Matt Laur Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 Important: please keep your image under 1000 pixels on the longest side for in-line viewing, and please keep the FILE SIZE UNDER 300kb. Note that this includes photos hosted off-site (at Flickr, Photobucket, your own site, etc). Are you new to this thread? The general guidelines for these Wednesday threads are right here:http://www.photo.net/nikon-camera-forum/00W7km. This forum's moderators are allowing up to three Nikon Wednesday images per week, so share some work! If you're here on the eastern seaboard like me, you're probably weary of the season's unusually rainy episodes. We're soaked. The ground is squishy. Everything's moldy. Enough! Aaaaand, we're about to feel the wrath of Florence. For us, that will probably be six more inches or rain or so. But for folks in the Carolinas and parts of Virginia, it looks really grim. Hope any and all PN-folk along that stretch of the coast and inland up against those hills are taking it very seriously, and being prepared for terrible flooding. Be safe! So for now, I've got no choice but to embrace the never-ending damp, and shoot some wed plants. See you all next week once that storm has done what it's going to do. Be careful out there! Don't be that guy that just had to photograph that raging river from the slippery bank. D810 and a 105mm macro. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew Currie Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 In Polynesia the trees have a lot of personality. This one seems a bit worried. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew Currie Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 A cemetery tree is very inviting (the view is good but I'm not sure it's to die for): 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew Currie Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 These tree buddies are inseparable: 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sanford Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 D300, 50mm 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blurrist Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 For a cloudy day here. Purdy day will follow, for sure. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ShunCheung Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 Pelicans, FX body with 600mm Nikkor lens 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jon Eckman Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 I'm with Matt - enough! 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jon Eckman Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 Already! 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tholte Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill J Boyd Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JDMvW Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 Chester, IL Home of Popeye Elzie C. Segar Memorial Park Nikon S2 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
heimbrandt Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 When I was out shooting herons not too long ago, the noise from my camera's mirror made this fellow curious. So no, a loud camera is not always something bad. Nikon D800E, AF-S 300/2.8 VR, TC-20-EIII 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sandy Vongries Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sandy Vongries Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 In Polynesia the trees have a lot of personality. This one seems a bit worried. Had to laugh - everywhere we go I have to take photos of tree trunks - my wife is a weaver and has an idea for patterns - I call it the Bark Project! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2Oceans Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bertliang Posted September 12, 2018 Share Posted September 12, 2018 Getting away from the rain, and spending quality time with the tools. Nikon F, 28-85mm Nikkor, Tri-X, Xtol/Rodinal. Swansea, MA. 5 "It's not what you look at that matters. It's what you see." -Henry David Thoreau Bert Dr. Bertrand's Patient Stories: A podcast dedicated to stories of being. \\anchor.fm/bertrand0 FineArtAmerica: https://fineartamerica.com/profiles/bertrand-liang Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yardkat Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 I wish we had too much rain! But I guess be careful what you wish for. Two shots this week, one from a rare Friday night free, too close to town and too much light pollution, but it's all for fun and practice. And one from a hike Sunday. Nikon D750, Rokinon 14mm, Nikon 24-85VR. 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jay M Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 Oregon Fall, D300s 24-85 AFD 5 workonit Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tonychristians Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 Important: please keep your image under 1000 pixels on the longest side for in-line viewing, and please keep the FILE SIZE UNDER 300kb. Note that this includes photos hosted off-site (at Flickr, Photobucket, your own site, etc). Are you new to this thread? The general guidelines for these Wednesday threads are right here:http://www.photo.net/nikon-camera-forum/00W7km. This forum's moderators are allowing up to three Nikon Wednesday images per week, so share some work! If you're here on the eastern seaboard like me, you're probably weary of the season's unusually rainy episodes. We're soaked. The ground is squishy. Everything's moldy. Enough! Aaaaand, we're about to feel the wrath of Florence. For us, that will probably be six more inches or rain or so. But for folks in the Carolinas and parts of Virginia, it looks really grim. Hope any and all PN-folk along that stretch of the coast and inland up against those hills are taking it very seriously, and being prepared for terrible flooding. Be safe! So for now, I've got no choice but to embrace the never-ending damp, and shoot some wed plants. See you all next week once that storm has done what it's going to do. Be careful out there! Don't be that guy that just had to photograph that raging river from the slippery bank. [ATTACH=full]1262139[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]1262140[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]1262141[/ATTACH]D810 and a 105mm macro. I feel your pain. While I'm not in Virginia anymore, my wife still is while we're going through the process of selling the house. I've been hearing the rain stories pretty much every day. I'm just praying that the big tree in our front yard doesn't get get blown over with a strong gust of wind with the ground so wet and us being so close to closing on the house. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tonychristians Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 In keeping with the water theme, here are a couple more shots from my hike the week before last. D3400 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jorish Posted September 16, 2018 Share Posted September 16, 2018 A bit late, but better than never, right? "Dead in the water" Handheld, Sigma 150mm Macro on D750. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andrew Garrard Posted September 17, 2018 Share Posted September 17, 2018 I'm way behind on triage again, and can't really fit the theme. But here's the Lynn Valley bridge, which I wouldn't like to be on in a hurricane. I hope the forum regulars are all safe. D850, 14-24. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andrew Garrard Posted September 17, 2018 Share Posted September 17, 2018 When I was there, the bridge was closed for a few hours while some teenagers were hauled up from the river below by firemen - they'd ignored the "people hurt themselves jumping off the rocks" warning and one had done so; I'm told nothing life-threatening, fortunately. The others had got cold waiting and weren't up to travelling over multiple waterfalls to get out. These are the crowds waiting to cross when the bridge was reopened. (The broken tread on the bridge was caused by the rescue equipment.) 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andrew Garrard Posted September 17, 2018 Share Posted September 17, 2018 The view over the edge of the bridge - which is why the rescue would have been a bit tricky; Capilano is, relatively, much more accessible. Apparently people injure themselves a lot at Lynn Valley (despite the signs) - even while the bridge was closed people were asking about getting down to the river, and in the full-size version of this, you can make out someone getting ready to swim in the pool above the farther falls. I kind of wish the fire crews were left to help put out BC's wild fires, but there's no accounting for people. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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