Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 387 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Tararua Wind Farm is the largest wind power installation in the Southern Hemisphere. It is located 10 kilometres northeast of the city of Palmerston North, on a 5 kilometre long ridge in the Tararua Ranges, on the North Island of New Zealand. Humans have migrated to the ends of the earth to cut farms from virgin forests and compete for new resources, such as here in the South Pacific. Published in "Light Travel: Photography on the Go" by Tom Dempsey 2009, 2010.
    07NZ_6095_Tararua-Wind-farm.jpg
  • Mount Egmont or Taranaki (2518 meters / 8261 feet) in Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island. Featured as a stand-in for Mount Fuji in the Tom Cruise motion picture, "The Last Samurai". Published in "Light Travel: Photography on the Go" by Tom Dempsey 2009, 2010.
    07NZ_7019_Mt-Egmont_Taranaki.jpg
  • A map of North Island, New Zealand, suggests favorite parks and sights.
    NEW-ZEALAND-North-Island-map.jpg
  • Sheep graze in a pasture beneath Tararua Wind Farm, largest in the Southern Hemisphere. Humans have migrated to the ends of the earth to cut farms from virgin forests and compete for new resources, such as here in the South Pacific. Location: North Island of New Zealand, 10 km northeast of Palmerston North on a ridge in the Tararua Ranges.
    07NZ_6094_Tararua-Wind-farm.jpg
  • Cats cuddle on a black leather couch, in New Zealand, North Island.
    07NZT_335-cute-cats-cuddling.jpg
  • Fossil shells, Putangirua Pinnacles, New Zealand, North Island. When ocean levels were much higher 7 to 9 million years ago, the Aorangi Ranges were an island which deposited large alluvial fans at the seashore. Conglomerate rock formed in layers. Erosion over the past several thousand years created a badlands of earth pillars (or hoodoos) at the head of this valley in the Aorangi Ranges.
    07NZ_6063_fossil-shells_Putangirua.jpg
  • Sheep trails on a steep hillside, on the Stratford to Taumarunui "Forgotten World Highway", North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_7083_sheep-trails.jpg
  • Taranaki (2518 meters / 8261 feet) in Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_7032_Mt-Egmont_Taranaki.jpg
  • New Plymouth city lights shine below Pouakai Hut on the Pouakai Track, within Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_6152_New-Plymoth.jpg
  • Waka (Polynesian sea canoe) in the Auckland Museum, North Island, New Zealand. The Polynesian navigator Kupe has been credited with the discovery of New Zealand around AD 800. Continuous settlement of New Zealand dates from about 1200 AD, following which a fairly steady migration of people came from Kupe's homeland of Hawaiki (Ra'iatea in modern-day French Polynesia).  Panorama stitched from 2 overlapping images.
    07NZT_554-555-Waka_sea-canoe.jpg
  • A Maori woman blows a conch horn to signal villagers at Tamaki Maori Village, an evocative cultural re-creation near Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand. Published in Mountain Travel Sobek 2010 trip catalog. Published in "Light Travel: Photography on the Go" by Tom Dempsey 2009, 2010. For licensing options, please inquire.
    07NZT_490.jpg
  • The Moki Tunnel (also known as “Hobbit’s Hole”; 180 meters long) is found at the west end of the Tangarakau Gorge. This one-way tunnel, built in 1936, is on the Stratford to Taumarunui "Forgotten World Highway", North Island, New Zealand
    07NZT_368_Hobbits-Hole_Forgotten-Wor...jpg
  • An orange, pink, and blue sunset makes silhouettes of tree trunks on North Island, New Zealand
    07NZT_323.jpg
  • Steam rises from orange and green Champagne Pool at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_9037-Wai-O-Tapu-TW.jpg
  • Steam rises from orange and green Champagne Pool at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_9034-Wai-O-Tapu-TW.jpg
  • Rainbow Crater steams at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_9020-Wai-O-Tapu_Rainbow-Crater.jpg
  • Devil's Bath gets its color from excess water from Champagne pool mixing with sulphur and ferrous salts. Changes in color from green to yellow depend upon cloud cover and reflected light. Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_9018-Wai-O-Tapu-TW_Devils-Bath.jpg
  • Green and orange Champagne Pool steams at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8241-Wai-O-Tapu-TW.jpg
  • Blue, yellow, and orange Champagne Pool steams at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8196-Wai-O-Tapu-TW.jpg
  • Trees frame Lake Waikaremoana along the Panekiri Bluff trail in Te Urewera National Park, North Island, New Zealand. Published in "Light Travel: Photography on the Go" by Tom Dempsey 2009, 2010.
    07NZ_8152-Lake-Waikaremoana.jpg
  • Hikers pause for the view at Lake Waikaremoana, in Te Urewera National Park, North Island, New Zealand For licensing options, please inquire.
    07NZ_8141-Lake-Waikaremoana.jpg
  • The cavern mouth frames tree ferns and verdant vegetation at Orakei Korako Cave and Thermal Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_8073-Orakei-Korako-Thermal-Park.jpg
  • Mineral hot springs emerge in a cave at Orakei Korako Cave and Thermal Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_8068-Orakei-Korako-Thermal-Park.jpg
  • Hot springs water cools and deposits white travertine and hosts orange microbial mats at Orakei Korako Cave and Thermal Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_8058-Orakei-Korako-Thermal-Park.jpg
  • Hot springs water cools and deposits white travertine and hosts orange microbial mats at Orakei Korako Cave and Thermal Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_8055-Orakei-Korako-Thermal-Park.jpg
  • Chateau Tongariro (built 1929), Whakapapa Village, Tongariro National Park, New Zealand, North Island. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape.
    07NZ_8018-p$1-Chateau-Tongariro-1929.jpg
  • A tramper (hiker) views Lake Rotoaira and Lake Taupo (in the distance), from the Tongariro Crossing in Tongariro National Park, New Zealand, North Island. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape.
    07NZ_7250-Lake-Rotoaira+Taupo.jpg
  • Trampers hike the 10-mile Tongariro Crossing beneath Mount Ngauruhoe in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. The volcanoes in this image are: Mount Ruapehu (with snow at far left, 2797 meters or 9177 feet, last erupted in 2006), Mount Ngauruhoe (upper middle, 2291 meters or 7516 feet elevation, last erupted in 1975), and Red Crater (foreground right, 1886 meters, last erupted 1926). Geologically speaking, both Mount Ngauruhoe and Red Crater are vents of Mount Tongariro. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the Rings" Motion Pictures. Published in "Light Travel: Photography on the Go" by Tom Dempsey 2009, 2010.
    07NZ_7237-Red-Crater-1886m.jpg
  • Emerald Lakes, on the Tongariro Crossing, Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the rings" Motion Pictures.
    07NZ_7210-Emerald-Lakes.jpg
  • Mount Ngauruhoe (2291 metres or 7516 feet elevation) last erupted in 1975 in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the rings" Motion Pictures.
    07NZ_7205-p$1-Mt-Ngauruhoe.jpg
  • Red volcanic vent on North Island, New Zealand. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the rings" Motion Pictures. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape.
    07NZ_7196-Red-Crater-1886m.jpg
  • Red volcanic vent on North Island, New Zealand. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the rings" Motion Pictures. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape.
    07NZ_7188-Red-Crater-1886m.jpg
  • Mount Ngauruhoe (2291 metres or 7516 feet elevation) last erupted in 1975 in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the rings" Motion Pictures. For licensing options, please inquire.
    07NZ_7185_Mt-Ngauruhoe-2287m.jpg
  • Mount Ngauruhoe (2291 metres or 7516 feet elevation) last erupted in 1975 in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape.
    07NZ_7156_Mt-Ngauruhoe-2287m.jpg
  • Mt Ngauruhoe (2291 metres or 7516 feet elevation) last erupted in 1975 in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape.
    07NZ_7135_Mt-Ngauruhoe-2287m.jpg
  • Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_7070_Kokowai-Track_Taranaki.jpg
  • Volcanic ash layers (tuff), at Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_7058_ash-layers_Mt-Egmont.jpg
  • Lush green vegetation tangles over a hiker tramping in Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, North Island, New Zealand.
    07NZ_6230_mossy-trees.jpg
  • Harsh wind has twisted trees on the Pouakai Track, Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island. Published full page in up to 800 DICK’S Sporting Goods stores in 2010.
    07NZ_6188_twisted-trees_Pouakai.jpg
  • Harsh wind has twisted trees on the Pouakai Track, Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island.
    07NZ_6179_twisted-trees_Pouakai.jpg
  • Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_6139.jpg
  • Participatory sun dial tells the time all year, in Wellington, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_6078_Sun-dial-Wellington_Mt-Vic...jpg
  • Wellington cable car, tree fern, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_6073_Wellington_Mt-Victoria-vie...jpg
  • Lambton Harbor, Wellington, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_5267_Wellington_Lambton-Harbor.jpg
  • Wharenui ("big house") refers to the meeting house in a Maori marae (village). Auckland Museum, North Island, New Zealand. Panorama stitched from 3 overlapping images.
    07NZT_560-562-Wharenui_meeting-house.jpg
  • A tattooed warrior gestures with a pole at Tamaki Maori Village, Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand For licensing options, please inquire.
    07NZT_499.jpg
  • Tattoo demonstration at Tamaki Maori Village, Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZT_494.jpg
  • Whangamomona village border Control, on the Stratford to Taumarunui "Forgotten World Highway", North Island, New Zealand
    07NZT_367.jpg
  • White flowers bloom at Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island.
    07NZC_358.jpg
  • Devil's Bath gets its color from excess water from Champagne pool mixing with sulphur and ferrous salts. Changes in color from green to yellow depend upon cloud cover and reflected light. Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8257-Wai-O-Tapu-TW_Devils-Bath.jpg
  • Green and orange Champagne Pool steams at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8253-Wai-O-Tapu-TW.jpg
  • Hot springs paint bright yellow and green colors at Artist's Palette, at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8200-Wai-O-Tapu-TW.jpg
  • Devil's Ink Pots get their grey color from small amounts of natural graphite and crude oil percolated up from the depths, at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8182-Wai-O-Tapu-TW_Devils-Inkpo...jpg
  • Mud pots, Orakei Korako Cave and Thermal Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_8082-Orakei-Korako-Thermal-Park.jpg
  • Mount Ngauruhoe (2291 metres or 7516 feet elevation) last erupted in 1975 in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the rings" Motion Pictures. Published 2012 in a double page spread in Happinez magazine, Hamburg, Germany.
    07NZ_8027-Mt-Ngauruhoe.jpg
  • Sulphur crystals condensed from a fumarole in Tongariro National Park, New Zealand, North Island.
    07NZ_7254-sulphur-crystals.jpg
  • A sulfurous yellow pond lies beneath Mount Ngauruhoe (2291 metres or 7516 feet elevation), which last erupted in 1975 in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape.
    07NZ_7165_Mt-Ngauruhoe-2287m.jpg
  • Mount Damper Falls, 78 metres high (North Island's highest), is located on the Stratford to Taumarunui "Forgotten World Highway", New Zealand.
    07NZ_7092_Mt-Damper-Falls.jpg
  • Mount Egmont or Taranaki (2518 meters / 8261 feet) in Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island. Featured as a stand-in for Mount Fuji in the Tom Cruise motion picture, "The Last Samurai". Published in "Light Travel: Photography on the Go" by Tom Dempsey 2009, 2010.
    07NZ_7019_Mt-Egmont_Taranaki.jpg
  • A tramper hikes the Pouakai Track, Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island For licensing options, please inquire.
    07NZ_6168.jpg
  • Pouakai Track hut, Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_6160_Pouakai-Hut.jpg
  • Take care crossing Boomerang Slip, in Taranaki / Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_6144_Boomerang-Slip.jpg
  • Wellington downtown waterfront, Lambton Harbor, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_5270_Wellington_Lambton-Harbor.jpg
  • Champagne Pool, at Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland, North Island, New Zealand. Published in "Light Travel: Photography on the Go" by Tom Dempsey 2009, 2010.
    07NZ_8239-Wai-O-Tapu-TW.jpg
  • Epiphytic plants on a beech tree in Te Urewera National Park, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8143-Lake-Waikaremoana.jpg
  • Lake Waikaremoana, in Te Urewera National Park, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8101-Lake-Waikaremoana.jpg
  • "Geysers and Galsers" joke sign marks the toilets (bathroom/WC) at Orakei Korako Cave and Thermal Park, New Zealand, North Island
    07NZ_8048-Orakei-Korako-Thermal-Park.jpg
  • The volcanic cone of Mount Egmont / Taranaki (2518 meters or 8261 feet) rises in Mount Egmont National Park and glows at sunset, seen from Tongariro in New Zealand, North Island. Taranaki was a stand-in for Mount Fuji in the Tom Cruise motion picture, "The Last Samurai".
    07NZ_8031-Mt-Egmont_sunset_Taranaki.jpg
  • Mount Ngauruhoe (2291 metres or 7516 feet elevation) last erupted in 1975 in Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand. In 1990 and 1993, UNESCO honored Tongariro National Park as a World Heritage Area and Cultural Landscape. Tongariro National Park served as a location for fictional Mordor and Mount Doom in the "Lord of the rings" Motion Pictures.  Panorama stitched from 5 overlapping images.
    07NZ_7190-94pan-Ngauruhoe-Tongariro.jpg
  • A footbridge arches across a stream near Mount Egmont or Taranaki (2518 meters / 8261 feet) in Mount Egmont National Park, New Zealand, North Island. Featured as a stand-in for Mount Fuji in the Tom Cruise motion picture, "The Last Samurai". Panorama stitched from 4 overlapping photos.
    07NZ_6249-6252pan_Mt-Egmont_Taranaki.jpg
  • Wellington, Lambton Harbor, New Zealand, North Island.  Panorama stitched from 2 overlapping images.
    07NZ_6079-80pan-Wellington_Mt-Victor...jpg
  • Lake Waikaremoana, in Te Urewera National Park, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8119-Lake-Waikaremoana.jpg
  • Papakorito Falls, in Te Urewera National Park, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_8116-Papakorito-Falls_Te-Urewer...jpg
  • Emerald Lakes, on the Tongariro Crossing, Tongariro National Park, North Island, New Zealand
    07NZ_7232-Emerald-Lakes.jpg
  • The Putangirua Pinnacles were featured as the Dimholt Road in the "Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" motion picture. When ocean levels were much higher 7 to 9 million years ago, the Aorangi Ranges were an island which deposited large alluvial fans at the seashore. Conglomerate rock formed in layers. Erosion over the past several thousand years created a badlands of earth pillars (or hoodoos) at the head of this valley in the Aorangi Ranges.
    07NZ_6056_Putangirua-Pinnacles.jpg
  • The Putangirua Pinnacles were featured as the Dimholt Road in the "Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" motion picture. When ocean levels were much higher 7 to 9 million years ago, the Aorangi Ranges were an island which deposited large alluvial fans at the seashore. Conglomerate rock formed in layers. Erosion over the past several thousand years created a badlands of earth pillars (or hoodoos) at the head of this valley in the Aorangi Ranges.
    07NZ_6013_Putangirua-Pinnacles.jpg
  • The Putangirua Pinnacles were featured as the Dimholt Road in the "Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" motion picture. When ocean levels were much higher 7 to 9 million years ago, the Aorangi Ranges were an island which deposited large alluvial fans at the seashore. Conglomerate rock formed in layers. Erosion over the past several thousand years created a badlands of earth pillars (or hoodoos) at the head of this valley in the Aorangi Ranges.
    07NZ_6021_Putangirua-Pinnacles.jpg
  • Bluebridge Ferry transports cars & people through Queen Charlotte Sound, South Island, New Zealand (on the way to North Island).
    07NZ_5240_Queen-Charlotte-Sound.jpg
  • The current Bodie Island Lighthouse (originally Body's Island, after the family name of the land seller) is the third that has stood in this vicinity of Bodie Island on the Outer Banks in North Carolina and was built in 1872. It stands 156 feet tall and is located on the Roanoke Sound side of the first island that is part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. The lighthouse is just south of Nag's Head. Its first order Fresnel lens focuses its 1000-watt bulb to be visible up to 19 miles. The US Coast Guard owns the tower, and the National Park Service owns the site. The lighthouse has white and black bands with a black lantern house. Cape Hatteras was once dubbed the "Graveyard of the Atlantic" for its treacherous currents, shoals, and storms.
    08NC-1027_Bodie-Island-Lighthouse.jpg
  • Grass grows on a dune on Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge (adjacent to Cape Hatteras National Seashore), located on the north end of North Carolina's Hatteras Island, a coastal barrier island and part of a chain of islands known as the Outer Banks. The Pea Island sanctuary is located 10 miles south of Nags Head, North Carolina on NC Highway 12. The refuge objectives are to provide nesting, resting, and wintering habitat for migratory birds, including the greater snow geese and other migratory waterfowl, shorebirds, wading birds, raptors, and neotropical migrants, as well as habitat and protection for endangered and threatened species. The Refuge was established May 17, 1937.
    08NC-1035.jpg
  • This sand dune pattern is on Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge (adjacent to Cape Hatteras National Seashore), located on the north end of North Carolina's Hatteras Island, a coastal barrier island and part of a chain of islands known as the Outer Banks. The sanctuary is located 10 miles south of Nags Head, North Carolina on NC Highway 12. The refuge objectives are to provide nesting, resting, and wintering habitat for migratory birds, including the greater snow geese and other migratory waterfowl, shorebirds, wading birds, raptors, and neotropical migrants, as well as habitat and protection for endangered and threatened species. The refuge was established May 17, 1937.
    08NC-1064_sand-pattern.jpg
  • Bird tracks cross a sand dune pattern on Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge, which is located on the north end of North Carolina's Hatteras Island, a coastal barrier island and part of a chain of islands known as the Outer Banks, adjacent to Cape Hatteras National Seashore. The sanctuary is located 10 miles south of Nags Head, North Carolina on NC Highway 12.The refuge objectives are to provide nesting, resting, and wintering habitat for migratory birds, including the greater snow geese and other migratory waterfowl, shorebirds, wading birds, raptors, and neotropical migrants, as well as habitat and protection for endangered and threatened species. The refuge was established May 17, 1937.
    08NC-1053_sand-pattern.jpg
  • Sea shells and skate egg case. Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge (adjacent to Cape Hatteras National Seashore) is located on the north end of North Carolina's Hatteras Island, a coastal barrier island and part of a chain of islands known as the Outer Banks. The sanctuary is located 10 miles south of Nags Head, North Carolina on NC Highway 12.The refuge objectives are to provide nesting, resting, and wintering habitat for migratory birds, including the greater snow geese and other migratory waterfowl, shorebirds, wading birds, raptors, and neotropical migrants, as well as habitat and protection for endangered and threatened species. The refuge was established May 17, 1937.
    08NC-1046_beach-shells.jpg
  • Skate egg case. Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge is located on the north end of North Carolina's Hatteras Island, a coastal barrier island and part of a chain of islands known as the Outer Banks, adjacent to Cape Hatteras National Seashore. The sanctuary is located 10 miles south of Nags Head, North Carolina on NC Highway 12.
    08NC-1044_Skate-egg-case.jpg
  • Bird tracks cross a sand dune pattern on Pea Island National Wildlife Refuge, which is located on the north end of North Carolina's Hatteras Island, a coastal barrier island and part of a chain of islands known as the Outer Banks, adjacent to Cape Hatteras National Seashore. The sanctuary is located 10 miles south of Nags Head, North Carolina on NC Highway 12.The refuge objectives are to provide nesting, resting, and wintering habitat for migratory birds, including the greater snow geese and other migratory waterfowl, shorebirds, wading birds, raptors, and neotropical migrants, as well as habitat and protection for endangered and threatened species. The refuge was established May 17, 1937.
    08NC-1057_sand-pattern.jpg
  • Pebbles on sand, North Beach, Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Tidal current speeds reach 8 knots (9 mph) and create standing waves, large whirlpools, and roiling eddies visible from the shoreline and from spectacular Deception Pass Bridge, which spans 976 feet long, 180 feet above the water.
    1302WHI-018.jpg
  • West Beach, Deception Island, Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Tidal current speeds reach 8 knots (9 mph) and create standing waves, large whirlpools, and roiling eddies visible from the shoreline and from spectacular Deception Pass Bridge, which spans 976 feet long, 180 feet above the water.
    1302WHI-031.jpg
  • Scarlet colored Oregon grape leaves, Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Tidal current speeds reach 8 knots (9 mph) and create standing waves, large whirlpools, and roiling eddies visible from the shoreline and from spectacular Deception Pass Bridge, which spans 976 feet long, 180 feet above the water.
    1302WHI-026.jpg
  • Old growth forest reaches skywards in Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
    1302WHI-023.jpg
  • Path, ferns, and old growth forest, Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Tidal current speeds reach 8 knots (9 mph) and create standing waves, large whirlpools, and roiling eddies visible from the shoreline and from spectacular Deception Pass Bridge, which spans 976 feet long, 180 feet above the water.
    1302WHI-024.jpg
  • Tendril pattern on yellow log, Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Tidal current speeds reach 8 knots (9 mph) and create standing waves, large whirlpools, and roiling eddies visible from the shoreline and from spectacular Deception Pass Bridge, which spans 976 feet long, 180 feet above the water.
    1302WHI-016.jpg
  • Ancient, twisted, 850-year-old Douglas Fir tree (Pseudotsuga menziesii), on West Beach Trail, Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Tidal current speeds reach 8 knots (9 mph) and create standing waves, large whirlpools, and roiling eddies visible from the shoreline and from spectacular Deception Pass Bridge, which spans 976 feet long, 180 feet above the water.
    1302WHI-011.jpg
  • Ancient, twisted, 850-year-old Douglas Fir tree (Pseudotsuga menziesii), on West Beach Trail, Deception Pass State Park, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA. In this scenic park, an old growth evergreen forest meets the turbulent waters of Deception Pass, a strait which separates Whidbey Island from Fidalgo Island and connects Skagit Bay (part of Puget Sound), with the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Tidal current speeds reach 8 knots (9 mph) and create standing waves, large whirlpools, and roiling eddies visible from the shoreline and from spectacular Deception Pass Bridge, which spans 976 feet long, 180 feet above the water.
    1302WHI-010.jpg
  • Moss covered picnic shelter, table, Meerkerk Rhododendron Gardens, Whidbey Island, Washington, USA.
    1302WHI-005.jpg
  • Wizard Island at Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, USA — June 2, 2004. In early June, Rim Drive is open to bicycles but closed to cars to allow snow plowing.
    04CRA0010-11pan.jpg
  • Banner Peak seen from Thousand Island Lake at sunrise in Ansel Adams Wilderness, Inyo National Forest, California, USA. We backpacked for 5 days from Agnew Meadows to Thousand Island Lake, Garnet Lake, Ediza Lake, Minaret Lake, and Devils Postpile Ranger Station, reaching trailheads using the Reds Meadow Shuttle from the town of Mammoth Lakes.
    2108CA2-0693.jpg
  • Banner Peak and the Moon reflect in Thousand Island Lake at dawn in Ansel Adams Wilderness, Inyo National Forest, California, USA. We backpacked for 5 days from Agnew Meadows to Thousand Island Lake, Garnet Lake, Ediza Lake, Minaret Lake, and Devils Postpile Ranger Station, reaching trailheads using the Reds Meadow Shuttle from the town of Mammoth Lakes. Multiple overlapping photos were stitched to make this panorama.
    2108CA2-0620-622-Pano.jpg
  • Banner Peak reflects in Thousand Island Lake at sunrise in Ansel Adams Wilderness, Inyo National Forest, California, USA. We backpacked for 5 days from Agnew Meadows to Thousand Island Lake, Garnet Lake, Ediza Lake, Minaret Lake, and Devils Postpile Ranger Station, reaching trailheads using the Reds Meadow Shuttle from the town of Mammoth Lakes. Multiple overlapping photos were stitched to make this panorama.
    2108CA2-0664-671-Pano.jpg
  • Banner Peak seen from Thousand Island Lake at sunrise in Ansel Adams Wilderness, Inyo National Forest, near Mammoth Lakes, California, USA. We backpacked for 5 days from Agnew Meadows to Thousand Island Lake, Garnet Lake, Ediza Lake, Minaret Lake, and Devils Postpile Ranger Station, reaching trailheads using the Reds Meadow Shuttle from the town of Mammoth Lakes. Multiple overlapping photos were stitched to make this panorama.
    2108CA2-0678-679-Pano.jpg
  • Banner Peak (12,936 ft) seen from Thousand Island Lake at sunrise in Ansel Adams Wilderness, Inyo National Forest, near Mammoth Lakes, California, USA. We backpacked for 5 days from Agnew Meadows to Thousand Island Lake, Garnet Lake, Ediza Lake, Minaret Lake, and Devils Postpile Ranger Station, reaching trailheads using the Reds Meadow Shuttle from the town of Mammoth Lakes.
    2108CA2-0661.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Portfolio of Tom Dempsey / PhotoSeek.com

  • Portfolio
  • BLOG — PhotoSeek HOME
  • ALL IMAGES + captions
    • Worldwide favorites
    • ALL GALLERIES
    • Lightbox
  • SEARCH
  • CART
  • How to buy my images
  • Camera reviews
  • ABOUT