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Not a real scenic time of year up here

Posted by rcnaylor z7 Tex (My Page) on
Fri, Nov 20, 09 at 16:40

We are not real scenic up here when we have our "dead of winter" look going (unless snow or ice puts a pretty blanket on things). So, here is what it looked like out in the Canadian River breaks today:

Photobucket


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: Not a real scenic time of year up here

Nice scene with windmill, cattle, barn, and quite a large American flag -- pure Texas! Looks like the cattle could be saying "What ever happened to the green grass?"

What does Canadian River Breaks refer to?


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RE: Not a real scenic time of year up here

Glad you asked Roselee. Its the rough country in the watershed of our main river up here the Canadian River. Here's a little info blurb on it:

river that rises in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, northeastern New Mexico, U.S., and flows southward across the Las Vegas Plains, cutting a gorge nearly 1,500 feet (450 m) deep in the Canadian escarpment before turning eastward. It continues through the Texas Panhandle in a deep, narrow valley cut into reddish sandstones, the walls of which are known locally as the "breaks," and flows eastward through the Antelope Hills in Oklahoma, past Oklahoma City, to join the Arkansas River 27 miles (47 km) southeast of Muskogee, at the western edge of the Boston Mountains. Through most of its 906-mile (1,458-kilometre) course, the Canadian is a braided stream with an interlacing system of channels; it drains an area of 46,900 square miles (121,500 square km).

Flood-control and irrigation units along its course are Conchas Dam and reservoir (1939), near Tucumcari, N.M.; Ute Reservoir, impounded at Logan, N.M.; and Lake Meredith, impounded by Sanford Dam, near Borger, Texas. The main tributary is the North Canadian, which joins the Canadian from the west, near Eufaula, Okla., there dammed to form Eufaula Reservoir before the combined streams enter the Arkansas. Other tributaries include the Mora River and Ute Creek in New Mexico and Mustang Creek in Texas.

The rugged terrain along the river in the Llano Estacado (Staked Plain) in southeastern New Mexico and western Texas was a favourite hiding place for bandits and rustlers. The river was probably named by early French traders and hunters from Canada who followed it west into Spanish territory. The Fort Smith and Santa Fe pioneer trails went through the Canadian River valley.


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RE: Not a real scenic time of year up here

Thanks for the information Richard. Those gorges sound beautiful. Wanting to see just how the river flowed I googled it and got a map. Wow, you sure are way up there in the panhandle if you live anywhere near the Colorado River Breaks.

Here is a link that might be useful: Colorado River


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RE: Not a real scenic time of year up here

We're definitely on the high side of Texas Roselee.

Here is another one I took looking back towards the river. On my little Canon the distant detail isn't too clear, but you can see for miles and miles in to the distance on that shot with eye.

Photobucket


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RE: Not a real scenic time of year up here

That country has its own beauty, huh, RC?!?!
Now THAT is "in the country"!!


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RE: Not a real scenic time of year up here

You know it Justin.


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RE: Not a real scenic time of year up here

Love the feeling that photos of those wide open spaces offer.

If wide open spaces can be 'captured' -- you've captured them.


 
 

 

 


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