Hopewell Rock Heads
by Lieve Snellings
Title
Hopewell Rock Heads
Artist
Lieve Snellings
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
It was breath taking to see those rocks, special when the water came up so quickly. The water was brown, a strange and impressing experience. Some minutes before we walkedm besides, some minutes later the first canoes appeared. I am so glad we visited that place.
The Hopewell Rocks, also called the Flowerpots Rocks or simply The Rocks, are rock formations caused by tidal erosion in The Hopewell Rocks Ocean Tidal Exploration Site in New Brunswick. They stand 40–70 feet tall.
This photograph is featured in the FAA group
- NEW FAA UPLOADS LIMIT ONE PER DAY (01/12/2020)
- PHOTOGRAPHIC CAMERA ART (01/12/2020)
- YOUR STORY OF ART (02/04/2020)
- This image has been featured on the Home Page of the ABC GROUP from the R IS FOR ROCKS AND ROCK FORMATIONS themed week, MARCH 30 - APRIL 6 2020
- ABC group (04/16/2020)
- Water Forms (05/29/2020)
- Hodge Podge (11/24/2022)
- Jigsaw Puzzle (11/26/2022)
- Fine Art America Professional (12/05/2022)
- IF THE IMAGE EXCITES YOU (12/07/2022)
- A Woman’s Touch (12/11/2022)
- The Outdoor Photographer (12/15/2022)
- Just Perfect (02/05/2023)
- 10 Plus (04/01/2023)
Uploaded
January 8th, 2020
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Comments (33)
Anne Gifford
Superb capture, and the composition is so captivating with all of it’s negative space, and the weight of the rocks on the right.
Sharon Williams Eng
What an amazing place. The trees on top of the rock prove that nature will find a way. The brown water is rather strange, though. Wonderful capture.
Lieve Snellings replied:
Yes it is indeed an amazing place. And also for me the first time I saw this brown water. five minutes before we walked there, and then, I. 1-2-3 the water was everywhere…
Beryl Jasper
Congrats!! Your amazing artwork has been featured in IF THE IMAGE EXCITES YOU group. You may promote your artwork in “Thank you and Promote” and any other thread in which the artwork fits. Thanks for sharing.
Chuck Burdick
A great capture of Hopewell Rock during low tide. They are amazing sea stack formations. l/f