I have done it with a lightweight aluminum one. Obviously you will want to position it for the best composition but having said that try and find a place where the water is flowing a little slower, like the inside of a bend. I, went to some effort, wthout the camera attached to get the tripod legs solidly between some heavy rocks. In the end I ended up holdig my own weight down onto the teipod I think.




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I keep supplies in myRide now. The problem I had with this shot was I was at a choke point. The trees above kept me from being able to back out more and the shots from the bank looked cheesy. I had one rock directly in front of me but it seemed to create more havoc than help. Do they make fancy splitters (shaped like an airplane wing kinda) that go over the tripod legs that might help work the water around? I've never heard of aerodynamic legs before. Just thinking out loud.
