- Порядок сортировкиПо умолчанию
✔ Название изображения, А → Я
Название изображения, Я → А
Дата создания, новые → старые
Дата создания, старые → новые
Дата публикации, новые → старые
Дата публикации, старые → новые
Рейтинг, высокий → низкий
Рейтинг, низкий → высокий
Посещения, много → мало
Посещения, мало → много - Размер изображения✔ Квадрат
Миниатюра
XXS - крошечный
XS - очень мелкий
S - мелкий
M - средний
L - крупный - ЯзыкAfrikaans Argentina Azərbaycanca
Bahasa Indonesia Brasil Brezhoneg
Català Česky Dansk
Deutsch Dhivehi English
English English Español
Esperanto Estonian Euskara
Finnish Français Français
Gaeilge Galego Hrvatski
Íslenska Italiano Latviešu
Lëtzebuergesch Lietuviu Magyar
Malay México Nederlands
Norsk bokmål Norwegian nynorsk Polski
Português Română Slovenšcina
Slovensky Srpski Svenska
Tiếng Việt Türkçe Wolof
Ελληνικά Български Македонски
Монгол Русский Српски
Українська עברית العربية (مصر)
العربية العربية پارسی
कोंकणी বাংলা ગુજરાતી
தமிழ் ಕನ್ನಡ ภาษาไทย
ქართული ខ្មែរ 中文 (繁體)
中文 (香港) 日本語 简体中文
한국어
Начало / Coldwater Lake Photos WA 56
Просмотр:
Месяцы
Дата публикации / 2016 / Июнь
- Skeletons are all that remain of the forest in this part of the 1980 volcanic blast. The terrain allows abundant wildflowers.
- Some jagged peaks loom above the Coldwater Trail.
- Tent caterpillars cover a leaf along the South Coldwater trail.
- Tent caterpillars create a horror scene for plants growing along the trail this year (2012). The webs remind me of Shelob's lair in Lord of the Rings.
- The South Coldwater Trail begins in a new forest and has a moderate climb up to a ridge. Foxglove stretch for the sky in this small clearing.
- The trail breaks out of the forest where the hillside bore the full brunt of the 1980 volcanic blast. Still no trees growing after more than 30 years have passed.
- This interesting root ball is along Coldwater Lake.
- This moss was smiling at me as I walked by. It reminded me of a Smurf. I found this along the shore of Coldwater Lake.
- This old bulldozer was once part of a logging operation. Another example of what the 1980 blast destroyed.
- Trees that were not blown down in the blast were killed as their branches and bark were scoured off in the 1980 blast.
- Wildflowers bloom along the trail because the old undergrowth was blasted away and covered with a layer of ash providing pioneer plants such as Lupine an ideal place to grow.