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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
  • Backlit tiny leaves of new growth in spring. Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    New Growth Mount Tabor Park.jpg
  • A dusting of snow on fall leaves near the summit of Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon.
    AJH_170107_0017.jpg
  • Spectacular example of Senecio canescens of the Family: Asteraceae in the Quebrada Llanganuco (Llanganuco Valley) region of Huascarán National Park.  The park was established in 1975, and listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 1985.  Plant of 45 cm tall.  Has golden flower heads, soft leaves of grayish-white color.  Grows on the puna at 4,100 to 4,500 m.  Used for treating coughs.
    40_AJH_080625_1819_DRV.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Fall foliage in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_10a_October-2019.jpg
  • Vine Maple (Acer circinatum), Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_191005_6193.jpg
  • Fall foliage in Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_171029_2556.jpg
  • On the eve of the Spring Equinox, deciduous trees are bursting with spring blossoms and budding leaves that will provide a canopy of shade by the heat of summer. Tabor Summit Drive Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    Tabor Summit Drive Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Sun dog over Mount Hood, Portland, Oregon.  Also known as a Mock Sun or Parhelia, this is a halo phenomenon observed at 22-degrees offset from the sun (the sun is out of frame to the left).  They are formed in cold conditions when the air contains sufficient plate ice crystals floating horizontally like leaves.  An uncommon occurrence in Portland.
    Sundog, Sun Dog, Mock Sun, Parhelia ..Hood
  • Illumination Rock 2,909m (9,543ft) and Illumination Saddle 2,865m (9,400ft).  Illumination Rock is a spectacular spire of rotten basalt on the southwest side of Mt Hood, a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  Powerful glacial forces have eroded down a former rock ridge, leaving this sprire shaped like the fin of a fish.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat.
    Illumination Rock, Mt Hood
  • Castle Crags from Illumination Saddle 2,865m (9,400ft), with Leuthold Couloir (FA 1932) far left, and the Yocum Ridge above the couloir.  Castle Crag is a spectacular spire of rotten basalt on the southwest side of Mt Hood, a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  Powerful glacial forces have eroded down a former rock ridge, leaving this fantasy sprire.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat.
    Castle Crags, Mt Hood
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Andrew Haliburton

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