Running & Thermal

Photography Now & Then #134

Another hour or two at the gym.  This photo uses the panorama feature of the iPhone to take a vertical image that shows both the floor of the basketball court and the ceiling over it.  There are actually some people walking the track, but their images got chopped up with the camera motion necessary to produce the “panorama.”

Running/walking track above basketball court with aerobic machine area on upper floor, St. Mary’s Wellness Fitness Center, Russellville, Arkansas, May 15, 2018 (Apple iPhone 6s)

Now: Running/walking track above basketball court with aerobic machine area on upper floor, St. Mary’s Wellness Fitness Center, Russellville, Arkansas, May 15, 2018 (Apple iPhone 6s)

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This beautiful thermal pool is next to the Fairy Falls trailhead parking just before the bridge over the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park.  (Update: while working on another post, I discovered that the name of this thermal spring is Egeria Spring. It’s part of the Rabbit Creek Group of thermal features in Midway Geyser Basin)

Egeria Spring, a thermal feature next to Fairy Falls Trail, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, August 8, 2010 (Pentax K10D)

Then: Thermal pool next to Fairy Falls Trail, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, August 8, 2010 (Pentax K10D)


Photography Now & Then Notes:

  • Series Photos
    • The Now photo is one that is almost always taken the day of the blog post.  In some instances, posts may be backdated if internet access is not available on the day of the photo or other reasons prevent posting Photography Now and Then.
    • The Then photo is usually a randomly selected older photograph from a batch of photos specifically “curated” for Photography Now and Then.
  • Each photo in this series is an “original work” – a copyright term – of Michael Goad.
  • Reference links were accessed on the date the blog post was published, unless otherwise stated.
  • The title convention for Photography Now & Then blog posts evolved early on from one word related to each photo separated by “&” to usually being the first word in the caption description for each photo.

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