Lemmon Falls at Thousand Springs State Park | Southern Idaho Landscape Fine Art Print

from $75.00

Horizontal orientation. Images include an optional natural barn wood frame with only a clear protective finish created by the photographer. Frames vary in color and look, and are each unique and one-of-a-kind.

In an already spectacular area with springs flowing out from canyon walls, and the magnificent Snake River flowing by, the view of Lemmon Falls is icing on the cake. Just a few hundred yards from the gate to Ritter Island, these falls are easily accessible and approachable. On the morning that I took this image, I had hoped for a colorful sunrise but instead got a pleasant breeze blowing the mist away from the front of the falls, so that my lens wasn't instantly getting covered with water each time I opened the cap, as has happened every other time I have visited. I was quite pleased with that, and took several images, including this one where I was able to set my tripod up right near where the water disappears into the loose rock below and flows underneath the trail and out to the river. The mists were being carried by the breeze upward, filling the lower part of the sky in the image, creating a beautiful eeriness in the atmosphere and giving the final touches to a beautiful scene.

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Horizontal orientation. Images include an optional natural barn wood frame with only a clear protective finish created by the photographer. Frames vary in color and look, and are each unique and one-of-a-kind.

In an already spectacular area with springs flowing out from canyon walls, and the magnificent Snake River flowing by, the view of Lemmon Falls is icing on the cake. Just a few hundred yards from the gate to Ritter Island, these falls are easily accessible and approachable. On the morning that I took this image, I had hoped for a colorful sunrise but instead got a pleasant breeze blowing the mist away from the front of the falls, so that my lens wasn't instantly getting covered with water each time I opened the cap, as has happened every other time I have visited. I was quite pleased with that, and took several images, including this one where I was able to set my tripod up right near where the water disappears into the loose rock below and flows underneath the trail and out to the river. The mists were being carried by the breeze upward, filling the lower part of the sky in the image, creating a beautiful eeriness in the atmosphere and giving the final touches to a beautiful scene.