Hello people!
This week as usual there is another edition of the #POBphotocontest, and I am joining it one more time with a new inspiring topic, it is my 26th time participating! Here you can read the guide post of this cool initiative by @friendlymoose
This new round of this week is about heights. And it is possible to be creative, so I felt inspired by looking upwards, surprised and amazed by the heights that water can reach. Yes, water doesn't usually go up, but in some cases it does happen and I want to share it.
So here is my new contribution for the Proof of Brain photo contest:
HEIGHTS: Water at heights in the Yellowstone National Park
Once again I felt inspired by nature, so for this reason I have chosen an amazing natural place to share here. This is Yellowstone National Park, and there we can see many wonders that nature shows us, and in the past I have shared many of them and beautiful landscapes in different posts, but still many photos ready to be shared and now, specially a geyser! Water up!
It is a rare natural phenomenon, it is not easy to see it, so when we are witnesses almost in the front row (well, you can't be very close because it is water at a very high temperature and just a few drops could burn us), but with care we can enjoy the spectacle of water going up high. Waters towards the heights!
The Geyser Show!
Step by step of an amazing natural phenomenon.
And that incredible phenomenon begins with simple vapors on that small mound, as if nature were giving us smoke signals in an extraordinary place surrounded by lush forests, with the great geyser being the center of attention, and its show seems to be about to begin...
And suddenly, the action begins, boiling water starts to come out from inside the earth, it starts to rise, higher and higher. With more momentum, strength and energy, the power that the earth has inside comes out, showing it in a powerful splendor that amazes us and vapors that make the moment a fantastic unforgettable experience.
So we enjoy the natural show, we cheer and applaud, moving our heads upwards, because the water goes up, trying to reach the heights, as if in an act of explosive madness it tried to touch with its burning and vaporous drops the sky of such a magnificent national park.