#Ruby Falls
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Ruby Falls, the tallest known waterfall in a cave.
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Sept. 29, 2024
#Chattanooga#tennessee#ruby falls#waterfalls#waterfall#cave#travel#original photography#photographers on tumblr#lensblr#photography#landscape#nature#nature photography#lookout mountain#wanderingjana
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(Cave) Flower Power Friday
I've been taking lots of flower photos to share. But we toured two caves a few weeks ago that were gorgeous, and both had formations called cave flowers, so I'm going to share some cave highlights this week and save the flowers for next week.


The first photo are the cave flowers, second is a lake they stock with rainbow trout (the water is too cold for them to reproduce).


Some rock formations


The second cave has a waterfall. You walk in in darkness and then the lights gradually come up to illuminate the waterfall.




Thanks for tagging me @flowertrigger @jamilas-pen and @a-noble-dragon .
Tagging some flower loving friends if you'd like to share @mammameesh @ramonaflow @carolrain @jettestar @dytzyone .
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Ruby Falls, Tennessee, United States: Ruby Falls is a series of underground cascading waterfalls totaling 145 feet in Lookout Mountain, near Chattanooga, Tennessee, in the United States. Wikipedia
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Beautiful Ruby Falls in Tennessee! Located deep within Lookout Mountain, this breathtaking underground waterfall cascades 145 feet, making it one of the tallest and most captivating subterranean waterfalls in the United States. 💦😍

#nature#ruby falls#tenessee#united states#fresh air#artists on tumblr#color photography#nature photoshoot#naturecore#traveling#travel#adventure#hiking#heaven on earth#subterranean#waterfalls#waterway#water#lookout mountain
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On this day: October 21, 1969
Johnny Cash released the singles "Blistered" and "See Ruby Fall" for his upcoming 1970 album Hello, I'm Johnny Cash. The singles were released by Columbia Records on a 7" 45-RPM vinyl record, with "Blistered" on the A-Side and "See Ruby Fall" on the B-Side. "Blistered," written by Billy Ed Wheeler, peaked at #4 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart and #1 on the Canadian RPM Country Tracks chart. "See Ruby Fall" was co-written by Cash and Roy Orbison, and peaked at #4 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart as a double-A-side record.
The title "See Ruby Fall" is a play on the phrase "See Ruby Falls" that was (and still is) often painted on barn roofs in Tennessee and north Georgia to promote tourism at Ruby Falls in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

#johnny cash#country music#outlaw country#country#johnny cash history#blistered#see ruby fall#hello i'm johnny cash#ruby falls#Spotify
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📍Ruby Falls
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Ruby Falls, Chattanooga, Tennessee
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Ruby Falls Celebrating 96 Years
Ruby Falls, one of the most iconic attractions in Chattanooga, marked its 96th anniversary of discovery this past Monday. Located deep within Lookout Mountain, this breathtaking 145-foot underground waterfall was uncovered in 1928 by explorer Leo Lambert. Since opening to the public in 1929, just a year after its discovery, Ruby Falls has transformed from a hidden gem into a must-visit…
#Bledsoe County News#Chattanooga News#Dunlap News#Jasper News#Kimball News#Marion County News#New Hope#Pikeville#Ruby Falls#Sequatchie County News#Sequatchie Valley News#South Pittsburg News#Whitwell News
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Ruby Falls {January 16, 1946 - June 15, 1986}
Ruby Falls has been the most successful black woman country performer to date, with her mellifluous voice taking her to the Billboard country singles chart nine times between 1974 and 1979. Her biggest hits were “You’ve Got To Mend This Heartache,” which peaked at number 40 in 1977 and “I’m Getting’ Into Your Love,” which peaked at number 56 in 1979. Falls was also nominated as country music’s Most Promising Female Vocalist in 1975 by country industry trade media. She recorded on the 50 States Records label and also found success in her stage shows. In the late 1970’s, she was touring through the Atlas Artists Bureau with Grand Ole Opry star Justin Tubb. She also performed with such country greats as Faron Young, Jeanne Pruett, Del Reeves, Narvel Felts, and Dave & Sugar. She additionally got significant Nashville area and national promotion on such television programs as the Ralph Emery Show, Nashville Today, Good Ol’ Nashville Music and Music Hall America.
When Falls died in Nashville at the young age of 40 of a brain hemorrhage in June 1986, she was touted by the media along with Linda Martell for becoming one of the first black women to find significant success in country music. In a brief retrospective nine years after her death, Nashville’s major daily newspaper, The Tennessean, proclaimed, “Along with other successful black artists of the period, such as Charley Pride and Stoney Edwards, she helped illuminate the black community’s long history of artistic contributions to the country.” Tubb told the media after her death that “She was the one of the best friends I ever had. Ruby Falls made everybody feel good that she was around.”
Born as Bertha Frances Bearden (married: Dorsey) in January 1946, on a farm near Jackson, Tennessee, Falls spent her early years primarily picking cotton, tomatoes and strawberries. She dreaded her days in the field at the hand of a strict grandmother, who was her guardian. For refuge, she listened to the radio a lot at night, particularly to country music heard frequently on station KLAC out of Gallatin, Tennessee. The sounds she heard prompted her to dream of a singing career. She began that career singing in churches, in schools on talent shows and at local social events as a teenager.
After high school she moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, took voice, dance and charm lessons, and turned professional in early 1960’s by becoming lead singer with the group Harvey Scales and the Seven Sounds. The group travelled all over the country and performed country, pop, and rock in such places as Las Vegas and New York supper clubs. Then she joined a rock and jazz band whose club dates were typically closer to home. Then she decided to concentrate on the music she enjoyed most and moved to Nashville. There she was discovered by Johnny Howard, who signed her to 50 States in 1974.
She took the name Ruby Falls from one of Tennessee’s natural treasures- a cavern that is 1,100 feet below the surface of Lookout Mountain in Chattanooga, is the deepest cavern in the United States and boasts the highest underground waterfall open to the public. “It’s like a dream come true,” she says in a publicity brief, about her success as Ruby Falls. “I get to thinking about everything good that’s happened to me since I moved to Nashville and sometimes I get so excited I feel I sing in my sleep every night.” Of her move to Nashville to concentrate on both singing and writing country, she adds, “It made sense. There’s a lot of country girl left in me and I guess it shows in my music like it does in my talking…I love music and I love people, so my main goal is making music that people will love. I want to do my very best all the time so people will love me.”
After pounding the Nashville pavement and landing a recording contract, Falls found that having records out in the public and getting touring dates was not enough to bring her what she wanted. She wanted more. She wanted to catapult her career to the next level. A grand opportunity to just that came to her in 1976 when she won a slot to perform before thousands of country radio on-air personalities and executives from around the country. Gathered in Nashville for their annual industry convention known as the Country Radio Seminar, these are the people who somehow had to become attracted to Falls and be part of an overall effort to promote her and her music if she were to become a true star. But the opportunity didn’t open the doors she had expected, and by the time of her death she was disgruntled at not having done better in her career and had taken a traditional job at a computer firm.
Falls did not blame people’s reaction to her race for her not reaching the heights she had dreamed of, and she had earlier vowed to keep trying to reach her career goals in every way she could think of. “Everybody’s been real nice to me,” she said in a September 1977 Essence magazine article. “I’ve never had negative incidents on the road. If I did, I wouldn’t pay them any mind…I want to be a star. No one ever told me that it was gonna be easy. I’m gonna hang on in there for as long as it takes to make it.”
articles: Hillbilly Music Jet Billboard The Black Women Of Country Music That Nashville Sound
Youtube: Sweet Country Music {1975} He Loves Me All To Pieces {1975} Let's Spend Summer In The Country {1975} Show Me Where {1976} Somewhere There’s A Rainbow Over Texas {1976} Beware Of The Woman (Before She Gets To Your Man) {1976} You’ve Got To Mend This Heartache {1977} Do The Buck Dance {1977} Three Nights A Week {1978} If That’s Not Loving You (You Can’t Say I Didn’t Try) {1978} I’m Gettin’ Into Your Love {1979}
Stella Parton Remembers Singer Ruby Falls {2022}
Country Music Time #767: interview {1982}
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@WDEFNews12 @EPB_Chattanooga view of holiday lights going up at @RubyFalls on the north flank of #LookoutMountain #ChattanoogaTN.
#chattanooga weather#chief meteorologist austen onek#wdef-tv#wdef#tennessee river valley#wdef.com/weather#wdef news 12#[email protected]#wdef chattanooga#wdef.com#EPB Chattanooga#EPB Fiber Optics Weather Cam Network#Chattanooga Webcams#weather webcams#https://www.wdef.com/weather-cam-network/#Ruby Falls#Lookout Mountain
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A Trip to Rock City Garden
On our anniversary trip we did ALL the touristy stuff and it was great. The trip to Tennessee centered around seeing Ruby Falls and Rock City. Our trip to Rock City to see the gardens was inspired by seeing all of those signs along highways over the years. Between the Ruby Falls signs and the See Rock City signs we figured we needed to check this off the bucket list. . The day we went to Rock…
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obsessed with stories that start out silly and stupid and then turn out to be deep and heartbreaking in their beauty. like okay, make me cry at midnight while i reflect on the true meaning of friendship i guess
#if you couldn't tell i just watched romantic killer#absolutely obsessed with the friendships#but seriously like gravity falls?#york by laura ruby too#they're all so immaculate#romantic killer#gravity falls#york
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Saw it for the first time almost a couple of years ago


Ruby Falls!
Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA

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martha jones 🤝 donna noble 🤝 ruby sunday
racing to prevent an apocalypse, without the doctor, in an alternate timeline that ultimately never comes to be due to their efforts, their efforts that no one will ever know of as the wheel of time keeps on turning with barely a feather ruffled
#on the bright side at least ruby didn’t remember all the shit she went through#edit: including donna in this too as someone in the notes rightfully pointed out that she falls into this category too#god rtd really loves making his companions suffer in this specific way#doctor who#dw#dw spoilers#doctor who spoilers#dw series 14#ruby sunday#martha jones#dw season 3#donna noble#dw season 4
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One thing I really like about RWBY as a show is that the heroes do not have a strict no kill rule. Like, obviously, they very much prefer not hurting or killing anyone at all, but if it comes to that, they do not hesitate.
-Tyrian is trying to capture Ruby and kill her uncle and her friends? The moment he gets slightly distracted, Ruby takes the chance and cuts his tail off without a second thought.
-Cinder is affected by Ruby's silver eyes in the Battle of Haven? Jaune doesn't hesitate and the moment she lets her guard down he tries to stab her in the face; had he gone for a slash instead, Cinder would be dead.
-Tock has blinded Maria and is about to kill her? There you go, Maria will decapitate her. Bye, Tock.
-Adam keeps trying to kill Blake and Yang? Oh, he gets stabbed by both of them. No more Adam.
-Ironwood tries to shoot Winter again with that weird gun even though she's a Maiden now? Winter just sends the blast back at him and leaves. Doesn't even check if he's still alive.
-Neo just pushed Yang to the void and they think she's gone? Blake WILL try to cut Neo's head off. And while they're fighting Ruby doesn't hesitate to push Neo off the bridges even if she thought that would kill her.
Which are all like, normal. Those other people are actively trying to kill them or their loved ones as well. Which is why I used to be really confused when I kept seeing some people complaining mostly about the Ruby with Tyrian and the Blake and Yang vs Adam things. Saying they are supposed to be the good guys and they should set an example to viewers instead of maiming or killing their foes.
What example do you want them to set? That letting others kill you and your loved ones is okay? Because that's what was gonna happen; Tyrian had just poisoned Qrow, actually he's lucky Ruby only went for the tail. Adam was not going to stop and he going to take Blake's sword to continue to try murdering her and Yang, who had no Auras either and were as vulnerable as he was. They either did it first or they could die, and they did. It's self-defense. Tyrian and Adam were trying to kill them and they were the ones who started the fights. You fuck around, you're gonna find out.
#rwby#yang xiao long#blake belladonna#ruby rose#winter schnee#jaune arc#adam taurus#tyrian callows#cinder fall#james ironwood#neopolitan#qrow branwen
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