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  • The beautiful red and yellow leaves that fall from deciduous trees are a splendid sign of Autumn.  Located on an extinct volcanic cinder cone, and designed in 1909 by Frederick Law Olmsted and John Charles Olmsted, this urban park celebrates its centennial in 2009/2010, at a time when the future of the beloved open water reservoirs within the park is threatened by new EPA regulations.  Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.  Nikon F4, 20-35/2.8D. Fuji RVP 50.  Photo: November 2001.
    AJH-10b-October-2015-Mount-Tabor-Par...jpg
  • The beautiful red and yellow leaves that fall from deciduous trees are a splendid sign of Autumn.  Located on an extinct volcanic cinder cone, and designed in 1909 by Frederick Law Olmsted and John Charles Olmsted, this urban park celebrates its centennial in 2009/2010, at a time when the future of the beloved open water reservoirs within the park is threatened by new EPA regulations.  Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.  Nikon F4, 20-35/2.8D. Fuji RVP 50.  Photo: November 2001.
    Autumn Splendor, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) viewed from Portland, Oregon.  The left skyline is the Northwest Ridge (named Cathedral Ridge); the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon. Sunrise provides backlighting glow to radiation fog (Valley Fog) filling the valleys on this cool autumn morning. Radiation fog results from radiation cooling of the ground and adjacent air under clear night skies and elevated relative humidity, most common in autumn. Normally, this fog dissipates within a few hours of sunrise as the sun warms the ground.
    AJH_221008_1243.jpg
  • Lake effect fog is backlit by a clear autumn sunrise on Waldo Lake 1650m with Three Sisters volcanoes beyond (far left); Oregon Cascades.
    Sunrise-Fog-Waldo-Lake-Panorama.jpg
  • Autumn leaves and sun on forest trail, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.  In 1903, John Charles Olmsted of the Massachusetts-based landscape design firm Olmsted Brothers recommended that a city park be developed at Mount Tabor.  Portland Parks Superintendent Emanuel T. Mische, who had worked at Olmsted Brothers, consulted with Olmsted on the park layout and integration of the reservoirs into the park design.  Photo: September 1999.  Nikon F4, 35/2.0.  Fuji Velvia RVP50.
    Forest Trail, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • View of Reservoir 5 through autumn leaves at sunset, Mt Tabor Park.  This is one of three open reservoirs at Mt Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run sourse supplying them.
    Sunset Over Reservoir 5, Mt Tabor Pa...jpg
  • Vine Maple (Acer circinatum), Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_191005_6193.jpg
  • In October 2020 the statue in Mt Tabor Park of Harvey W Scott was toppled by demonstrators. The granite plinth engraved with the inscription: "Pioneer, Editor, Publisher and molder of public opinion in Oregon and the nation" was vandalized with the word “COLONIZER” added above “Pioneer”. Harvey W Scott was editor of The Oregonian newspaper from 1866–1872. The statue was found toppled to the ground on the morning of 20 October 2020 following a series of statue removals during racial justice protests in Portland. On 20 February 2021, a sculpture entitled Bust of York, by an unidentified artist, appeared on the same pedestal.
    Empty Statue Pedestal Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 sunset silhouette, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_08a2_August-2020.jpg
  • Historic light fixture, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_06b_June-2020.jpg
  • Hiker on Arendsig Ridge, above the uMlambonja River Valley. The red grass is rooigras (Themeda triandra). Above the cliffs is the Ngwavu Plateau and the Ganabu Ridge rising to the left. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F100; 24-50/3.3-4.5D. Kodak E100VS.
    uMlambonja River Valley Drakensberg.jpg
  • Three trees in fall, Mount Tabor Park.  In 1903, John Charles Olmsted of the Massachusetts-based landscape design firm Olmsted Brothers recommended that a city park be developed at Mount Tabor.  Portland Parks Superintendent Emanuel T. Mische, who had worked at Olmsted Brothers, consulted with Olmsted on the park layout and integration of the reservoirs into the park design.
    10_October.jpg
  • On the morning of 20 October 2020 the statue in Mt Tabor Park of Harvey W Scott was found toppled to the ground following a series of statue removals during racial justice protests in Portland. The granite plinth engraved with the inscription: "Pioneer, Editor, Publisher and molder of public opinion in Oregon and the nation" was vandalized with the word “COLONIZER” added above “Pioneer”. Harvey W Scott was editor of The Oregonian newspaper from 1866–1872.
    Harvey Scott Statue Pedestal Mt Tabo...jpg
  • On the morning of 20 October 2020 the statue in Mt Tabor Park of Harvey W Scott was found toppled to the ground following a series of statue removals during racial justice protests in Portland. The granite plinth engraved with the inscription: "Pioneer, Editor, Publisher and molder of public opinion in Oregon and the nation" was vandalized with the word “COLONIZER” added above “Pioneer”. Harvey W Scott was editor of The Oregonian newspaper from 1866–1872.
    Vandalized Harvey W Scott Statue Ped...jpg
  • Reservoir 1 preservation, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_04a_April-2020.jpg
  • 2020 Mount Tabor Park Calendar
    AJH_00_Cover-Front-2020.jpg
  • Colors of summer in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_09b_September-2019.jpg
  • Sun dappled firs, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_07a_July-2020.jpg
  • Warm to cool; sun's last rays on the curved wall of Gatehouse 5, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_08b_August-2020.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon D700. AF300/4.
    AJH_02b_February-2019.jpg
  • Backlit Black tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica)) also known as blackgum in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.  Tree #5 Trees of Mt Tabor Park. Kodak Portra 400, W Nikkor 35mm f/2.5, Nikonos-V.
    AJH_11b_November-2019.jpg
  • Study of drinking water Reservoir 5, which violates the EPA LT2 Rule, Mount Tabor Park,  Portland, Oregon.
    Study of Drinking Water Reservoir 5,...jpg
  • Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora) Tree #21 in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA. PC-Nikkor 35mm f/2.8 at f/11 with 6mm shift, vertically upward.
    AJH_211015_9125.jpg
  • Tar n Trail Run 2018 in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_09b_September-2020.jpg
  • Fall foliage in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_10a_October-2019.jpg
  • Misty fall at the summit loop in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_11a_November-2019.jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 reflected at sunset in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_09a_September-2019.jpg
  • Fall colors, Mount Tabor Park
    Fall colors Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Reservoir 6 headhouse, which violates the EPA LT2 Rule, Mount Tabor Park,  Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Gatehouse 6, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Reservoir 6 headhouse, Mount Tabor Park,  Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Gatehouse 6, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 crenellations, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_10a_October-2020.jpg
  • Sunset shadows on SE Salmon Way, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_09a_September-2020.jpg
  • Fall colors in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_10b_October-2019.jpg
  • Acer circinatum (Vine Maple), Mount Tabor Park
    11-November-2014.jpg
  • Acer circinatum (Vine Maple), Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon
    November 2014 Mount Tabor Park Calen...jpg
  • Period lighting from 1924, comprising polygonal lantern-style shades, reminiscent of gaslamps. These replaced the original single white globes from 1911, thanks to the vision of Parks Superintendent Emanuel T. Mische. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_171029_2565.jpg
  • Warm to cool; sun's last rays on the curved wall of Gatehouse 5, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_190930_5966_MA.jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 reflected at sunset in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_180917_4511.jpg
  • Reservoir 6 headhouse, Mount Tabor Park,  Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH-09a-September-2015-Mount-Tabor-P...jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221017_1327.jpg
  • Reservoir 1 preservation, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_191001_6078_MA.jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 crenellations reflected, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_190930_5995_HDR_MA.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon D700. AF300/4.
    AJH_130118_0285.jpg
  • Fall colors, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA
    AJH_151114_7726_MA.jpg
  • The Monastery of the Precious Blood is a building in the Montavilla neighborhood of southeast Portland, Oregon, USA. The building is a Portland Historic Landmark, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
    AJH_201104_7344.jpg
  • Summit Restroom (aka Harvey Scott Restroom) after restoration in 2017, Mount Tabor Park, Portland Oregon USA. The restoration project was funded by the Parks Replacement Bond. Left: Period lighting from 1924, comprising polygonal lantern-style shades, reminiscent of gaslamps. These replaced the original single white globes from 1911, thanks to the vision of Parks Superintendent Emanuel T. Mische. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_201024_7271.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221110_1555.jpg
  • Reservoir 7, Portland Water Bureau's last remaining active drinking water reservoir in Mount Tabor Park, is a covered, underground tank built in 1912, with a capacity of 200,000 gallons. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_211124_9837.jpg
  • Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon USA.
    AJH_171209_3196.jpg
  • Giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_180930_4640_MA.jpg
  • Sunset shadows on SE Salmon Way, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_191001_6043_MA.jpg
  • Historic light fixture silhouette against sunset twilight. This period lighting from 1924 comprises polygonal lantern-style shades, reminiscent of gaslights. These replaced the original single white globes from 1911, thanks to the vision of Parks Superintendent Emanuel T. Mische. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_191001_6068.jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 reflected at sunset in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_190930_5969_MA.jpg
  • Mist shrouds the summit, Mount Tabor Park, Portland Oregon.
    AJH_131020_2279_DRV.jpg
  • Three trees in fall, Mount Tabor Park.  In 1903, John Charles Olmsted of the Massachusetts-based landscape design firm Olmsted Brothers recommended that a city park be developed at Mount Tabor.  Portland Parks Superintendent Emanuel T. Mische, who had worked at Olmsted Brothers, consulted with Olmsted on the park layout and integration of the reservoirs into the park design.
    Three Red Trees, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Period lighting from 1924, comprising polygonal lantern-style shades, reminiscent of gaslights. These replaced the original single white globes from 1911, thanks to the vision of Parks Superintendent Emanuel T. Mische. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_131020_2273.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221017_1331.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221017_1322.jpg
  • Misty forest at the intersection of Tabor Summit Drive and Summit Loop, near where the pedestal still stands from toppled statue of Harvey W Scott. The misty ambience evokes a fantasy landscape along the road to Dagoba, the swamp planet where Yoda lives in Star Wars: Eposide V - The Empire Strikes Back. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    road-to-dagobah-mt-tabor-park.jpg
  • Beautiful hand-crafted greeting cards made with the finest inks and professional matte paper. All cards feature images of Mount Tabor Park, printed on Epson's Signature Worthy 100% cotton rag fine art paper. Cards are standard size 5" x 7" and include mailing envelope. Since each card is a fine art professional print, they can be mounted behind a standard matte with 5” x 7” opening and framed.
    Pine-At-Reservoir5-Mt-Tabor-Park.jpg
  • Fall colors, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_171029_2565.jpg
  • Fall colors in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_180917_4501.jpg
  • European Beech (Fagus sylvatica) - Tree #2 - in fall colors, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_161123_9807.jpg
  • Historic light fixture and firs, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA
    AJH-10a-October-2015-Mount-Tabor-Par...jpg
  • The Monastery of the Precious Blood is a building in the Montavilla neighborhood of southeast Portland, Oregon, USA. The building is a Portland Historic Landmark, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
    AJH_201104_7345.jpg
  • Austrian Black Pine (Pinus nigra) entwined by an unidentified vine. Forest greens are reflected in the still surface of Reservoir 5 beyond. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_211015_9139.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221110_1553.jpg
  • Beautiful hand-crafted greeting cards made with the finest inks and professional matte paper. All cards feature images of Mount Tabor Park, printed on Epson's Signature Worthy 100% cotton rag fine art paper. Cards are standard size 5" x 7" and include mailing envelope. Since each card is a fine art professional print, they can be mounted behind a standard matte with 5” x 7” opening and framed.
    Forest-Trail-Sunrise-Mt-Tabor-Park.jpg
  • Serpentine path and fall colors, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA
    AJH_151114_7725.jpg
  • The crater floor and basalt walls of Mount Tabor's extinct volcanic cinder cone create a spectacular amphitheater setting and backdrop for summertime music concerts, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_191001_6036.jpg
  • Sun's first rays on Gatehouse 5, while fog blankets the city, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Gatehouse 5 Fog Sunrise Mt Tabor Par...jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 sunset silhouette, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_190930_5977_MA.jpg
  • Sunset last light over Reservoir 5, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_2020_Calendar-Mt-Tabor-Park-1-Fr...jpg
  • Colors of summer in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_180917_4505.jpg
  • Backlit Black tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica) also known as blackgum in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.  Tree #5 Trees of Mt Tabor Park. Kodak Portra 400, W Nikkor 35mm f/2.5, Nikonos-V.
    AJH_171028_40560038.jpg
  • Misty fall at the summit loop in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_171029_2551.jpg
  • Serpentine path curves around a European Beech (Fagus sylvatica) amongst other beautiful fall colors, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA
    AJH_151114_7725.jpg
  • Fall colors, Mount Tabor Park Portland Oregon
    Fall-Colors-Mt-Tabor-Park.jpg
  • Oak tree at the tennis courts, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Oak-tree-and-tennis-courts.jpg
  • Reservoir 6 headhouse, Mount Tabor Park,  Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH-04b-April-2015-Mount-Tabor-Park-...jpg
  • Acer circinatum (Vine Maple), Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA
    AJH-09b-September-2015-Mount-Tabor-P...jpg
  • Surface runoff and channel drain detail of stormwater facilities, Ankeny Plaza / Saturday Market, Portland, Oregon.
    Stormwater Channel Drain.jpg
  • Gatehouse 5 and reflections on Reservoir 5, with the City of Portland beyond.  This is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park, and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park, with their ancillary structures, were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them.
    Portland Beyond Reservoir 5 Mt Tabor...jpg
  • The Monastery of the Precious Blood is a building in the Montavilla neighborhood of southeast Portland, Oregon, USA. The building is a Portland Historic Landmark, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
    AJH_201104_7339.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221110_1557.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221017_1323.jpg
  • Reservoir 5 at Mt Tabor Park was emptied by Portland Water Bureau in October 2022, to check for leaks in the liner, seen here. Reservoir 5 (1911) is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  Mount Tabor's three open reservoirs and their ancillary structures were placed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.  The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2006 regulation known as the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (aka the LT2 Rule) imposed new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. These requirements could not practicably be met while maintaining these open reservoirs, and in 2016 all of the reservoirs at Mount Tabor were finally taken offline and permanently disconnected from Portland’s drinking water system. Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221017_1326.jpg
  • Gatehouse 1 and Weir Building (1923), also called the Inlet Building or Dosing House, at Reservoir 1, one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park, with their ancillary structures, were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_211124_9870.jpg
  • Mount Tabor Park entry sign at SE 69th Avenue, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    mount-tabor-park-sign-fall.jpg
  • Fog at Reservoir 1, emptied for restoration work, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon. Reservoir 1 is one of three open reservoirs at Mount Tabor Park and of five total in Portland.  The 3 open reservoirs in Mount Tabor Park, with their ancillary structures, were placed in the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 2004.  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulation: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, referred to as the LT2 rule imposes new requirements that open water reservoirs be covered, buried or additionally treated.  This applies to Portland's five open reservoirs and to the unfiltered Bull Run source supplying them.  To comply with these regulations, the Portland Water Bureau disconnected Mount Tabor's original uncovered reservoirs from the drinking water system in 2015.
    Fog at Reservoir 1 Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Beautiful hand-crafted greeting cards made with the finest inks and professional matte paper. All cards feature images of Mount Tabor Park, printed on Epson's Signature Worthy 100% cotton rag fine art paper. Cards are standard size 5" x 7" and include mailing envelope. Since each card is a fine art professional print, they can be mounted behind a standard matte with 5” x 7” opening and framed.
    Luminaire-Fall-Colors-Mt-Tabor-Park.jpg
  • Mount Tabor Park
    AJH_131020_2300.jpg
  • Sunset last light over Reservoir 5, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Last Light Reservoir 5 Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Sun dappled firs, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_190930_5958_HDR_MA.jpg
  • Fall foliage in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_171029_2556.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon D700. Nikon AF Nikkor 300mm f/4 IF-ED.
    AJH_160224_8039_MA.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3426m (11,239ft) casts its own shadow at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon F4, AF300/4. Kodak E100VS
    Mount Hood Shadow, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Autumn reflection on Reservoir 5, Mount Tabor Park Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Autumn reflection on Reservoir 5, Mt...jpg
  • The southern African Bearded Vulture (Gypaetus barbatus) - or Lammergeyer - is currently endangered and likely to become extinct.  Originally common throughout Lesotho, the Free State, Eastern Cape Province and KwaZulu-Natal (along the Maloti-Drakensberg mountains), the Bearded Vulture now only breeds and forages across a fraction of its original range. Current (2011) population estimates are in the region of 100 breeding pairs, down from over 200 pairs 25 years ago.  Here, this rarely-seen vulture-like eagle of Africa catches the sun's first rays while the grassy slopes of the high Drakensberg remain in deep shadow.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F601, 50-135/3.5. Fuji RD. Autumn 1993.
    Bearded Vulture Drakensberg Green Mo...jpg
  • Mount Tabor Park entry sign at SE 69th Avenue, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    mount-tabor-park-sign-autumn.jpg
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