Tag: Waterfall

Picture of the Day for August 9, 2014

People have been enjoying the Wisconsin State Fair this past week, eating all the fair food, but if you enjoy a little more educational twist and headed to the Department of Natural Resources building, you could pick up the Wisconsin’s Great Lakes 2014-2015 Calendar which contains pictures from the photo contest earlier this year with nearly 500 photos submitted.

My photo, A Hidden Gem, was the first place photo in the natural features and wildlife category and is the 2015 May photo in the calendar. Lost Creek Falls is near Cornucopia on the shore of Lake Superior. Another photo I submitted of an old fishing boat placed 2nd in the cultural and historic features category and is the October 2015 photo and was my ‘Picture of the Day’ photo for 11/25/13.

Besides the calendar, the photos may be used in other DNR educational uses. To see the calendar and other winners, check out the Wisconsin Great Lakes photo contest page.

A Hidden Gem 

A Hidden Gem

Picture of the Day for March 15, 2014

I imagine there will be a large number of visitors at the Lake Superior ice caves this weekend since it is the last weekend they will be open this year as the ice is thinning and the ice formations are beginning to fall. Soon these big ice chunks will melt and will become part of Lake Superior waves that will etch out more sea caves.

Icy Falls

Icy Falls

Picture of the Day for September 24, 2013

A babbling stream can make a very soothing sound for one to enjoy and relax. And while this seems like a nice river with water creating gurgles and ripples around and over rocks, the sound was a bit noisier with the upper falls of the Siskiwit River upstream and the middle falls directly behind me.

The sound is not roaring as larger falls would generate as the Siskiwit Falls only drops twenty feet in a series of drops and slides, with the largest cascading slide having a drop of ten feet and the other three drops and slides averaging two to five feet as it empties into the Lake Superior less than a mile away. But little falls were still impressive as you could get right up to the falls and let the water spill over your hands as it dropped over the falls but one problem of getting so close, I kept getting drops of water on the camera lens.

Siskiwit Falls

Siskiwit Falls

Picture of the Day for September 16, 2013

When thinking of waterfalls on the western side of Lake Superior, famous waterfalls like Gooseberry Falls or Baptism High Falls come to mind but sometimes you can find a gem hidden away from most people. With a two mile hike in the forest area of the Bayfield Peninsula, a little gem of a waterfall set in a sandstone glen can be found on Lost Creek Number One.

I’m glad Lost Creek was ‘found’ as it is a breathtaking view to see the small fifteen foot waterfall at one end of a glen with high cliff walls and the small stream running across flat rocks and little boulders. Moss and ferns cover some of the rocks but when a piece of sandstone breaks off, a bright reddish-orange color is revealed.

The thick trees and the glen cut off all sounds of man-made sounds and you hear the water plunging and flowing away, the wind in the tree tops and an occasional bird call like the pileated woodpecker. The sandstone has been eroded away behind the falls so you can walk behind and peer out down the ravine through the veil of water.

I guess I am a bit selfish, but I hope Lost Creek Falls stays ‘losted’ for a while longer as it was so peaceful not to have to share the view with anyone else and it was my tranquil spot, at least for a few minutes away.

Lost Creek Falls

 Lost Creek Falls