RON DICKEY PHOTOGRAPHY

Ronald Dickey > When you dock in Port Cantaros you can trek along the scenic Cantaros Cascade up to Cantaros Lake. This seven hundred-step walk is in deep, wet rainforest, with flora like fungus and mushrooms that are inaccessible anywhere else in the park.
Ronald Dickey > El Ombú de Areco, an historical estancia (ranch) just over an hour's drive from downtown Buenos Aires, is located in San Antonio de Areco, birthplace of the gaucho tradition. The Late-Colonial style mansion was built in 1880 by Lieutenant-general Pablo Riccheri. The main house is surrounded by a covered gallery typical of the late-Colonial period, with a richly tiled floor and cascaded steps that lead into the gardens of the park.
Ronald Dickey > This photo was taken from the Brazil side of Iguazu Falls.
Ronald Dickey > The waterfall system consists of about 270 falls along 2.7 kilometres (1.67 miles) of the Iguazu River. Some of the individual falls are up to 82 metres (269 feet) in height, though the majority are about 64 metres (210 feet). The Garganta del Diablo or Devil's Throat (Garganta do Diabo in Portuguese), a U-shaped 150-metre-wide and 700-metre-long (490 by 2300 feet) cliff, is the most impressive of all, and marks the border between Argentina and Brazil. Most of the falls are within Argentine territory, but from the Brazilian side a more panoramic view of the Garganta do Diabo is obtained. Many islands split up the falls, including several large ones. About 900 metres of the 2.7-kilometre length does not have water flowing over it.
Ronald Dickey > Situated in Iguazú National Park, some 20 km. from Puerto Iguazú in the north of the province, these falls are shared by Brazil and Argentina. Iguazú river is born in Paraná state in Brazil, and after crossing 1,200 km. on a plateau where it receives several affluents, it reaches a fault forming a crack in the interleaved layers of sandstone and basalt where the river runs.
Ronald Dickey > Iguazu Falls are located in the region bounded by the municipalities of Puerto Iguazu (Argentina), Foz do Iguacu (Brasil) and Ciudad del Este (Paraguay).
Ronald Dickey > The Ilulissat icefjord contains icebergs, some of which are more than 300 feet high and more than 30,000 years old. In summer, you can sit by the fjord in the glow of the midnight sun sipping a drink with ice cubes that are thousands of years old! The fjord's icebergs originate from Greenland's second-fastest producing glacier located at the head of the fjord producing 20 million tons of ice every 24 hours - as much water as New York City consumes in one year!
Ronald Dickey > The public beach on St. George Island is a perfect place to spend the day. Its location in the middle of the island where the bridge connects to the mainland allows one to walk to housing and a wide variety of businesses.
Ronald Dickey > Apalachicola is home port for a fleet of offshore and near shore Gulf seafood vessels that daily bring in the shrimp, grouper, red snapper and other delicacies that will be locally prepared and shipped overnight to grace the tables of upscale restaurants all along the Eastern United States.
Situated in Iguazú National Park, some 20 km. from Puerto Iguazú in the north of the province, these falls are shared by Brazil and Argentina. Iguazú river is born in Paraná state in Brazil, and after crossing 1,200 km. on a plateau where it receives several affluents, it reaches a fault forming a crack in the interleaved layers of sandstone and basalt where the river runs.
Ronald Dickey > Situated in Iguazú National Park, some 20 km. from Puerto Iguazú in the north of the province, these falls are shared by Brazil and Argentina. Iguazú river is born in Paraná state in Brazil, and after crossing 1,200 km. on a plateau where it receives several affluents, it reaches a fault forming a crack in the interleaved layers of sandstone and basalt where the river runs.
Situated in Iguazú National Park, some 20 km. from Puerto Iguazú in the north of the province, these falls are shared by Brazil and Argentina. Iguazú river is born in Paraná state in Brazil, and after crossing 1,200 km. on a plateau where it receives several affluents, it reaches a fault forming a crack in the interleaved layers of sandstone and basalt where the river runs.
See photo in original gallery.

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