Waterfalls Photos

This will be photographs of waterfalls taken during our travels.

Photos of Haw Creek Falls in Ozark National Forest. They were taken at close to the same spot, but with different camera settings that represent two basic ways to photograph waterfalls. On the left is about what the eye sees, camera set on a faster shutter speed. The right side photo is take with a slow shutter speed that makes the moving water blur and usually requires a tripod.                                                                                                                                                  

 

Other photos from Arkansas

Triple Falls, Buffalo National River Park

Stream leading to Glory Hole Falls, Ozark National Forest

Glory Hole Falls

This is another photo technique. All the images taken of this falls were blurry when reviewed at home, but the falls was so unique, flowing through a hole in a rock, that I wanted to have a shot of it. So I turned the photo into a painting with the use of post-processing. This covers the blurriness.

 

This brings up: should this natural phenomenon be called a waterfalls or waterfall (falls or fall)?

After searching google I could find no consensus. So I will try to be consistent and use waterfalls.

Shots of falls in California

Brandy Creek Falls near Redding, California

Clear Creek near Lassen, California

Stream in Tahquitz Canyon, near Palm Springs, California

Savegre River Falls, Costa Rico

Zapata Falls State Park near Sand Dunes National Park, Colorodo

To get this photo you have to navigate about 100 feet along the rocky edge of a stream with the canyon sidewall squeezing narrower and narrower to a width of about two feet before the "path" opens to the falls.

 

 

 

New York State

Middle Falls, Genesse River, Letchworth State Park in western NY

This is an amazing park with three falls.

Falls in the mountains of North Carolina

Deep Creek Falls

Little Bradley Falls     

Oregon Waterfalls

Multnomah Falls, full front view and from the top

 

 

 

The bottom (the very top photo in this waterfalls page is also of the bottom of Multnomah Falls.

Bridal Veil Falls photo and painting conversion.

Latourell Falls                                                                     Falls on stream flowing into Crater Lake

Falls in Canada

Athabasca River and beginning of Athabasca Falls,

Canadian Rockies

Athabasca Falls

Bow River Falls, Banff National Park

River aux Sables Falls, Chutes Provincial Park,       Croches Falls, Mont Tremblant National, Park

Ontario                                                                                                                                            Quebec

 

Diablo Falls, Mont Tremblant National Park

Englishman River Falls, Vancouver Island, British Columbia

Maligne Canyon Falls Canadian Rockies

Little Qualicum Falls, Vancouver Island, BC

Mary Ann Falls, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia          Chute du Diable (Diablo Falls), Mont Tremblant

Falls on River Saint Maurice, La Mauricie National Park, Quebec

Rats Waterfalls, Mont Tremblant, Quebec

Montmorence Falls, Quebec

Suwapata Falls, Canadian Rockies

Hawaii

Falls along the Pipiwai Trail, near Hana, Maui

Waimoku Falls at the end of Pipiwai Trail.                                           Wailua Falls near Hana, Maui

                                                 The water of both flows off Mt. Haleakala.

Seven Sacred Pools, sacred place to Hawaiians, flows through Ohe'o Gulch (photo take in 1973)

Akaka Falls, Kauai

Current photo of Seven Sacred Pools

Toraille Falls, St. Lucia

Stock Ghyll Force Waterfalls, Ambleside England's Lake District National Park

Iceland

Iceland is a land of Falls, perhaps as many or more than any other locale in the world.

Aldeyjarfoss on the Skjálfandafljót River

The word foss is Icelandic for falls

Barnafoss is a complex of falls with an area that looks like an angle

Dettifoss in Vatnajökull National Park

Multilevel falls of Dynjandi

Gjarfoss, perhaps the most photogenic of Iceland's falls

Gulfoss, a massive waterfall. Note the tiny people to the left of center.

                          Hafragilsfoss                                                                    Haifoss

Jokulsafoss another multilevel falls

 

 

 

 

Kirkufellsfoss, one of the most photographed

Oxarasfoss in Thingvellir National Park

 

      Seljalandsfoss, see a tiny person in red jacket behind the falls

Skogafoss, a massive misty falls

Systrafoss, the lower part of a tall falls, easy to walk to.

Gođafoss, claimed to be the largest falls in Europe.   

Glymur falls, the tallest falls in Iceland, requires a long tough hike and climb to reach the falls.