Nov 30, 2008

Wet prairie



In some places the cypress are stacked tightly against one another. In other areas, as shown below, they are few and far in between. We call those areas our wet prairies.

Nov 29, 2008

11 Mile Road


This photo was taken in the eastern half of Big Cypress National Preserve looking north toward the Raccoon Point pinelands. You can see them in the background where the cloud shadow is.

Nov 28, 2008

Hat rack cypress


The dwarf cypress are sometimes referred to as hat racks because they resemble the size and shape of an old time hat rack. You don't see many hat racks any more. My grandparents had one at their front door. Maybe they are more common up north in "jacket and hat" country.

Nov 27, 2008

Cloud reflection


In the air, during late fall, when the cypress needles have fallen, and the swamps are still holding water, the reflections of sunny sky and clouds give the land a three dimensional feel.

Nov 26, 2008

Cloud shadow


As a hydrologist, I am always tracking the ecologic position of the wetting front. That's not what this photo shows. Rather, its a cloud shadow moving across the cypress plain. If you look closely you can see some egrets and even standing water at the feet of the cypress.

Nov 25, 2008

Pines and cypress



In this photo you can see the contrast between the "evergreens" of the pinelands from the needle-less expanse of cypress.

Nov 24, 2008

Deep in the swamp


View of a cypress dome, in winter, from the ground. November is the first official month of the dry season ... but November is also just on the other side of our peak water season, so water is still covering most of the preserve.

Nov 23, 2008

Annual needle drop


Up north the leaves have already started to fall from their branches. The same thing happens in the Big Cypress Swamp to our cypress in November. When it happens, the pine islands, which remain green, really jump out.

Nov 22, 2008

Bon voyage



Another happy customer, heading downstream from the lock.

Nov 21, 2008

Empty lock



This photo nicely shows how far the boat had to drop to get from one side of the lock to the other. That makes me wonder: what's the drop on other major locks in our nation's river system?

Nov 20, 2008

View from the lock



View of the S78 Dam from the edge of the lock, looking south. There was just the right dose of cloud cover for good photos on this day.

Nov 19, 2008

Gates



The lock gates are bigger than you'd think, and they have to be strong. Water is a mighty force.

Nov 18, 2008

S78 headwaters


Here's the upstream side of the S78 spillway. You can see the lock master's house in the background, on the right.

Nov 17, 2008

Closed lock


Here's a photo of the same lock, looking downstream, when it was closed. On that day there was a significant drop in river stage on the upstream and downstream side, on the order of around 10 ft. That made it fun to watch the boat pass into, and through the lock, as the lock keeper with the Army Corps of Engineers slowly let water out of the chamber through the downstream gate.

Nov 16, 2008

Ortona lock



Here's a boat entering the lock of the S78, also called the Ortona Lock and Dam, floating down the river.

Nov 15, 2008

S78


This photo was taken in November of last year, looking upstream along the Caloosahatchee.

Nov 14, 2008

Yellowstone Lake


Yellowstone Lake is the largest freshwater lake above 7,000 feet in North America. It covers 136 square miles and has an average depth of 140 ft. Lake Okeechobee is around 730 square miles and has an average depth of 9 feet in comparison.
Thanks for the great photos Alexis!

Nov 13, 2008

Lamar Valley



Lamar River as viewed from Specimen Ridge, also in Yellowstone National Park.

Nov 12, 2008

Winter "water" land


Firehole Falls ... in winter.
Photo submitted by Alexis Brooks.

Nov 11, 2008

At the brink


Photo was taken by Alexis Brooks at the brink of Yellowstone's Lower Falls earlier this summer.

Nov 9, 2008

LeHardy Rapids


Another shot of the Yellowstone River. Isn't this the one that Lewis and Clark had to paddle up? It looks hard enough paddling down. I can almost hear the sound of the rapids.

Nov 8, 2008

Yellowstone River


I've never been to Yellowstone National Park myself, but I eagerly await the day when I do. In the meanwhile it's fun to look at the next couple photos, courtesy of Alexis Brooks, who spent time out there this past year.


Thanks for the great photos Alexis.

Nov 7, 2008

In between

Entering the lock at the S77, the transition zone from the lake to the river.

Nov 6, 2008

On the outside looking in


On the headwaters of the Caloosahatchee, looking upstream towards the S77.

Nov 5, 2008

Inside levee


On the inside of the Lake Okeechobee levee, looking towards the S77.

Nov 4, 2008

Same view, slightly different spot


Same view as previous photo, but taken a little to the side to include the S77 weather station. This is an especially fun station to keep track of because it is such a reliable site (the Army Corps of Engineers does a great job maintaining it) and because of the local "lake effect" which represses rainfall totals relative to areas away from Okeechobee .

Nov 3, 2008

Same spot, other way



Photo from the same spot as the previous photo, facing the other way, looking towards Lake Okeechobee last November.

Nov 2, 2008

Moore Haven Lock



Moore Haven Lock (S77) looking downstream into the Calooshatchee River.

Nov 1, 2008

S77


Headwaters of the Caloosahatchee, where it connects to Lake Okeechobee.

Submit your photos!

Submit your watershed photos to robert_sobczak@nps.gov. Please include your name, a brief caption, and when the photo was taken.