Query = 'pol'

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Results from the Directory listing:

  No matches.

Results from the Photographs listing:

  #img_8303
Prickly Pear Cactus
Opuntia polyacantha
  
  #img_8302
Prickly Pear Cactus
Opuntia polyacantha
  
  #img_8301
Prickly Pear Cactus
Opuntia polyacantha
  
  #img_8208
Cushion milkwort
Polygala subspinosa
  
  #img_8207
Cushion milkwort
Polygala subspinosa
  
  #418-4
Maple & aspens, close pol. has no effect onleaves, only sky up high, sun 180 from camera Massive rise

Blackhawk road, Nebo loop  
  #391-1  "tit+teen+pemale"
Power station <i>insulators max rise, raised bed, 2.5 in rise pol rotated for bluest sky, orange builging</i>

Eureka UT  
  #388-2
Dead fish, mudpan flies wings made blue by pol.

Mona reservoir  
  #129-2950
More shots with the b/y pol

  
  #129-2946
Hoodoos, witht he b/y polarizer

  
  #129-2939
The Sentinel, shot with a blue/yellow polariser

  
  #052-33
Lineman's handiwork

  
  #202v-27
Scenic from roadway, Mt. Nebo scenic loop (note very uneven effect of the polarizer with this wide-angle lens)

  
  #201v-29
Scenic, fall colors next to Mt. Nebo Scenic Loop (note the uneven effect of the polarizer with a wide-angle lens)

  
  #275-20  "wind turbin"
Wind turbin profile, shot with polarizer, set deep.

  
  #1153
South Dakota: prettiest telephone poles in the world

  

Results from the Comments:

Dorde Woodruff of SLC thought on 5/30/2004 that this photo was good and added the following:
"A pretty, neat flower on Sclerocactus parviflorus, not S. whipplei, which is a smaller plant, doesn't grow here, and rarely becomes cylindrical. The common name for S. parviflorus is a translation of the Latin, "small-flowered fishhook cactus", or more properly, "small-flowered little barrel cactus", a misnomer, since this species has small flowers only in comparison to the giant of the genus, S. polyancistrus of California. " 4188

Dorde Woodruff of SLC thought on 5/30/2004 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"this is not Opuntia polyacantha but rather O. basilaris, beavertail. Note that it doesn't have regular spines, just glochids, the fine barbed minature spines. The pads are bluer than O. polyacantha, and a different shape. The plant is more compact. Gorgeous photos! " 5063

Bruce Wilson of Provo, Utah thought on 2/23/2004 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"This is shot through a Cokin blue/yellow polarizer. I was just holding it in front of the lens as best I could, but wasn't aligned very well. In the end I liked the effect, so left it full-frame. Sort of an unintentional vignette, much like the very early field cameras that used lenses with small image circles. I've tried printing similar shots, but always come back to this one." 6333

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