The wonderful world of trees

December 14, 2020  •  2 Comments

"T" is for Trees. 

I love trees. No surprise there, but I was quite surprised at how many tree images I had when I started looking through my catalog of photos. 

This post is simple. Just a whole lot of wicked awesome trees. I hope you enjoy. 

Fig Tree, Kauai

Aspens in snow, Sierra Nevada 

Winter aspens, Lake Tahoe

Aspens in motion, Hope Valley

Bamboo, Kauai

Banyon tree roots, Maui

Baobob tree, Tanzania

Pine tree, Sequoia National Park

Bishop Pine, Point Reyes National Seashore

Bonsai tree, Zion National Park

Gnarly tree, Crater Lake National Park

Pine forest, Sequoia National Park

Juniper, Deadhorse Point State Park

Fall color, Silver Falls State Park

Aspen panoramic, June Lake 

Trees in fog, Sequoia National Park

Giant Forest, Sequoia National Park

Ancient Bristlecone, Bristlecone Pine Forest

Jeffrey Pine, Yosemite National Park

Joshua trees silhouette, Joshua Tree National Park

Joshua tree sunset, Death Valley National Park

Oak trees, Table Mountain 

Oak tree at sunset, El Dorado Hills

Oak tree in fog, Cameron Park

Pinyon Pine, Joshua Tree National Park 

Redwoods, Redwood National Park

Ancient tree, Bryce Canyon National Park

Snow covered pines, Yosemite National Park

Ancient Bristlecone and star trails, Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest 

My favorite tree, Yosemite National Park

Gnarly tree, Deadhorse Point State Park

Silhouetted tree, Zion National Park

 

That's it! A whole lot of trees that I just love. Stay tuned for what "U" stands for. 

 


Comments

Truman Holtzclaw(non-registered)
Great collection, variety and beautiful images! Thank you!
Bill Ambrosini(non-registered)
Awesome pics. This made me think of what I call a small ghost forest at Old Salmon Falls. This time of year almost every year Folsom Lake recedes to reveal the Old Salmon Falls bridge and a few remnants of the old settlement. There used to be a decent size grove of trees on one side of the river. Now it's a few acres of 10-20 ft tall stumps or sticks. Every year it's covered by Folsom Lake then the water recedes and reveals them again. It's kind of neat, weird and spooky. I have taken a few photos of them, but have never found a way to capture them correctly. If you ever take the short trek to that spot I would love to see how you would shoot them
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