@evelynefoerster I can kinda sympathise with some of Eve's impressive empathetic (telepathic) emotional IQ when it come to trying to paraphrase a tail of a trail of anistropic hydrodynamic 🛶 relaxation constants of polarized 😎 paramagnetic cholesteric double helical colorful 🧬 #colloids on #Waterfall 🌈 🌊 wednesday and capillary electrophoretic action of a minuscus U might see in a typical tumbling tryptophan peptide of a given anistropic Svedburg Constant Stoke's Raduis or centrifical coriolis effect G force hydrodynamic 🌪️ window or topo logical map 🌎 of a cylindrical cross section of spherical xyz sine ~ or cosign for a loan while surfing waves to a deep blue collision in a ⛈️ cloud chamber like "deep mind" desanctimonius cleansing 🧠 of very short ("sub") atomic effervescent, kinda nanosecond MOSFET bimetal pulse of a sonic boom of collidal FTL Cherenkov Orbital collision 🚗 of lead shielded bremsstrah lung 💀 radiation or continuum of a line of text_ https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-18421-9
Waterfall on Minnesota's North Shore. It's a vertical shot. If you are using default settings, you may need to click or tap it to see the entire image.
A view high up in the John Muir Wilderness of a creek flowing toward the distant valley below where the 395 highway runs. I was camped not too far away and made a lucky decision to get up early for sunrise. #landscapephotography#naturephotography#waterfall#waterfallwednesday
The countless cascades of Red Rock falls in Many Glacier create a soothing sound that welcomes hikers in the back country to take a break and take all the sights and sounds in.
Near the #MeetingOfThreeWaters you'll find this small but attractive cascading waterfall. There's plenty of rain here so the falls present themselves nicely.
A 2022 Ontario road trip took me through Campbellford, where I stopped at Ferris Provincial Park and checked out Ranney Falls and the suspension bridge in the distance.
Sol Due is a large, powerful #Waterfall in Olympic NP. This particular year had seen massive snowfall and the water was running higher than normal. I’m always fascinated by falls that run off at a 90-degree angle to the waterfall. How did that happen?