gorgeous photo when a flash flood appeared. (I have been here since 2006 and have seen a number of photos of this canyon, but not one that showed such a tight squeeze as yours!) Thanks for sharing. -Nik
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