Thank you for your patience while we retrieve your images.
Taken 30-Aug-15
Visitors 8


5 of 51 photos
Thumbnails
Info
Photo Info

Dimensions5760 x 3840
Original file size16.3 MB
Image typeJPEG
Color spaceAdobe RGB (1998)
Date taken30-Aug-15 15:30
Date modified28-Aug-18 12:18
Shooting Conditions

Camera makeCanon
Camera modelCanon EOS 5D Mark III
Focal length16 mm
Max lens aperturef/2.8
Exposure3.2s at f/22
FlashNot fired, compulsory mode
Exposure bias0 EV
Exposure modeManual
Exposure prog.Manual
ISO speedISO 100
Metering modePattern
Kicking Horse River

Kicking Horse River

The Kicking Horse River is in the Canadian Rockies of southeastern British Columbia, Canada.[2] The river was named in 1858, when James Hector, a member of the Palliser Expedition, reported being kicked by his packhorse while exploring the river. Hector named the river and the associated pass as a result of the incident. The Kicking Horse Pass, which connects through the Rockies to the valley of the Bow River, was the route through the mountains subsequently taken by the Canadian Pacific Railway when it was constructed during the 1880s. The railway's Big Hill and associated Spiral Tunnels are in the Kicking Horse valley and were necessitated by the steep rate of descent of the river and its valley.