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  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Cottonwood tree and winter fog on the Willamette River, from the Ruth Bascom Riverbank Path in towntown Eugene, Oregon, USA.
    Willamette-River-Cottonwood-Fog.jpg
  • Sun's first rays on Gatehouse 5, while fog blankets the city, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_12b_December-2020.jpg
  • Late-night fog and light shadows cast by original light fixture in 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.
    Midnight Thrill, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Winter Jogger. Fog shrouds the summit loop after fresh snowfall in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Winter Jogger Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • In fog, a jogger runs through snow, framed by the branches of a Japanese Flowering Cherry (Prunus serrulata). The Japanese Flowering Cherry has characteristic horizontal lenticels on red bark. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    12_December.jpg
  • In fog, a jogger runs through snow, framed by the branches of a Japanese Flowering Cherry (Prunus serrulata). The Japanese Flowering Cherry has characteristic horizontal lenticels on red bark. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Cherry-Tree-Snow-Workout-Mt-Tabor-Pa...jpg
  • Mist shrouds the summit loop in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.  Kodak Portra 400, Nikon LW Nikkor 28mm f/2.8, Nikonos-V.
    AJH_05b_May-2019.jpg
  • Misty fall at the summit loop in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_11a_November-2019.jpg
  • The active Shark Island Lighthouse (steel lattice tower on left) stands just to seaward of the historic 1903 Shark Island Lighthouse (right), located atop the rugged granite peninsula that provides natural shelter to the tiny harbor of Luderitz.  The old lighthouse is a 12m (40 ft) square tower with attached 1-story keeper's house.  The lantern has been removed and the building has been made available for overnight accommodations, offering adventurous tourists the opportunity the stay in this genuine light house steeped in the maritime history of Namibia's rugged coastline, notorious for its harsh weather.
    Shark Island Lighthouse
  • The three summits of Sterkhorn 2973m, also known as Mount Memory or Mount Mandela, seen backlit at sunrise from Keith Bush Camp as morning mist dissipates in the uMhlwazini Valley.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 50-135/3.5. Fuji RD. October 1995
    Sterkhorn Silver Lining, Drakensberg...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
  • 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_1322.jpg
  • Mist shrouds the summit loop in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.  Kodak Portra 400, Nikon LW Nikkor 28mm f/2.8, Nikonos-V.
    AJH_180820_0010.jpg
  • Last Rays Filter Through Mist, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon. Photo 12/25/2008.
    AJH-12a-December-2015-Mount-Tabor-Pa...jpg
  • Historic light fixture and firs, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA
    AJH-10a-October-2015-Mount-Tabor-Par...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
  • Misty fall at the summit loop in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_171029_2551.jpg
  • The three summits of Sterkhorn 2973m, also known as Mount Memory or Mount Mandela, seen backlit at sunrise from Keith Bush Camp as morning mist dissipates in the uMhlwazini Valley.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 50-135/3.5. Fuji RD. October 1995
    Sterkhorn (Mt Memory), Drakensberg.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
  • Last Rays Filter Through Mist, Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA. 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 12/25/2008.
    Sun-Rays-Diffused-Mt-Tabor-Park.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
  • Reservoir 7, Portland Water Bureau's last remaining active drinking water reservoir in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_220208_0293.jpg
  • Mount Tabor Park
    AJH_131020_2300.jpg
  • Chacma Baboon - Papio ursinus - eating insects in a fern garden, below the Amphitheatre, Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park (former Royal Natal National Park), South Africa.  The Tugela River is visible in the background.  Nikon F90, 50-135/3.5. Fuji RDP-II.
    Baboon Papio ursinus Drakensberg.jpg
  • A late-summer sunrise burns off fog at Waldo Lake 1650m, one of the purest water bodies in the Oregon Cascades.
    Waldo-Lake-Sunrise-Fog-Window.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.
    Harvey-W-Scott-in-Fog-Mt-Tabor-Park-...jpg
  • Booth-Kelly Railroad Bridge (1882), now called Hayden Bridge, is a single span Whipple through truss spanning the McKenzie River in Springfield. A Whipple truss is a (stronger) variation of the Pratt truss, also called a “Double Intersection Pratt”, characterized by diagonal tension members crossing adjacent verticals, thereby spanning two panels instead of just one for the Pratt truss. It is considered the oldest surviving bridge in Oregon, while rare and significant for its wrought iron Phoenix columns. This bridge has been moved once. Originally built in 1882 by Phoenixville Bridge Works at Corrine, Utah, it was dismantled and relocated in 1901 to its current location to serve the since abandoned Weyerhaeuser Logging Railway. The bridge was abandoned in 1987, then decked for pedestrian use and reopened in 2019. Notable also is the use of longitudinal bracing rods beneath the bottom chord bracing the deck beams. Lane County, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_221116_1718.jpg
  • Late summer sunrise at Waldo Lake 1650m with Three Sisters volcanoes beyond; Oregon Cascades
    Waldo Lake, Oregon.jpg
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Andrew Haliburton

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