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  • Detail in undulating rail wall, Tanner Springs Park, Portland, Oregon.  This park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Undulating Rail Wall Detail.jpg
  • Detail in undulating rail wall, Tanner Springs Park, Portland, Oregon.  This park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Undulating Rail Wall.jpg
  • Snow on Basalt Crater Wall, 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.  Photo 12/24/2008.
    Crater Wall Basalt, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Art detail in undulating rail wall, Tanner Springs Park, Portland, Oregon.  This park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Tanner Springs Art 2.jpg
  • Art detail in undulating rail wall, Tanner Springs Park, Portland, Oregon.  This park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Tanner Springs Art 1.jpg
  • Snow on Basalt Crater Wall, 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.  Photo 12/24/2008.
    AJH-02a-February-2016-Mt-Tabor-Park-...jpg
  • Hikers at a chasm in the Amphitheatre Wall, caused by erosion at a vertical fracture line in the basalt.  The Tugela Falls (visible below) drop 614m from this summit plateau elevation. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Nikon F90; 35-135/3.5. Kodak E100SW. December 1996.
    Hikers view Tugela Falls Amphitheatr...jpg
  • Boardwalk detail, Tanner Springs Park, Portland, Oregon.  This park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Tanner Springs Boardwalk.jpg
  • Rainbow Wall from Juniper Peak 1,862m (6,109ft), Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, a public land administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).  The Class 3 scramble is accessed from the Oak Creek Canyon Trailhead and the Arnight Trail (10.5km / 6.5 mi round trip).  Excellent views of Brownstone Wall and the south fork of Pine Creek.
    AJH_090808_2948_DRV.jpg
  • Rainbow Wall from Juniper Peak 1,862m (6,109ft), Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, a public land administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).  The Class 3 scramble is accessed from the Oak Creek Canyon Trailhead and the Arnight Trail (10.5km / 6.5 mi round trip).  Excellent views of Brownstone Wall and the south fork of Pine Creek.
    AJH_090808_2956_DRV.jpg
  • Channel drain detail of stormwater facilities, Tanner Springs Park, Portland, Oregon.  This park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Channel Drain Steps.jpg
  • Flowering Arnold Promise Witch Hazel (Hamamelis intermedia) and parapet wall detail at Reservoir 1, 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.  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 source supplying them.
    AJH-05b-May-2015-Mount-Tabor-Park-Ca...jpg
  • Vegetated Sand Filter.  Tanner Springs Park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Vegetated Sand Filter.jpg
  • Flowering Arnold Promise Witch Hazel (Hamamelis intermedia) and parapet wall detail at Reservoir 1, 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.  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 source supplying them.
    AJH-03a-March-2016-Mt-Tabor-Park-Cal...jpg
  • Flowering Arnold Promise Witch Hazel (Hamamelis intermedia) and parapet wall detail at Reservoir 1, 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.  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 source supplying them.
    Witch Hazel Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • Wall Art. Hands of volunteers at a work meet.  Café au Play at Tabor Commons, a project of the Southeast Uplift Neighborhood Coalition (SEUL) and volunteers from Portland's Mt Tabor neighborhood.
    Hands of Volunteers at Cafe au Play
  • Unidentified climber falls from the last moves in the Finals round of the Veggi-Fruit Open climbing competition, July 1995, Durban Beachfront, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5.  Fuji RVP Velvia 50.
    Climbing Competition, Durban
  • Original 1950s wallpaper detail found behind a mirror in the bathroom of a house built in 1957, Utterstrom Heights residential subdivision, Portland, Oregon.
    Wallpaper - Bidet
  • Unidentified climber in the Finals round of the Veggi-Fruit Open climbing competition, July 1995, Durban Beachfront, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5.  Fuji RVP Velvia 50.
    Climbing Competition, Durban
  • Dave Pothier, gains 3rd in the Masters Division of the Veggi-Fruit Open climbing competition, July 1995, Durban Beachfront, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5.  Fuji RVP Velvia 50.
    Climbing Competition, Durban
  • David Olds climbs to overall victory in the Veggi-Fruit Open climbing competition, July 1995, Durban Beachfront, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5.  Fuji RVP Velvia 50.
    Climbing Competition, Durban
  • David Olds climbs to overall victory in the Veggi-Fruit Open climbing competition, July 1995, Durban Beachfront, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5.  Fuji RVP Velvia 50.
    Climbing Competition, Durban
  • Steven Bradshaw competes in the Veggi-Fruit Open climbing competition, July 1995, Durban Beachfront, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5.  Fuji RVP Velvia 50.
    Climbing Competition, Durban
  • Steven Bradshaw competes in the Veggi-Fruit Open climbing competition, July 1995, Durban Beachfront, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5.  Fuji RVP Velvia 50.
    Climbing Competition, Durban
  • Original 1950s wallpaper detail found behind a mirror in the bathroom of a house built in 1957, Utterstrom Heights residential subdivision, Portland, Oregon.
    Wallpaper - Shower
  • Original 1950s wallpaper detail found behind a mirror in the bathroom of a house built in 1957, Utterstrom Heights residential subdivision, Portland, Oregon.
    Wallpaper - Make-up
  • Original 1950s wallpaper detail found behind a mirror in the bathroom of a house built in 1957, Utterstrom Heights residential subdivision, Portland, Oregon.
    Wallpaper - Shaving
  • Parapet graffiti on freeway off-ramp I-5 southbound to Morrison Bridge..
    Parapet graffiti I-5.jpg
  • Near Lüderitz, lies Kolmanskop (or Kolmanskuppe), an abandoned diamond mining town from the early 1900's.  Abandoned in 1956, it has been invaded by the sand of the Namib Desert and is now a ghost town.
    Pantry Hatch 3, Kolmanskop.jpg
  • Near Lüderitz, lies Kolmanskop (or Kolmanskuppe), an abandoned diamond mining town from the early 1900's.  Abandoned in 1956, it has been invaded by the sand of the Namib Desert and is now a ghost town.
    Pantry Hatch 2, Kolmanskop
  • Near Lüderitz, lies Kolmanskop (or Kolmanskuppe), an abandoned diamond mining town from the early 1900's.  Abandoned in 1956, it has been invaded by the sand of the Namib Desert and is now a ghost town.
    Kolmanskop Ghost Town Triptych
  • Near Lüderitz, lies Kolmanskop (or Kolmanskuppe), an abandoned diamond mining town from the early 1900's.  Abandoned in 1956, it has been invaded by the sand of the Namib Desert and is now a ghost town.
    Kolmanskop Ghost Town Poster.jpg
  • Near Lüderitz, lies Kolmanskop (or Kolmanskuppe), an abandoned diamond mining town from the early 1900's.  Abandoned in 1956, it has been invaded by the sand of the Namib Desert and is now a ghost town.
    Hand Basin, Kolmanskop.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
  • 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
  • Tanner Springs Park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Tanner-Springs-Park-Rail-Detail.jpg
  • Snow lines Reservoir 5 in Mount Tabor Park, emptied for maintenance, etching in sharp relief the shape of the reservoir basin, the reinforced concrete counterfort dam wall and Gatehouse 5.  Photo: 3 January 2016.
    AJH_160103_8030_MA.jpg
  • Front wheel turned.  Graffiti on downtown wall featuring a bicycle with front wheel turned, San Francisco, California, USA.
    Graffiti Bicycle San Francisco.jpg
  • Tanner Springs Park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Basalt-Cobble-Rainwater-Channel.jpg
  • "Ancient basalt boulder, fiery heat its moulder, carved and formed by frost and storm..." - the first words of the peom The Cold, Winter Wind by Lorna Peirson. These were the words that inspired this image of a basalt boulder resting on smooth sandstone bedrock in Tooth Gully, Drakensberg.  Tooth Gully lies at the left-hand end of the Amphitheatre, the iconic view of the jagged escarpment wall as viewed from the former Royal Natal National Park. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.   Nikon F90; 28-70/3.5-4.5. Fuji RDP-II.
    Ancient Basalt Boulder Drakensberg.jpg
  • Tanner Springs Park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Rainwater-Recirculation-Pond.jpg
  • Tanner Springs Park in the Pearl District of downtown Portland, Oregon is a modern-day experiment in sustainable design and stormwater management.  The water feature, designed by Herbert Dreiseitl is an effort to re-create the pre-industrial wetlands and riparian ecology of the original Tanner Creek that flowed to the nearby Willamette River in the early 1800s.  One sustainability feature of the park is the collection, treatment and recirculation of all rainwater that falls within the park.  Additional sustainability features include the re-use of basalt cobbles, or Belgian Blocks, for walkways and the re-use of rusty railroad rails for the undulating wall.
    Tanner-Springs-Park-99-Rails.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-03b-March-2016-Mt-Tabor-Park-Cal...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
  • 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_150919_7447_DRV.jpg
  • Laguna Orconcocha and the sheer granite walls of the Quebrada Llanganuco (Llanganuco Valley) in the Huascarán National Park.  This view is looking west from Cebolla Pampa, on one of the switchbacks snaking up to the Portachuelo de Llanganuco.  Nikon D200, 70-200/2.8.
    Laguna Orconcocha
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