Columbia River orchards
The Columbia River provides spectacular views along its 1243-mile length from the mouth that separates Oregon and Washington, through the Columbia Gorge where the river cuts through the Cascade Mountains, into the arid parts of Eastern Washington and British Columbia and into the high Rocky Mountains to its source. The Columbia is the 4th largest river in the US by volume, is the largest river in North and South America that flows into the Pacific and is the 38th largest river in the world. Hydroelectric power generation on the Columbia and it's tributaries produce 44% of the United States hydroelectric power, however the dams that provide this power (as well as cargo ships) have decimated the native Salmon runs (in pre-colonial times salmon and steelhead runs are estimated to be 10-16 million fish, but the largest since 1938 was just 3.2 million). A huge reason for the reduction in the salmon and steelhead fisheries is because the majority of the dams did not include fish ladders, which meant the fish are collected and transported by truck upstream but this is cost-prohibitive, less effective than fish ladders and doesn't scale.This is a 3:1 panorama and this page may not render it correctly, for the full image please view this image in the GALLERY section.
7x21 printed on 17x22 Canon Photo Paper Pro Luster or Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Smooth.
Some custom sizes available.
Daniel Imagery watermark will be removed from printing.
The Columbia River provides spectacular views along its 1243-mile length from the mouth that separates Oregon and Washington, through the Columbia Gorge where the river cuts through the Cascade Mountains, into the arid parts of Eastern Washington and British Columbia and into the high Rocky Mountains to its source. The Columbia is the 4th largest river in the US by volume, is the largest river in North and South America that flows into the Pacific and is the 38th largest river in the world. Hydroelectric power generation on the Columbia and it's tributaries produce 44% of the United States hydroelectric power, however the dams that provide this power (as well as cargo ships) have decimated the native Salmon runs (in pre-colonial times salmon and steelhead runs are estimated to be 10-16 million fish, but the largest since 1938 was just 3.2 million). A huge reason for the reduction in the salmon and steelhead fisheries is because the majority of the dams did not include fish ladders, which meant the fish are collected and transported by truck upstream but this is cost-prohibitive, less effective than fish ladders and doesn't scale.This is a 3:1 panorama and this page may not render it correctly, for the full image please view this image in the GALLERY section.
7x21 printed on 17x22 Canon Photo Paper Pro Luster or Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Smooth.
Some custom sizes available.
Daniel Imagery watermark will be removed from printing.
The Columbia River provides spectacular views along its 1243-mile length from the mouth that separates Oregon and Washington, through the Columbia Gorge where the river cuts through the Cascade Mountains, into the arid parts of Eastern Washington and British Columbia and into the high Rocky Mountains to its source. The Columbia is the 4th largest river in the US by volume, is the largest river in North and South America that flows into the Pacific and is the 38th largest river in the world. Hydroelectric power generation on the Columbia and it's tributaries produce 44% of the United States hydroelectric power, however the dams that provide this power (as well as cargo ships) have decimated the native Salmon runs (in pre-colonial times salmon and steelhead runs are estimated to be 10-16 million fish, but the largest since 1938 was just 3.2 million). A huge reason for the reduction in the salmon and steelhead fisheries is because the majority of the dams did not include fish ladders, which meant the fish are collected and transported by truck upstream but this is cost-prohibitive, less effective than fish ladders and doesn't scale.This is a 3:1 panorama and this page may not render it correctly, for the full image please view this image in the GALLERY section.
7x21 printed on 17x22 Canon Photo Paper Pro Luster or Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Smooth.
Some custom sizes available.
Daniel Imagery watermark will be removed from printing.
Photo paper prints are created in my home studio from 8x10 up to 17x22 on Canon Photo Paper Pro Luster. This paper has a beautiful luster finish for great color saturation and a soft feel. Luster finish provides an elegant surface that resists fingerprints and virtually eliminates glare.
Fine art prints are created in my home studio from 8x10 up to 17x48 on Hahnemuehle Photo Rag smooth. The white cotton art paper has a discreet, very finely textured surface with a strikingly silky feel and are acid-free & pH neutral. The matte premium inkjet coating guarantees extraordinary print results with impressive reproduction of color, detail and very deep black.