Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 975 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints A lone sile flooded out of commission by the American Falls Dam is a concrete gravity-type dam located near the town of American Falls, Idaho, on river mile 714.7 of the Snake River. The dam and reservoir are a part of the Minidoka Project on the Snake River Plain and are used primarily for flood control, irrigation, and recreation. When the original dam was built by the Bureau of Reclamation, the residents of American Falls were forced to relocate three-quarters of their town to make room for the reservoir. A second dam was completed in 1978 and the original structure was demolished. Although the dam itself is located in Power County, its reservoir also stretches northeastward into both Bingham County and Bannock County.
    SnakeAmericanFallsDamSilo1680.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Sunset near American Falls Idaho
    SnakeCSunsetAmericanFalls270.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints Massacre Rocks State Park on the Snake River near American Falls Idaho. Oregon Trail emigrants referred to the Massacre Rocks area as "Gate of Death" and "Devil's Gate", but modern day travelers use terms like beautiful, serene, and restful to describe the park. The park is rich in Oregon Trail, geological, and natural histories.
    SnakeMassacreRocksSt.Park3078.jpg
  • Sprinkler pivot irrigating the rolling farmland of Eastern Idaho near Tetonia. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SprinklerPivot2057.jpg
  • Editions of 17<br />
Patriotic American Flag cattle guard on country road in Eastern Idaho with a few autumn colors still hanging on and a pick-up truck in the distance travel toward cattle guard
    American Prairie.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9251.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek283.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9286.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9256.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9314-2.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9247.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSprinklers9273-2.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9298.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9285-2.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Sprinklers spraying water over alfalfa hay fields near Picabo Idaho in the American West against a dark hillside
    WaterIrrigationSilverCreek9288.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    ShoshoneFalls6946.jpg
  • Rail Road Station in Shoshone Idaho has a long and colorful history of the earliest days of the railroad crossing the American West. The Depot in Shoshone was built in 1928 at the junction of the Main Line and the Ketchum Branch of the Oregon Short Line Railway. The town dates from the building of the railroad. The first train arrived in Shoshone in 1883. From about 1937 until 1965 passengers traveling by train en route to Sun Valley arrived and departed from this depot. The trains to Shoshone also carried the first pioneers into the present-day Magic Valley. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    ShoshoneRRStation 3-2018-0143.jpg
  • Brilliant yellow ground cover finds fertile purchase on the dry river bed of a tributary running into Magic Reservoir on a drought year in the American West.  Licensing and Limited Edition Prints.
    CamasTributaryMagic--0218.jpg
  • Island Lake Dam Reservoir in Eastern Idaho in the American West near Yellowstone National Park. Brilliant sunset on a summer evening.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    IslandParkPointSunset7945.jpg
  • Edition of 35 All Sizes Included<br />
Boulder foothill grove of pumpkin colored Aspen Trees in a wide expanse of 1:2 ratio near Sun Valley Idaho in the American West
    Boulder Aspens .jpg
  • Open Edition Numbered Prints<br />
Teton Mountains from Schwabacher Landing on a spring morning near Jackson, Wyoming in Teton National Park in the American West.
    TetonsMtnsSchwabacherLanding-7707.jpg
  • New Boat Dock on Island Lake Dam Reservoir in Eastern Idaho in the American West near Yellowstone National Park. Brilliant sunset on a summer evening.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    IslandParkBoatRampSunset-5977.jpg
  • Editions of 17<br />
New Boat Dock on Island Lake Dam Reservoir in Eastern Idaho in the American West near Yellowstone National Park with clouds and bright red dock edging and a light rain falling
    SnakeIsParkDam5963.jpg
  • Snake River, Hells Canyon, Brownlee Reservoir, Idaho, Oregon, Farewell Bend, water, mountains, clouds, gold, blue, boat, boating, fishing, hunting, recreation, destination, state border, American West, history, pioneers,
    SnakeDBrownlee-67.jpg
  • American West, Idaho, adventure, boy, concept, destination, lake, summer, travel, water
    DocksPriestLakeBoy----1348.jpg
  • Edition of 75 All sizes included in Single Edition<br />
boat dock on Island Lake Dam Reservoir in Eastern Idaho in the American West near Yellowstone National Park with clouds and bright red dock edging and a light rain falling
    No Tying Up .tif
  • Open Edition Numbered Prints  Winter Sunset of the Teton Mountain Range with beautiful clouds catch last of Golden Light in the American West near Jackson Hole Wyoming
    TetonMountainRangeSunset3890.jpg
  • Classic American West windmill pumps water up from subterranean water table on the Idaho Desert with clouds and blue sky
    CamasWindmill8956.jpg
  • Open Edition Numbered Prints<br />
Camas Prairie winter sunset with fence line and snow covered prairie in the Southwest corner of Idaho in the American West,
    CamasFrozenPrairie600.jpg
  • Brilliant yellow ground cover finds fertile purchase on the dry river bed of a tributary running into Magic Reservoir on a drought year in the American West.  Licensing and Limited Edition Prints.
    CamasSpring2022Crop--0081.jpg
  • Boulder foothill grove of pumpkin colored Aspen Trees just below the upper forest of evergreens near Sun Valley Idaho in the American West. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    BoulderMtnFall.jpg
  • Boulder foothill grove of pumpkin colored Aspen Trees in a wide expanse of 1:2 ratio near Sun Valley Idaho in the American West. Edition of 35 All Sizes Included
    Boulder Aspens 50mb.jpg
  • Henrys Lake view from Sawtell Peak in Eastern Idaho allows for a distant view into Montana from Idaho with West Yellowstone area on distant right horizon. Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakeHenrysLakePano-9900.jpg
  • Winter wonderland of snow encrusted lodgepole pine trees on top of Two Tops Mountain in Eastern Idaho very close to West Yellowstone on the groomed snow mobile trail that access area from Idaho and Wyoming.  Licensing and Prints available.
    SnowEncrustedLodgePolePines.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    Shoshone Falls Rainbow.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    Shoshone Falls 3064.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    SnakeShoshoneFalls3001.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    SnakeShoshoneFalls2983-Edit.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints <br />
Snake River Oxbow near Grandview and south of Boise on a hazy summer evening just west of CJ Strike Reservoir in southern Idaho
    SnakeGrandviewAerialWest92932.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls in snow is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeCShoshoneFallsWinter2304.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints <br />
Snake River Oxbow near Grandview and south of Boise on a hazy summer evening just west of CJ Strike Reservoir in southern Idaho
    SnakeRiverOxbowsGrandview2961.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeShoshoneFalls3064.jpg
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    Shoshone Falls Rainbow.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints<br />
Aerial view of the interconnected Agricultural Land and the Snake River near Grandview in Southern Idaho in springtime looking west.
    SnakeRiverAerial2953.jpg
  • Early Morning Panoramic Springtime View to the East from West End of Alturas Lake in the Sawtooth Mountains in Central Idaho
    AlturasLakeLogPano8Bit2-Edit.tif
  • Limited Editions of 8<br />
Early Morning Panoramic Springtime View to the East from West End of Alturas Lake in the Sawtooth Mountains in Central Idaho
    AlturasLakeLogPano8Bit2-Edit.tif
  • Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    SnakeShoshoneFalls3064.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeShoshoneFalls2989.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls in sub-zero temperatures is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeRiverShoshoneFalls04951.jpg
  • Railroad tracks near Shoshone Idaho with sun burst looking west. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    RailRoadShoshoneTracksStation0109.jpg
  • Spring Runoff Rainbow. Shoshone Falls is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    ShoshoneFallsSpringRunoff-2665.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints<br />
Shoshone Falls in sub-zero temperatures is a waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions.
    SnakeShoshoneFallsSpringRunoff.jpg
  • Open Edition Prints <br />
Snake River Oxbow near Grandview and south of Boise on a hazy summer evening just west of CJ Strike Reservoir in southern Idaho
    SnakeRiverSouthOfBoise2909.jpg
  • Henrys Lake view from Sawtell Peak in Eastern Idaho allows for a distant view into Montana from Idaho with West Yellowstone area on distant right horizon. Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    HenrysLakeFromSawtellPeak9848.jpg
  • Dawn Light allows for a slow exposure onShoshone Falls. A waterfall on the Snake River located approximately five miles east of Twin Falls, Idaho. Sometimes called the "Niagara of the West," Shoshone Falls is 212 feet (64.7 m) high—45 feet (14 m) higher than Niagara Falls—and flows over a rim 1,000 feet (305 m) wide. Shoshone Falls has existed at least since the end of the last ice age, when the Bonneville Flood carved much of the Snake River canyon and surrounding valleys. It is a total barrier to the upstream movement of fish. The falls were the upper limit of sturgeon, and spawning runs of salmon and steelhead could not pass the falls. Yellowstone cutthroat trout lived above the falls in the same ecological niche as Rainbow Trout below it. Due to this marked difference, the World Wide Fund for Nature used   Shoshone Falls as the boundary between the Upper Snake and the Columbia Unglaciated freshwater ecoregions. Licensing - Open Edition Prints
    ShoshoneFallsDawn--2384.jpg
  • Henrys Lake view from Sawtell Peak in Eastern Idaho allows for a distant view into Montana from Idaho with West Yellowstone area on distant right horizon. Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    HenrysForkLakeFromSawtellPeak9918.jpg
  • Licensing - Open Edition Prints  Bruneau Sand Dunes near the Snake River in south west Idaho. Bruneau Dunes State Park is home to the tallest freestanding sand dunes in North America, with the highest reaching 470 feet.
    BruneauSandDunes-Hor67.jpg
  • Limited Edition of 17<br />
Winter scene of Little Redfish Lake's Outlet flowing toward Salmon River in Central Idaho at sunrise with alpenglow.
    LittleRedfishOutlet-3.jpg
  • Lifting winter storm near Galena Lodge on Cherry Creek with snow sculpted hills and snow covered forest. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CherryCreek8193.jpg
  • Fall colors and a brilliant day create a wetlands oasis in Trail Creek Canyon near Sun Valley Idaho. Limited Editions of 8
    BeaverPonds8b45H.jpg
  • Golden wheat fields approach harvest time as sprinklers spray irrigation water in last light
    Wheatfield & Sprinklers.jpg
  • Editions of 25 includes all sizes. Ripened grain dances in the Eastern Idaho wind near Howe<br />
Vertical
    Wheat1Rotated-Edit.tif
  • Sprinkler pivot irrigating the rolling farmland of Eastern Idaho near Tetonia. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    WaterIrrigationAgriculture-1979.jpg
  • The Lost River reemerges from the Idaho Desert after a hundred mile plus subterranean journey to the Snake River Canyon near Hagerman, Idaho at Thousand Springs
    Snake1000Springs2189.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Drummond Idaho Grain Elevator with the Teton Mountain Range in Background from the Idaho Side in early summer
    Grain Elevator and Tetons5006.jpg
  • A spring storm breaks above a rural farm yard and green field on the Camas Prairie in Southwest Idaho. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CamasFarmYard6445.jpg
  • Farming furrows design from tilling the soil in springtime on the North Idaho Palouse agricultural area.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    Palouse Harvest Patterns 69.jpg
  • Spring flooding on the Camas Prairie in Southwest Idaho causes a temporary lake on agriculture fields with the Smokey Mountains snow capped in the background. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CamasPrairieSoldierMtnSpring1330.jpg
  • Storm clouds and Montana agriculture land in early dormant springtime
    MontanaAgLandStorm-8-0267.jpg
  • Sprinkler pivot irrigating the rolling farmland of Eastern Idaho near Tetonia. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SprinklerPivot2019.jpg
  • Collapsing barn holds on against the harsh elements of weather and time on the Camas Prairie in Southwest Idaho.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CamasSprinklerPivotBarnCrop8792.jpg
  • Evening light warms up the Centennial Marsh near Hill City on the Camas Prairie in SW Idaho.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CamasWetlandsFence-3235.jpg
  • Editions of 25 includes all sizes. Ripened grain dances in the Eastern Idaho wind near Howe<br />
Vertical
    Wheat #2 Rotated -Edit.tif
  • Waterfall tumbles down mountain side on the Going to the Sun Highway in Glacier National Park in Montana
    WaterfallGlacier-8-20546.jpg
  • Old Wooden Water Tower near Fenn in Idaho Northern Panhandle stands as a sentinel against the evening sky. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    WoodenWaterTowerFenn45Crop.jpg
  • Agriculture mecca of the Washington State Palouse with farm yard and tractor plowing rolling hills in Springtime.  Open Edition Prints and Editorial Licensing.
    SnakeEPalouseFarm2543.jpg
  • The full moonrise on the South Fork of the Snake River with Fall Creek Waterfall in foreground during the autumn season.  Limited Editions of 17.
    SouthForkMoonrise2129AC-3040.jpg
  • The Lost River reemerges in sub-zero temperatures from the Idaho Desert after a hundred mile plus subterranean journey to the Snake River Canyon near Hagerman, Idaho at Thousand Springs
    1000 Springs Winter.jpg
  • Mesa Falls on the Henrys Fork of the Snake River in Eastern Idaho near Island Park in spring runoff. Limited Editions of 17 includes all sizes.
    UpperMesaFalls67.jpg
  • Sunset and irrigation sprinklers light up the evening sky near Bellevue Idaho.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SunsetBellevue-4590.jpg
  • Editions of 25 includes all sizes. Ripened grain dances in the Eastern Idaho wind near Howe.<br />
Horizontal
    Wheatfield Howe Horizontal69.tif
  • Spring run off swells the Snake River near Twin Falls Idaho as it cascades over Shoshone Falls.
    ShoshoneFalls.jpg
  • The Lost River reemerges from the Idaho Desert after a hundred mile plus subterranean journey to the Snake River Canyon near Hagerman, Idaho at Thousand Springs
    Snake1000Springs92168.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
Wood River just below Phantom HIll with fall colors and forest hillside along the willow edged stream in Central Idaho
    WoodRiverAutumnSeries-1664.jpg
  • Edition of 65 includes all sizes<br />
Lightening Storm rolls through the lava fields of south central Idaho near Carey, Idaho with the Little Wood Reservoir in foreground
    LittleWoodStormAutumnColorF2.jp
  • Agricultural patterns of canola and wheat create their own mosaic onthe Palouse rolling hills of North Idaho in early summer. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    CanolaWheatNorthIdahoAg-1400.jpg
  • Open Edition<br />
The Sheep Bridge near Stanton Crossing on the Wood River just before it enters Magic Reservoir in South Central Idaho on a spring evening and dramatic clouds
    SheepBridge2869.jpg
  • Open Edition <br />
Pacific Ocean from the Big Sur coastline of California's Highway 1
    Infinite Pacific 0227.jpg
  • Borah Peak at 12662 feet (3859 m)is also known as Mount Borah or Beauty Peak, is the highest mountain in the U.S. state of Idaho and one of the most prominent peaks in the contiguous United States. It is located in the central section of the Lost River Range, within the Challis National Forest in eastern Custer County. Earthquake Fault Line visible along bottom running horizontally.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    MtBorahEarthquakeFaultLine-271.jpg
  • Morning Winter scenic at Silver Creeks Nature Conservancy near Picabo in south central Idaho after a light snow storm blankets the landscape in a soft layer of white. Open Edition Prints and Licensing
    SilverCreekWinter11-2010-32.tif
  • North America's first chair lift is a symbol of Sun Valley Idahos heritage of a destination ski resort that welcomes more visitors in the summer months. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    RuudChairliftSummer.jpg
  • Longest Main Street in America.  City of Island Park, Idaho claims longest main street.  Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    SnakeIsParkSign8166.jpg
  • Craters of the Moon National Monument in South Central Idaho is lava wonderland of cinder cones, lava tubs and many geological features
    CratersOfTheMoon-0465.jpg
  • Fall colors and a brilliant day create a wetlands oasis in Trail Creek Canyon near Sun Valley Idaho.  Limited Editions of 75 includes all sizes.
    BeaverPonds8b45V.jpg
  • Birds eye view of springtime in Ketchum Idaho near Sun Valley in Central Idaho
    KetchumDowntownPano0869.jpg
  • Palisades Lake is form by the South Fork of the Snake River near Alpine Junction Wyoming with the lake slowly filling up in springtime leaving vast expanses of lake bed shore. Licensing and Open Edition Prints
    SnakePalisadesLakeShore8947.jpg
  • Winter rain storm creates interesting rivulet patterns on the foothills of the Boulder Mountains just north of Sun Valley Resort in Central Idaho.  Open Editions and Licensing.
    SnowRainPatternRivuletsTrees1549.jpg
  • Spring run off swells the Snake River near Twin Falls Idaho as it cascades over Shoshone Falls. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    ShoshoneFalls8b.jpg
  • Roadside cross erected in memory of car crash victims in the Idaho desert.
    CrossRoadside8b-2859.jpg
  • Stop sign on the Idaho Prairie get vandalized with shot gun blasts. Licensing and Open Edition Prints.
    StopSign8b-2776.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Kirk Anderson Photography

  • About
  • Portfolio
  • Contact
  • Buy Book