Happy Halloween! And even happier: we only have one more day until November. That's starting to sound like "solid dry season ground." We won't miss the hurricanes, but we will miss the "wet season" clouds. Photo was taken along Tamiami Trail near Big Cypress Bend.
If words are cheap, photographs in the age of digital cameras are even cheaper. Here's a running posting of watershed relevant photos.
Oct 31, 2008
Oct 30, 2008
Oct 29, 2008
Peace full
Oct 28, 2008
When water falls
Water + gravity - land = waterfall.
This water fall is located in Uganda, and which I assume is a tributary into the Nile, but I do not know its name.
If I had to to make an educated guess, I'd call it bridal falls.
Photo submitted by fellow hydrologist Gerald Eder of Hydrophil.
Oct 27, 2008
"Crystal" Lake
Oct 26, 2008
Water up high
Oct 25, 2008
Bird of flight
" Tropical storm Fay dropped 25 inches of rain on Melbourne, and over the following month it flowed north up the St. Johns to my home on Lake Jesup giving us a 100 year flood. The flood waters opened up a huge area to airboat that was previously nearly inaccessible. Just a few miles down the lake from my home, I found this amazing and unusual dead pine, the top of which looks like a bird.
Without this photo, it’s doubtful that anyone will ever see this 'sculpture'. "
Photo and narrative submitted by Matt Hasty of Geneva Florida.
Oct 24, 2008
Optical airboat illusion
"The flood of Aug/Sept 2008 in the St. Johns River touched many people lives; and not in a good way. Yet, in the flood waters there was much beauty to be found. This is in “the brickyard slough” just east of Sanford Florida on the river between Lakes Jesup and Monroe. It was a sunrise ride, my wife (Laura) riding with our neighbor (Karen) as I followed in our airboat (taking photos). In case you’ve not figured it out yet, the photo is UP-SIDE DOWN."
Photo and narrative submitted by Matt Hasty of Geneva Florida.
Oct 23, 2008
Beach patrol
Oct 22, 2008
Oct 21, 2008
Under the pier
Oct 20, 2008
Oct 19, 2008
Oct 18, 2008
Tamiami Trail
Oct 17, 2008
Tamiami tractor trailor
Oct 16, 2008
Shark Valley entrance
Oct 15, 2008
Ghost farms
Oct 14, 2008
Sea of cypress
One of the really distinctive vegetation types in Big Cypess National Preserve is our dwarf cypress, shown here in this photo from the air near Mullet Slough, also with some cypress domes. The domes look like the high points, but they are actually lower, ... its just the trees that are taller there.
Oct 13, 2008
Clouds in the canal
Oct 12, 2008
Oct 11, 2008
Oct 10, 2008
Bring dry socks
There's no escaping it: you can't walk the Florida Trail without getting your feet wet.
One of the many secrets to hiking in the swamps is to bring an extra pair of socks and shoes ... and yes, also bring water!
There's no better feeling than getting off the trail and into dry foot gear after a good days hike!
Oct 9, 2008
Alpine lake
Here's a shot of the Kissimmee River flowing into Lake Okeechobee.
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Wait a minute, that's not right!
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This is Ferry Basin Lake, also in Olympic National Park. It's appears to be similar to Lake Okeechobee in that it doesn't have a "natural" outflow channel ... unless it's obscured from view on the left-hand side of the photo.
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This photo was submitted by Steve Fradkin.
Oct 8, 2008
Olympic peak
Here's a photo of a "mountain peak" and a snow-melt fed alpine valley in Olympic National Park.
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The Olympic peninsula rivals, and exceeds, the Florida peninsula in terms of rainfall. But its a mixed bag: the mountains squeeze most of the water from the clouds on the western side of the range, leaving it considerably drier to the east.
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The photo was submitted by Steve Fradkin.
Oct 7, 2008
Dry boots
Oct 6, 2008
Florida's Trail
The Appalachian Mountains have their trail.
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(I'm proud to say that I hiked to its northern terminus in Maine's Baxter State Park, better known as Mount Khatadin.)
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Florida also has its own trail too, called the Florida Trail.
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Its southern twenty miles passes through the heart of Big Cypress Nat'l Preserve ... and its end point is Loop Road, at the sign shown in this photo.
Oct 5, 2008
Bill Williams
Here's another view of Sweetwater Strand, taken from a slightly different angle.
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Wait a minute, they aren't cypress trees ! And that isn't south Florida!
This is a scenic view of the Bill Williams River in southern Arizona, a tributary in the Gila River Basin, and home to cottonwood forest along its riparian fringe.
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The riparian corridors are the "jewels of the desert."
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This photo was taken by graduate student Scott Simpson and submitted by Professor Tom Meixner of the University of Arizona.
Oct 4, 2008
Oct 3, 2008
Oct 2, 2008
Sweet water hurdle
Waters are deep and flow fast at Sweetwater, but it's not navigable from a traditional canoeing standpoint ... at least not without getting out and getting wet, and possibly looking an alligator in the eyes.
Actually, there were no alligators to be found. They tend to disperse into the swamps during high water.
Oct 1, 2008
Running the rapids
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Submit your watershed photos to robert_sobczak@nps.gov. Please include your name, a brief caption, and when the photo was taken.