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  • Death Valley National Park Visitors come not only to experience the record heat but also the beauty. Despite the desert conditions, the park is known for its spring wildflowers. Under perfect conditions, the park experiences a rare event known as a wildflower "super bloom" which produces a sea wildflowers. Most of the desert wildflowers are annuals. This ensures their survival as this allows them to lie dormant as seeds during times of drought. Here, the golden light of sunset bathes Desert Gold, also known as Hairy Desert Sunflower, in Death Valley National Park.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Desert Gold in sunset light.jpg
  • Michigan Beach Park in Charlevoix, Michigan, is a favorite spot for tourists and residents wanting to catch a dramatic sunset. The park, within walking distance of downtown Charlevoix offers a white sand beach, playground swimming and the iconic Charlevoix South Pier Lighthouse. Fishing is also popular along the pier at the Pine River entrance.
    Sunset at Michigan Beach Park in Cha...jpg
  • Unnamed peaks (left) in the Tongass National Forest rise above Yeldagalga Creek next to the edge of Sinclair Mountain (right) as seen from the Lynn Canal near Haines, Alaska.
    Peaks next to Sinclair Mountain.jpg
  • Death Valley National Park Visitors come not only to experience the record heat but also the beauty. Despite the desert conditions, the park is known for its spring wildflowers. Under perfect conditions, the park experiences a rare event known as a wildflower "super bloom" which produces a sea wildflowers. Most of the desert wildflowers are annuals. This ensures their survival as this allows them to lie dormant as seeds during times of drought. Here, a field of Desert Gold, also known as Hairy Desert Sunflower, explodes into a sea of yellow during the super bloom of 2016 in Death Valley National Park. In the background is Corkscrew Peak.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Desert gold super bloom.jpg
  • Fall colors are on display at Echo Bluff State Park in this view on the Painter Ridge Trail. In addition to hiking, the Painter Ridge Trail is also popular with mountain bikers with several mountain-bike-specific side trails containing curvy boardwalks and jumps. <br />
<br />
Sinking Creek which flows through Echo Bluff State Park is the second-largest tributary to the nearby Current River which is part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. <br />
<br />
Opening to the public in 2016 Echo Bluff is one of the state's newer parks. Echo Bluff State Park, located in Shannon County occupies the site of the former Camp Zoe. This summer camp for children operated for more than 85 years.<br />
<br />
Echo Bluff State Park is a popular hiking, mountain biking, floating, swimming, and fishing destination. A herd of wild horses can sometimes be seen in the area of the park. There are lodge rooms and full-service cabins available along with primitive to full-service campsites.
    Fall colors on Painter Ridge Trail.jpg
  • Lake McDonald is the largest of the glacially carved lakes in Glacier National Park in Montana. Lake McDonald is ten miles long and 472 feet deep. While the lake has numerous species of fish, the fishing is considered poor due to the lack of nutrients in the lake.  Western red cedar and hemlock are found in the lake’s valley.<br />
<br />
Glacier National Park in the Rocky Mountains of Montana encompasses more than 1 million acres. The park’s nickname is the “Crown of the Continent Ecosystem.” The park was established in May 1910. Soon after, hotels and chalets were established in the park, including the Lake McDonald Lodge. In 1932 construction began on the Going-to-the-Sun Road, allowing automobiles to traverse the park. Climate change is affecting the park. As of 2010, only 25 active glaciers remain in the park, down from the 150 that existed in the mid-19th century.
    Lake McDonald.jpg
  • Fall colors are on display at Echo Bluff State Park in this view on the Painter Ridge Trail. In addition to hiking, the Painter Ridge Trail is also popular with mountain bikers with several mountain-bike-specific side trails containing curvy boardwalks and jumps. <br />
<br />
Sinking Creek which flows through Echo Bluff State Park is the second-largest tributary to the nearby Current River which is part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. <br />
<br />
Opening to the public in 2016 Echo Bluff is one of the state's newer parks. Echo Bluff State Park, located in Shannon County occupies the site of the former Camp Zoe. This summer camp for children operated for more than 85 years.<br />
<br />
Echo Bluff State Park is a popular hiking, mountain biking, floating, swimming, and fishing destination. A herd of wild horses can sometimes be seen in the area of the park. There are lodge rooms and full-service cabins available along with primitive to full-service campsites.
    Fall colors on Painter Ridge Trail-2.jpg
  • Fall colors are on display at Echo Bluff State Park in this view from the Painter Ridge Trail near the Bluff Top Pavilion. In addition to hiking, the Painter Ridge Trail is also popular with mountain bikers with several mountain-bike-specific side trails containing curvy boardwalks and jumps. <br />
<br />
Sinking Creek which flows through Echo Bluff State Park is the second-largest tributary to the nearby Current River which is part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. <br />
<br />
Opening to the public in 2016 Echo Bluff is one of the state's newer parks. Echo Bluff State Park, located in Shannon County occupies the site of the former Camp Zoe. This summer camp for children operated for more than 85 years.<br />
<br />
Echo Bluff State Park is a popular hiking, mountain biking, floating, swimming, and fishing destination. A herd of wild horses can sometimes be seen in the area of the park. There are lodge rooms and full-service cabins available along with primitive to full-service campsites.
    Fall leaves.jpg
  • Fall colors are on display at Echo Bluff State Park in this view from the Painter Ridge Trail near the Bluff Top Pavilion. The park’s namesake, Echo Bluff (upper right) overlooks Sinking Creek. Sinking Creek which flows through Echo Bluff State Park is the second-largest tributary to the nearby Current River which is part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. <br />
<br />
In addition to hiking, the Painter Ridge Trail is also popular with mountain bikers with several mountain-bike-specific side trails containing curvy boardwalks and jumps. <br />
<br />
Opening to the public in 2016 Echo Bluff is one of the state's newer parks. Echo Bluff State Park, located in Shannon County occupies the site of the former Camp Zoe. This summer camp for children operated for more than 85 years.<br />
<br />
Echo Bluff State Park is a popular hiking, mountain biking, floating, swimming, and fishing destination. A herd of wild horses can sometimes be seen in the area of the park. There are lodge rooms and full-service cabins available along with primitive to full-service campsites.
    Echo Bluff and Sinking Creek-2.jpg
  • A meadow of tall fireweed booms in Brotherhood Bridge Park in Juneau, Alaska. In the background is the Mendenhall Glacier, one of the most accessible glaciers in southeast Alaska. Each year, 465,000 curise ship passengers visit the Mendenhall Glacier.
    Tall fireweed and Mendenhall Glacier.jpg
  • Two large glaciers come together to form the main flow of the McBride Glacier in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve. The dark lines of rock debris are called medial moraines. A medial moraine is formed when two glaciers meet and the debris on the edges of the adjacent valley sides join and are carried on top of the glacier. <br />
<br />
The McBride Glacier, the most active glacier and only tidewater glacier in the Muir Inlet, is retreating.<br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is located in southeast Alaska. Known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall costal mountains, the park is also an important marine wilderness area. The park a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
    Medial moraines, McBride Glacier.jpg
  • Deep crevasses of Margerie Glacier take on an other worldly look in early evening light in this photo taken at the uppermost region of the glacier just inside the U.S. at the Canadian border. The 21-mile-long glacier in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is one of the park’s tidewater glaciers. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is located in southeast Alaska. Known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall costal mountains, the park is also an important marine wilderness area. The park a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
    Margerie Glacier crevasses-2.jpg
  • The 19-mile long Fairweather Glacier flows past the Lituya Mountain (left) in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve.<br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is located in southeast Alaska. Known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall costal mountains, the park is also an important marine wilderness area. The park a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
    Fairweather Glacier.jpg
  • Deep crevasses of Margerie Glacier take on an other worldly look in early evening light in this photo taken at the uppermost region of the glacier just inside the U.S. at the Canadian border. The 21-mile-long glacier in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is one of the park’s tidewater glaciers. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is located in southeast Alaska. Known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall costal mountains, the park is also an important marine wilderness area. The park a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
    Margerie Glacier crevasses.jpg
  • Nun Mountain, located in the Chilkat Range basked in the light of the sunset as seen from the Lynn Canal near Juneau, Alaska.
    Nun Mountain sunset.jpg
  • An unnamed peak in Chilkat Range near Juneau is basked in the light of the sunset as seen from the Lynn Canal near Juneau, Alaska.
    Chilkat Range peak at sunset.jpg
  • Fireweed (Chamaenerion angustifolium) blooms across from islands in the Lynn Canal. In the background are the mountains of the Chilkat Range. This view is from a pullout on the Glacier Highway, north of Juneau.
    Fireweed,.jpg
  • Commercial fishermen fishing off Point Couverdon in Chatham Strait. Seafood and seafood processing is the economic foundation of many coastal rural communities in Alaska. According to the Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute, Alaska's seafood industry employs 62,200 workers annually statewide and contributes $5.7 billion to Alaska’s economy.
    Fishing fleet.jpg
  • Mount Golub, a 4194 foot peak in the Chilkat Range as seen from the Favorite Channel near Juneau, Alaska.
    Mount Golub.jpg
  • A killer whale or orca (Orcinus orca), travels down the Lynn Canal under the shadow of Nun Mountain at sunset. Nun Mountain is near Juneau in southeast Alaska. <br />
<br />
Orcas are an apex species. Their prey depends on if they are local or transient. Local orcas feed primarily on salmon. While transient orcas feed on small marine mammals such as sea lions, seals, porpoises, and the calves of whales.
    Orca near Nun Mountain.jpg
  • A small glacial lake adds bright color to the otherwise bright white Tsirku Glacier in Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park. The park, located in the very northwestern corner of British Columbia, Canada, sits between Kluane National Park and Reserve in the Yukon and Glacier Bay and Wrangell-St. Elias National Parks and Preserves in Alaska. All together, they form the largest protected area in thew world, approximately 21 million acres. The Tatshenshini and Alsek Rivers are protected in their entirety making them the only large watershed in North America that is totally protected.<br />
<br />
The remote park is known for its spectacular glacier and icefields, rafting and kayaking, hiking and mountaineering. Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park is home to grizzly bears, Dall's sheep, wolves, mountain goats, moose, eagles, falcons, and trumpeter swans.<br />
<br />
The park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1994.
    Small glacial lake-2.jpg
  • The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes located in Death Valley National Park near Stovepipe Wells, is the largest dune field in the park. While the sand dunes appear tall, the highest dune only rises about 100 feet. The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes are the easiest sand dunes to visit in Death Valley National Park. Three types of dunes are found in the dune field: crescent, linear, and star shaped. The dune field is named for the Mesquite trees that create hummocks that provide places for wildlife to live. Here a lone hiker stretches as the dunes are bathed in the first light at sunrise.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes at sunrise ...psd
  • Bills Peak (left) at 12,703 feet towers above the Keyser Creek valley in the Byers Peak Wilderness. The Byers Peak Wilderness encompasses 8,801 acres in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests near Winter Park, Colorado. The wilderness area was established in 1993. The wilderness area is named after William N. Byers, founder of Colorado’s first newspaper, the Rocky Mountain News.
    Bills Peak, Byers Peak Wilderness.jpg
  • The sun sets on Logger's Lake near Bunker, Mo. Logger’s Lake and Logger’s Lake campground is located deep in the interior forests of Shannon County in the Mark Twain National Forest. The secluded campground, managed by the United States Forest Service consists of 14 campsites around a 22-acre lake known for fishing and non-motorized boating.<br />
<br />
Logger’s Lake was created in 1940 as a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) project. The CCC provided jobs for people needing work during the Great Depression. The campground and dam were constructed by Local 1730 of the CCC which mostly consisted of residents from Dent and Reynolds counties.
    Sunset on Logger's Lake.jpg
  • The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes located in Death Valley National Park near Stovepipe Wells, is the largest dune field in the park. While the sand dunes appear tall, the highest dune only rises about 100 feet. The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes are the easiest sand dunes to visit in Death Valley National Park. Three types of dunes are found in the dune field: crescent, linear, and star shaped. The dune field is named for the Mesquite trees that create hummocks that provide places for wildlife to live. Here a lone hiker stretches as the dunes are bathed in the first light at sunrise.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes at sunrise ...jpg
  • The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes located in Death Valley National Park near Stovepipe Wells, is the largest dune field in the park. While the sand dunes appear tall, the highest dune only rises about 100 feet. The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes are the easiest sand dunes to visit in Death Valley National Park. Three types of dunes are found in the dune field: crescent, linear, and star shaped. The dune field is named for the Mesquite trees that create hummocks that provide places for wildlife to live. Here, the dunes are bathed in the first light at sunrise.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes at sunrise.jpg
  • A small glacial lake adds bright color to the otherwise bright white Tsirku Glacier in Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park. The park, located in the very northwestern corner of British Columbia, Canada, sits between Kluane National Park and Reserve in the Yukon and Glacier Bay and Wrangell-St. Elias National Parks and Preserves in Alaska. All together, they form the largest protected area in thew world, approximately 21 million acres. The Tatshenshini and Alsek Rivers are protected in their entirety making them the only large watershed in North America that is totally protected.<br />
<br />
The remote park is known for its spectacular glacier and icefields, rafting and kayaking, hiking and mountaineering. Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park is home to grizzly bears, Dall's sheep, wolves, mountain goats, moose, eagles, falcons, and trumpeter swans.<br />
<br />
The park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1994.
    Small glacial lake.jpg
  • The upper regions of the Tsirku and Buckwell Glaciers start in Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park. The Tsirku Glacier (foreground) flows downward to become the Tsirku River, near Haines, Alaska and the Buckwell Glacier (upper right) flows to become Michael Creek which shortly connects with the O’Connor River. Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park is located in the very northwestern corner of British Columbia, Canada. The park sits between Kluane National Park and Reserve in the Yukon and Glacier Bay and Wrangell-St. Elias National Parks and Preserves in Alaska. All together, they form the largest protected area in thew world, approximately 21 million acres. The Tatshenshini and Alsek Rivers are protected in their entirety making them the only large watershed in North America that is totally protected.<br />
<br />
The remote park is known for its spectacular glacier and icefields, rafting and kayaking, hiking and mountaineering. Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park is home to grizzly bears, Dall's sheep, wolves, mountain goats, moose, eagles, falcons, and trumpeter swans.<br />
<br />
The park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1994.
    Tsirku Glacier and Tuckwell Glacier.jpg
  • The uppermost portion of the Grand Pacific Glacier appears like a road intersection in Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park. The Grand Pacific Glacier flows downward toward the Gulf of Alaska in the flow in the top left, and downward to to the upper reach of Glacier Bay National Park in the bottom left and right flows. The top right flow is the Melbern Glacier. Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park is located in the very northwestern corner of British Columbia, Canada. The park sits between Kluane National Park and Reserve in the Yukon and Glacier Bay and Wrangell-St. Elias National Parks and Preserves in Alaska. All together, they form the largest protected area in thew world, approximately 21 million acres. The Tatshenshini and Alsek Rivers are protected in their entirety making them the only large watershed in North America that is totally protected.<br />
<br />
The remote park is known for its spectacular glacier and icefields, rafting and kayaking, hiking and mountaineering. Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park is home to grizzly bears, Dall's sheep, wolves, mountain goats, moose, eagles, falcons, and trumpeter swans.<br />
<br />
The park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1994.
    Grand Pacific Glacier crossroad.jpg
  • Wild strawberry growing in a yard in Haines, Alaska
    Wild strawberry.jpg
  • Deep crevasses of Margerie Glacier take on an other worldly look in early evening light in this photo taken at the uppermost region of the glacier just inside the U.S. at the Canadian border. The 21-mile-long glacier in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is one of the park’s tidewater glaciers. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is located in southeast Alaska. Known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall costal mountains, the park is also an important marine wilderness area. The park a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
    Margerie Glacier crevasses.jpg
  • A meadow of tall fireweed booms in Brotherhood Bridge Park in Juneau, Alaska. In the background is the Mendenhall Glacier, one of the most accessible glaciers in southeast Alaska. Each year, 465,000 curise ship passengers visit the Mendenhall Glacier.
    Tall fireweed and Mendenhall Glacier.jpg
  • Bills Peak (left) at 12,703 feet towers above the Keyser Creek valley in the Byers Peak Wilderness. The Byers Peak Wilderness encompasses 8,801 acres in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests near Winter Park, Colorado. The wilderness area was established in 1993. The wilderness area is named after William N. Byers, founder of Colorado’s first newspaper, the Rocky Mountain News.
    Bills Peak.jpg
  • The sun sets on Logger's Lake near Bunker, Mo. Logger’s Lake and Logger’s Lake campground is located deep in the interior forests of Shannon County in the Mark Twain National Forest. The secluded campground, managed by the United States Forest Service consists of 14 campsites around a 22-acre lake known for fishing and non-motorized boating.<br />
<br />
Logger’s Lake was created in 1940 as a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) project. The CCC provided jobs for people needing work during the Great Depression. The campground and dam were constructed by Local 1730 of the CCC which mostly consisted of residents from Dent and Reynolds counties.
    Sunset on Logger's Lake-2.jpg
  • A mountain goat (Oreamnos americanus), also known as the Rocky Mountain goat, surveys the Byers Peak Wilderness in Colorado from the slopes of Byers Peak. Mountain goats are protected from harsh winter elements with their wooly double coats. Their undercoats of fine, dense wool is covered any an outer layer of longer, hollow hairs. In the spring, mountain goats molt rubbing their hair against bushes, trees and rocks to shed the thick wool during the warmer months. Mountain goats are herbivores spending most of their time grazing on grasses, plants and shrubs of their alpine habitat.
    Mountain goat.jpg
  • Byers Peak is the highest peak in the Byers Peak Wilderness. The wilderness area encompasses 8,801 acres in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests near Winter Park, Colorado. The wilderness area was established in 1993. The wilderness area and the 12,804 foot peak are named after William N. Byers, founder of Colorado’s first newspaper, the Rocky Mountain News.
    Byers Peak.jpg
  • Logger’s Lake and Logger’s Lake campground is located deep in the interior forests of Shannon County in the Mark Twain National Forest near Bunker, Mo. The secluded campground, managed by the United States Forest Service consists of 14 campsites around a 22-acre lake known for fishing and non-motorized boating.<br />
<br />
Logger’s Lake was created in 1940 as a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) project. The CCC provided jobs for people needing work during the Great Depression. The campground and dam were constructed by Local 1730 of the CCC which mostly consisted of residents from Dent and Reynolds counties.
    Sunrise on Logger's Lake.jpg
  • The Milky Way rises above the Eleven Point River shortly after sunset.<br />
<br />
The 138-mile-long Eleven Point River flows from southern Missouri into northern Arkansas. Its flow more than doubles from Greer Spring, adding over 200 million gallons of water per day. According to U.S. Geological Survey, the name comes from the French word pointe, a wooded point of land marking a river bend. French Voyageurs marked distance counting these points of river bends.<br />
<br />
A 44 mile section of the river was established in 1968 as The Eleven Point National Wild and Scenic River. The picturesque river is one of the eight initial units of the National Wild and Scenic River system. This designation created a shoreline that is mostly undeveloped.<br />
<br />
Paddling is a popular activity on the river for kayakers and canoeists with intermediate skills (Class I and Class II). The river alternates between deep clear pools and rapids. Also popular is fishing with smallmouth bass, rock bass, walleye and trout being among the fish sought out by anglers.<br />
<br />
Unlike the nearby Current and Jacks Fork Rivers, the Eleven Point River does not have as many gravel bars making river camping more challenging.<br />
<br />
The 4,167-acre Eleven Point State Park near the historic Pigman Ranch was announced in 2016 but remains undeveloped due to a legal dispute over the legality of the easement of the park on the river.
    Milky Way-2.jpg
  • The Milky Way rises above the Eleven Point River shortly after sunset.<br />
<br />
The 138-mile-long Eleven Point River flows from southern Missouri into northern Arkansas. Its flow more than doubles from Greer Spring, adding over 200 million gallons of water per day. According to U.S. Geological Survey, the name comes from the French word pointe, a wooded point of land marking a river bend. French Voyageurs marked distance counting these points of river bends.<br />
<br />
A 44 mile section of the river was established in 1968 as The Eleven Point National Wild and Scenic River. The picturesque river is one of the eight initial units of the National Wild and Scenic River system. This designation created a shoreline that is mostly undeveloped.<br />
<br />
Paddling is a popular activity on the river for kayakers and canoeists with intermediate skills (Class I and Class II). The river alternates between deep clear pools and rapids. Also popular is fishing with smallmouth bass, rock bass, walleye and trout being among the fish sought out by anglers.<br />
<br />
Unlike the nearby Current and Jacks Fork Rivers, the Eleven Point River does not have as many gravel bars making river camping more challenging.<br />
<br />
The 4,167-acre Eleven Point State Park near the historic Pigman Ranch was announced in 2016 but remains undeveloped due to a legal dispute over the legality of the easement of the park on the river.
    Milky Way.jpg
  • Seaweed is washed into a design on the beach at Carrillo State Park in Malibu, California.<br />
<br />
Leo Carrillo State Park is a beach park in Malibu noted for its swimming, surfing, windsurfing, surf fishing and beachcombing. Tidepools, coastal caves and reefs are popular for exploring.
    Seaweed.jpg
  • Death Valley National Park is a favorite for landscape photographers, particularly at sunrise and sunset. Here the sun rises in a blaze of color above the sand at the Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes. The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes located in Death Valley National Park near Stovepipe Wells, is the largest dune field in the park. While the sand dunes appear tall, the highest dune only rises about 100 feet. The Mesquite Sand Dunes are the easiest sand dunes to visit in Death Valley National Park. Three types of dunes are found in the dune field: crescent, linear, and star shaped. The dune field is named for the Mesquite trees that create hummocks that provide places for wildlife to live.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes sunrise.jpg
  • The South Pier Lighthouse in Charlevoix, Michigan, is a favorite spot for tourists and residents wanting to catch a dramatic sunset. The lighthouse, located on Lake Michigan sits at the entrance of the Pine River Channel which provides access to Round Lake and Lake Charlevoix. The current 41-foot steel structure was built in 1941. From 1885 to 1914 the light was located on a wooden tower on the north pier. In 2005, the U.S. Coast Guard deemed the light as no longer needed and in 2008 transferred the Charlevoix South Pier Lighthouse to the City of Charlevoix under the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act.
    South Pier Lighthouse.jpg
  • Clouds seen at sunset from the Griffith Observatory in Griffith Park in Los Angeles.
    Los Angeles sunset.jpg
  • Greer Spring is the second largest spring in Missouri with an average daily flow of 222 million gallons. The spring water gushes from the ground as a boil and then cascades 60 feet over the course of a mile-and-a-quarter deep ravine before entering the Eleven Point River. <br />
<br />
Anheuser-Busch Cos. tried to acquire the spring to bottle the springs water. In 1987, Conservationist Leo Drey purchased the property to prevent the sale to Anheuser-Busch and then later sold it to the U.S. Forest Service. Interestingly, Anheuser-Busch contributed to the money needed for Drey’s purchase of the spring and surrounding area. <br />
<br />
A 44-mile section of the Eleven Point River is among the original eight rivers included in the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System.
    Greer Spring-3.jpg
  • Greer Spring is the second largest spring in Missouri with an average daily flow of 222 million gallons. The spring water gushes from the ground as a boil and then cascades 60 feet over the course of a mile-and-a-quarter deep ravine before entering the Eleven Point River. <br />
<br />
Anheuser-Busch Cos. tried to acquire the spring to bottle the springs water. In 1987, Conservationist Leo Drey purchased the property to prevent the sale to Anheuser-Busch and then later sold it to the U.S. Forest Service. Interestingly, Anheuser-Busch contributed to the money needed for Drey’s purchase of the spring and surrounding area. <br />
<br />
A 44-mile section of the Eleven Point River is among the original eight rivers included in the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System.
    Greer Spring-2.jpg
  • The South Pier Lighthouse in Charlevoix, Michigan, is a favorite spot for tourists and residents wanting to catch a dramatic sunset. The lighthouse, located on Lake Michigan sits at the entrance of the Pine River Channel which provides access to Round Lake and Lake Charlevoix. The current 41-foot steel structure was built in 1941. From 1885 to 1914 the light was located on a wooden tower on the north pier. In 2005, the U.S. Coast Guard deemed the light as no longer needed and in 2008 transferred the Charlevoix South Pier Lighthouse to the City of Charlevoix under the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act.
    South Pier Lighthouse-2.jpg
  • Hallett Peak  (12,720 feet) looms above a frozen Bear Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park in March.
    Hallett Peak and Bear Lake-2.jpg
  • The downtown Los Angeles skyline is framed by the trees and lake at Echo Park. The park was established in 1892. The lake’s fountain was installed as party of the city’s hosting of the 1984 Olympic Games. The park was designed by Joseph Henry Tomlinson in a “picturesque” style of open lawns, groves of trees and winding pathways. The park is popular with families for boating, walking, jogging and people watching.
    Echo Park.jpg
  • Greer Spring is the second largest spring in Missouri with an average daily flow of 222 million gallons. The spring water gushes from the ground as a boil and then cascades 60 feet over the course of a mile-and-a-quarter deep ravine before entering the Eleven Point River. Pictured is the Greer Spring boil.<br />
<br />
Anheuser-Busch Cos. tried to acquire the spring to bottle the springs water. In 1987, Conservationist Leo Drey purchased the property to prevent the sale to Anheuser-Busch and then later sold it to the U.S. Forest Service. Interestingly, Anheuser-Busch contributed to the money needed for Drey’s purchase of the spring and surrounding area. <br />
<br />
A 44-mile section of the Eleven Point River is among the original eight rivers included in the National Wild and Scenic Rivers System.
    Greer Spring boil.jpg
  • Hallett Peak  ( center, 12,720 feet) looms above a frozen Bear Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park in March.
    Hallett Peak and Bear Lake.jpg
  • Death Valley National Park is a favorite for landscape photographers, particularly at sunrise and sunset. Here the sun rises in a blaze of color above mountains as seen from the Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Death Valley sunrise.jpg
  • Falling Spring Mill is located on the edge of a pond where a spring falls from a small bluff as a waterfall. Falling Spring has powered two mills in the past, the second one built in the 1920s still standing today. The mill ground corn, provided electricity and sawed lumber.
    Falling Spring.jpg
  • Sport fishers on Lake Michigan enter the Pine River channel near the South Pier Lighthouse during sunset at Charlevoix, Michigan. People fish for Salmon, Steelhead, salmon, brown trout and lake trout in the Lake Michigan waters near Charlevoix.
    Charlevoix sport fishers at sunset,.jpg
  • Hallett Peak (12,720 feet) looms above Bear Lake. Carol and I climbed to the top of the peak in our younger years. It wasn’t quite as hard as it looks. We climbed it from the west side of the Continental Divide. #routefinding
    Hallett Peak and Bear Lake.jpg
  • Tree roots of a tree at Echo Park in Los Angeles.
    Echo Park tree roots.jpg
  • Clouds seen at sunset from the Griffith Observatory in Griffith Park in Los Angeles.
    Los Angeles sunset-3.jpg
  • The Sun sets over Eider and Strawberry Islands, located in the Beardslee Islands in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve.<br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is located in southeast Alaska. The park is also an important marine wilderness area known for its spectacular tidewater glaciers, icefields, and tall coastal mountains. The park, a popular destination for cruise ships, is also known for its sea kayaking and wildlife viewing opportunities. <br />
<br />
Glacier Bay National Park is home to humpback whales which feed in the park's protected waters during the summer, both black and grizzly bears, moose, wolves, sea otters, harbor seals, steller's sea lions, and numerous species of sea birds. <br />
<br />
The dynamically changing park, known for its large, contiguous, intact ecosystems, is a United Nations biosphere reserve and a UNESCO World Heritage site.
    Beardslee Islands sunset.jpg
  • Byers Peak (left) towers above the Keyser Creek valley in the Byers Peak Wilderness. Second peak from the left is Bills Peak. The Byers Peak Wilderness encompasses 8,801 acres in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests near Winter Park, Colorado. The wilderness area was established in 1993. The wilderness area and the 12,804 foot peak are named after William N. Byers, founder of Colorado’s first newspaper, the Rocky Mountain News. *** Editors Note: This image is panorama comprised of multiple overlapping images.
    Byers Peak Wilderness.jpg
  • The Mackinac Bridge, the longest suspension bridge in the Western Hemisphere, connects Michigan’s lower and upper peninsulas. The Mackinac Bridge, including approaches is roughly file miles long with the roadbed at mid-span approximately 200 feet above the Straits of Mackinac where Lake Michigan and Lake Huron meet. As it is a suspension bridge, the bridge roadbed can slowly shift as much as 35 feet during severe winds. The Mackinac Bridge carries Interstate 75 (I-75). The bridge, also known as the “Mighty Mac” or “Big Mac" was opened in 1957. Pedestrians are not allowed to walk across the bridge except during the Mackinac Bridge Walk which is held every Labor Day. This view of the bridge is from Bridge View Park in Saint Ignace.
    Mackinac Bridge.jpg
  • The pipe organ of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels is believed to be the 89th largest pipe organ in North America and the 143rd largest in the world. It was built by Dobson Pipe Organ Builders, Ltd., of Lake City, Iowa with visual design collaboration with Cathedral architect Rafael Moneo. The organ’s burnished tin facade is the largest facade in the United States  made of polished tin.
    Pipe organ of the Cathedral of Our L...jpg
  • The curved stainless-steel exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall located in downtown Los Angeles was designed by architect Frank Gehry. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003
    Disney Concert Hall exterior detail.jpg
  • The curved stainless-steel exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall located in downtown Los Angeles was designed by architect Frank Gehry. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003
    Disney Concert Hall exterior detail-...jpg
  • The curved stainless-steel exterior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall located in downtown Los Angeles was designed by architect Frank Gehry. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003
    Disney Concert Hall exterior detail-...jpg
  • People enjoy a garden at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles. The Disney Concert Hall, opened in 2003, was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
    Disney Concert Hall garden.jpg
  • Byers Peak-2.jpg
  • Blue Spring is Missouri’s sixth largest spring with a discharge of 90 million gallons of water per day. The azure blue depths of Blue Spring reach 310 feet making it Missouri’s deepest spring and among the deepest in the United States. Dissolved rock such as limestone and or dolomite, along with the influence of the deep depth of the spring and the blue of the sky, give the spring its blue color. <br />
<br />
Blue Spring is a Missouri Natural Area, a special designation given to areas of outstanding beauty or scientific interest. The area around the spring is managed by the Missouri Department of Conservation, while the Current River and the surrounding area are administered by the National Park Service as part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. Blue Spring is located just off the Current River near Owls Bend, an area that historically supported a mill that produced gunpowder and a river ferry which was the only way across the Current River until 1975.<br />
<br />
The area surrounding Blue Spring was once used for a lodge and retreat until 1960.
    Blue Spring in the Fall-2.jpg
  • Blue Spring is Missouri’s sixth largest spring with a discharge of 90 million gallons of water per day. The azure blue depths of Blue Spring reach 310 feet making it Missouri’s deepest spring and among the deepest in the United States. Dissolved rock such as limestone and or dolomite, along with the influence of the deep depth of the spring and the blue of the sky, give the spring its blue color. <br />
<br />
Blue Spring is a Missouri Natural Area, a special designation given to areas of outstanding beauty or scientific interest. The area around the spring is managed by the Missouri Department of Conservation, while the Current River and the surrounding area are administered by the National Park Service as part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. Blue Spring is located just off the Current River near Owls Bend, an area that historically supported a mill that produced gunpowder and a river ferry which was the only way across the Current River until 1975.<br />
<br />
The area surrounding Blue Spring was once used for a lodge and retreat until 1960.
    Blue Spring in the Fall.jpg
  • Death Valley National Park Visitors come not only to experience the record heat but also the beauty. Despite the desert conditions, the park is known for its spring wildflowers. Under perfect conditions, the park experiences a rare event known as a wildflower "super bloom" which produces a sea wildflowers. Most of the desert wildflowers are annuals. This ensures their survival as this allows them to lie dormant as seeds during times of drought. Pictured here is Desert Gold, also known as Hairy Desert Sunflower, in Death Valley National Park.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Desert Gold blowing in the wind,.jpg
  • Blue Spring is Missouri’s sixth largest spring with a discharge of 90 million gallons of water per day. The azure blue depths of Blue Spring reach 310 feet making it Missouri’s deepest spring and among the deepest in the United States. Dissolved rock such as limestone and or dolomite, along with the influence of the deep depth of the spring and the blue of the sky, give the spring its blue color. <br />
<br />
Blue Spring is a Missouri Natural Area, a special designation given to areas of outstanding beauty or scientific interest. The area around the spring is managed by the Missouri Department of Conservation, while the Current River and the surrounding area are administered by the National Park Service as part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. Blue Spring is located just off the Current River near Owls Bend, an area that historically supported a mill that produced gunpowder and a river ferry which was the only way across the Current River until 1975.<br />
<br />
The area surrounding Blue Spring was once used for a lodge and retreat until 1960.
    Blue Spring.jpg
  • Water gushes from Blue Spring into the Blue Spring branch before quickly emptying into the Current River. Blue Spring is Missouri’s sixth largest spring with a discharge of 90 million gallons of water per day. The azure blue depths of Blue Spring reach 310 feet making it Missouri’s deepest spring and among the deepest in the United States. Dissolved rock such as limestone and or dolomite, along with the influence of the deep depth of the spring and the blue of the sky, give the spring its blue color. <br />
<br />
Blue Spring is a Missouri Natural Area, a special designation given to areas of outstanding beauty or scientific interest. The area around the spring is managed by the Missouri Department of Conservation, while the Current River and the surrounding area are administered by the National Park Service as part of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways. Blue Spring is located just off the Current River near Owls Bend, an area that historically supported a mill that produced gunpowder and a river ferry which was the only way across the Current River until 1975.<br />
<br />
The area surrounding Blue Spring was once used for a lodge and retreat until 1960.
    Blue Spring branch.jpg
  • A sailboat sailing in brisk winds in the Lynn Canal near Haines, Alaska. The 90 mile, 2,000 foot deep Lynn Canal is known for its beauty -- magnificent mountains and glaciers. It is the deepest fjord in North American and one of the longest and deepest in the world.
    Sailboat.jpg
  • Harding Mountain basks in sunlight as the sun sets. Harding Mountain is located across the Lynn Canal from Haines, Alaska. The 90 mile, 2,000 foot deep Lynn Canal is known for its beauty -- magnificent mountains and glaciers. It is the deepest fjord in North American and one of the longest and deepest in the world.
    Harding Mountain sunset.jpg
  • Death Valley National Park Visitors come not only to experience the record heat but also the beauty. Despite the desert conditions, the park is known for its spring wildflowers. Under perfect conditions, the park experiences a rare event known as a wildflower "super bloom" which produces a sea wildflowers. Most of the desert wildflowers are annuals. This ensures their survival as this allows them to lie dormant as seeds during times of drought. Pictured here is Desert Gold, also known as Hairy Desert Sunflower, in Death Valley National Park.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Desert Gold.jpg
  • Death Valley National Park Visitors come not only to experience the record heat but also the beauty. Despite the desert conditions, the park is known for its spring wildflowers. Under perfect conditions, the park experiences a rare event known as a wildflower "super bloom" which produces a sea wildflowers. Most of the desert wildflowers are annuals. This ensures their survival as this allows them to lie dormant as seeds during times of drought. Here, Desert Gold, also known as Hairy Desert Sunflower, blooms below the badlands of the Kit Fox Hills in Death Valley National Park.<br />
<br />
Death Valley National Park, located in eastern California near the border with Nevada is one of the hottest spots on earth, holding the hottest recorded air temperature of 134 °F. The Park also is location of the lowest spot in North America, 282 feet below sea level at the vast salt flats at Badwater Basin. At 3.4 million acres, the park is the largest national park in the contiguous United States. Death Valley National Park sits between the Panamint Range on the west  and Amargosa Range on the east.
    Desert Gold super bloom.jpg
  • Photographers capture the sunrise on the ice-laden Chilkat River in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve along the Chilkat River near Haines, Alaska. Photographers from around the world come to the Chilkat River to photograph bald eagles. During November and December several thousand bald eagles are seen along the river allowing for ample opportunities to photograph the birds along with beautiful scenery that the area offers. In 1982, the 48,000 acre area was designated as the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve.
    Chilkat River sunrise photographers.jpg
  • A lone bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) flies above the ice-laden Chilkat River during sunrise in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve near Haines, Alaska. Photographers from around the world come to the Chilkat River to photograph bald eagles. During November and December several thousand bald eagles are seen along the river allowing for ample opportunities to photograph the birds along with beautiful scenery that the area offers. In 1982, the 48,000 acre area was designated as the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve.
    Chilkat River sunrise with bald eagl...jpg
  • A lone bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) flies above the ice-laden Chilkat River during sunrise in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve near Haines, Alaska. Photographers from around the world come to the Chilkat River to photograph bald eagles. During November and December several thousand bald eagles are seen along the river allowing for ample opportunities to photograph the birds along with beautiful scenery that the area offers. In 1982, the 48,000 acre area was designated as the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve.
    Chilkat River sunrise with bald eagl...jpg
  • A lone bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) flies above the ice-laden Chilkat River during sunrise in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve near Haines, Alaska. Photographers from around the world come to the Chilkat River to photograph bald eagles. During November and December several thousand bald eagles are seen along the river allowing for ample opportunities to photograph the birds along with beautiful scenery that the area offers. In 1982, the 48,000 acre area was designated as the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve.
    Chilkat River sunrise with bald eagl...jpg
  • Dave Mitchell of Juneau, Alaska photographs  a bald eagle along the Chilkat River in the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve near Haines, Alaska. Photographers from around the world come to the Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve in southeast Alaska to photograph bald eagles. During November and December several thousand bald eagles are seen along the river allowing for ample opportunities to photograph the birds along with beautiful scenery that the area offers.
    Bald eagle photographer.jpg
  • People silhouetted in late afternoon sunshine walk along Hanakapiai Beach in Na Pali State Wilderness Park on the island of Kauai in Hawaii. While Hanakapiai Beach, located along the Kalalau Trail, looks beautiful is considered treacherous during all months of the year. The beach has been the site of numerous drownings due to the very strong undertow and powerful waves.
    Hanakapiai Beach.jpg