Peter Bennett - Citizen of the Planet Photo

Show Navigation
  • Start Here
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Prints
  • About
  • Contact

Search Results

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

Loading ()...

  • End sign, Arvin, Kern County, California, USA
    US_CA_82_535.jpg
  • Fallow crop field on farm near Maricopa, route 166, Kern County, California, USA
    US_CA_82_307.jpg
  • Cracked and dry earth next to fallow crop field. Fresno County, San Joachin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_126.jpg
  • Cracked and dry earth next to fallow crop field. Fresno County, San Joachin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_129.jpg
  • Cracked and dry earth next to fallow crop field. Fresno County, San Joachin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_122.jpg
  • Fallow crop field outside of Fresno. Three years of severe drought has led to a dramtic increase in unplanted farmland. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_039.jpg
  • Farmers are leaving more fields fallow after three years of severe drought. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_013.jpg
  • Farmers are leaving more fields fallow after three years of severe drought. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_016.jpg
  • Irrigation ditch running next to vineyard and almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_140.jpg
  • Cracked earth in front of grape vineyard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_087.jpg
  • Groundwater well with cracked earth. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_078.jpg
  • Cracked and dry earth next to fallow crop field. Fresno County, San Joachin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_138.jpg
  • Almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_098.jpg
  • Groundwater well and standpipe for crop irrigation. Porterville, Tulare County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_81_168.jpg
  • Irrigation ditch running next to vineyard and almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_155.jpg
  • Irrigation ditch running next to vineyard and almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_143.jpg
  • Rod Cardella stand in fron of the California Aqueduct next to his farm. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_112.jpg
  • The California Aqueduct is a 444 mile canal, part of the California State Water Project, that carries water from Northern California to Southern California, San Joaquin Valley, Mendota, Fresno County California, USA
    US_CA_83_109.jpg
  • Tractor hoeing crop field for planting. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_052.jpg
  • Cracked and dry earth next to fallow crop field. Fresno County, San Joachin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_127.jpg
  • Almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_097.jpg
  • Fallow crop field outside of Fresno. Three years of severe drought has led to a dramtic increase in unplanted farmland. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_042.jpg
  • Farmers are leaving more fields fallow after three years of severe drought. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_011.jpg
  • Farmers are leaving more fields fallow after three years of severe drought. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_005.jpg
  • Farmers are leaving more fields fallow after three years of severe drought. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_001.jpg
  • Irrigation ditch running next to vineyard and almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_142.jpg
  • Worker shoveling a crop field. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_057.jpg
  • Tractor hoeing crop field for planting. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_053.jpg
  • Political sign for Families Protecting the Valley activist group. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_150.jpg
  • Farmers are leaving more fields fallow after three years of severe drought. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_012.jpg
  • Farmers are leaving more fields fallow after three years of severe drought. Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_002.jpg
  • Irrigation ditch running next to vineyard and almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_159.jpg
  • Irrigation ditch running next to vineyard and almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_154.jpg
  • Irrigation ditch running next to vineyard and almond orchard. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_144.jpg
  • Rod Cardella stand in fron of the California Aqueduct next to his farm. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_114.jpg
  • No oilfield traffic sign next to groundwater well with oil well pumpjack and cotton field in background Kern County, located over the Monterey Shale, has seen a dramatic increase in oil drilling and hydraulic fracking in recent years. San Joachin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_82_172.jpg
  • Fallow crop fields with dusty road. Rod Cardella runs Cardella Winery, a family business since 1969, which grows almonds, broccoli and other crops as well as grapes. With the high price of water in recent years, Rod has turned to technology and drip irrigation to lower water usage and like many other farmers is planting high value crops such as almonds. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_132.jpg
  • Fallow crop field outside of Fresno. Three years of severe drought has led to a dramtic increase in unplanted farmland. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_044.jpg
  • Groundwater well and standpipe for crop irrigation. Porterville, Tulare County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_81_165.jpg
  • Cracked and dry earth next to fallow crop field. Fresno County, San Joachin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_118.jpg
  • Worker shoveling a crop field. Fresno County, San Joaquin Valley, California, USA
    US_CA_83_054.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2654.jpg
  • A Snowy Egret walks amongst garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2649.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2656.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2612.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2609.jpg
  • A Snowy Egret walks amongst garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2642.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2620.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2610.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2617.jpg
  • Department of Public Works workers clean up garbage that accumulates in Trash Net boom at the mouth of the Ballona Creek after first rainfall of the year. Urban runoff from heavy rains carries an assortment of styrofoam cups, plastic bottles and bags and other trash that has built up on streets and catch basins since the last rains into the Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. While the boom catches some of this trash, smaller particles and many other pollutants still empty into the Santa Monica Bay and Pacific Ocean. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US_CA_45_2611.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_256.jpg
  • Rain water empties from Storm Pipes into Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. Urban runoff carries an assortment of trash and debris from catch basins where a network of pipes and open channels create a pathway to the Ocean at Santa Monica Bay. Ballona Creek is designed to discharge to Santa Monica Bay approximately 71,400 cubic feet per second from a 50-year frequency storm event. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    CA16832.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_249.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_259.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_256.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_251.jpg
  • Dominguez Channel, a 15.7 mile stream that drains the Dominguez Watershed, going from its headwaters in Hawthorne and it emptying into the East Basin of the Port of Los Angeles. Carson, California, USA
    US_CA_50_232.jpg
  • Storm drain emptying into Ballona Creek. Once a meandering creek, Ballona Creek is now a concreted nine-mile flood channel that drains the Los Angeles Basin and watershed down into the Pacific Ocean, Culver City, California, USA
    US_CA_45_3711.jpg
  • Rain water empties from Storm Pipes into Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. Urban runoff carries an assortment of trash and debris from catch basins where a network of pipes and open channels create a pathway to the Ocean at Santa Monica Bay. Ballona Creek is designed to discharge to Santa Monica Bay approximately 71,400 cubic feet per second from a 50-year frequency storm event. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    CA16848.jpg
  • No Dumping in ocean sign along Dominguez Channel, a 15.7 mile stream that drains the Dominguez Watershed, going from its headwaters in Hawthorne and it emptying into the East Basin of the Port of Los Angeles. Carson, California, USA
    US_CA_50_236.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_253.jpg
  • Rain water empties from Storm Pipes into Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. Urban runoff carries an assortment of trash and debris from catch basins where a network of pipes and open channels create a pathway to the Ocean at Santa Monica Bay. Ballona Creek is designed to discharge to Santa Monica Bay approximately 71,400 cubic feet per second from a 50-year frequency storm event. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    CA16847.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_263.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_249.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_259.jpg
  • A berm was built and sandbags placed to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_273.jpg
  • Dominguez Channel, a 15.7 mile stream that drains the Dominguez Watershed, going from its headwaters in Hawthorne and it emptying into the East Basin of the Port of Los Angeles. Carson, California, USA
    US_CA_50_233.jpg
  • A berm was built and sandbags placed to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_273.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_264.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_251.jpg
  • A double rainbow over storm water emptying from Storm Pipes into Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. Urban runoff carries an assortment of trash and debris from catch basins where a network of pipes and open channels create a pathway to the Ocean at Santa Monica Bay. Ballona Creek is designed to discharge to Santa Monica Bay approximately 71,400 cubic feet per second from a 50-year frequency storm event. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    CA17607.jpg
  • No Dumping in ocean sign along Dominguez Channel, a 15.7 mile stream that drains the Dominguez Watershed, going from its headwaters in Hawthorne and it emptying into the East Basin of the Port of Los Angeles. Carson, California, USA
    US_CA_50_238.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_248.jpg
  • A cleanup crew cleans up oil and tar blobs, and shores up a berm that was built to prevent oil from spreading into the Santa Ana River which normally empties into the ocean. An estimated 127,000 gallons of crude oil leaked from an oil derrick pipeline in the Catalina Channel. The oil spread to nearby Huntington Beach beaches and wetlands, and quickly prompted cleanup crews to the scene. Orange County, California, USA
    US_CA_32_264.jpg
  • A double rainbow over storm water emptying from Storm Pipes into Ballona Creek, a nine-mile waterway that drains the Los Angeles basin. Urban runoff carries an assortment of trash and debris from catch basins where a network of pipes and open channels create a pathway to the Ocean at Santa Monica Bay. Ballona Creek is designed to discharge to Santa Monica Bay approximately 71,400 cubic feet per second from a 50-year frequency storm event. Culver City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    CA17606.jpg