Photos and text by H. Brian Rauvola
The high water forced a few racers to concede to the raging river, others ended up with dislocated shoulders and minor injuries, but the event was definitely a success!
The Duluth Photography Institute has organized a group of local photographers to learn on-location photography and environmental portraits while recording the people, places, and events of the Duluth-Superior Area. If you are a photographer and want to learn more about this type of photography, contact Brian at dpi@duluthphotographyinstitute.com or call 218.393.2468 and apply to be a part of the group! Enjoy!
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Sunday, April 27, 2014
Monday, April 21, 2014
Spring in Duluth
Photo and text by H. Brian Rauvola
Where else can you find huge ice piles and temperatures more than 60 degrees? Duluth in the spring, of course! Below, Richard Anderson photographs the "monolith," as he called it. This unusual ice shard is over a foot thick, more than 10 feet tall and stands upright on top of a 20+ foot ice pile on Park Point. "This would have been something to see as this pile was forming," Anderson said.
Where else can you find huge ice piles and temperatures more than 60 degrees? Duluth in the spring, of course! Below, Richard Anderson photographs the "monolith," as he called it. This unusual ice shard is over a foot thick, more than 10 feet tall and stands upright on top of a 20+ foot ice pile on Park Point. "This would have been something to see as this pile was forming," Anderson said.
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