View allAll Photos Tagged Stranded
ISO 400, f8 @ 25mm, 01:30, 30sec.
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A rather sad story. This Pelican broke its wing here at Somavundhla Pan. All day long it perches here and eats fish from the pan. At night he climbs into a brick built hide to avoid te attentions of the Hyena. At sunrise after the Hyena have gone to bed, he goes back to his perch. What a life! But just shows all animals/birds inbuilt propensity to survive.
A sail boat caught in the mangroves on the edge of the creek . I hope we are not lining up for another death in the shallows here .
Cabbage Tree Creek
Shorncliffe
Brisbane
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This is an old shot I already posted on Flickr in March 2011. I gave it a new life by re-processing it and adding the strike of lightning using Skylum Luminar 4 AI Augmented Sky.
The whole scene is real (except the lightning of course) and was shot in Sharjah, U.A.E.
The Pisces Star Shipwreck during a mid tide at Cape Banks.
When you have plain skies to work with, I often try to shoot images for a minimalist look - long exposures help that !
Beach hut -waiting for the Summer (like most of us)- that has been covered by sand. Seen at Tilsvilde, Northern Zealand, Denmark
We were just leaving the Muscatatuck Wildlife Refuge when we came upon this tortoise attempting to cross the road! We had to get out to guide it to safety, and of course have a photo shoot with it!
(It was dead, or else I would of course have helped it to get back into the water.)
Ranheim in Trondheim, Norway.
One of the joys of photographing along the coast is that everything is in a constant state of flux- no two visits to the same location are ever the same. And this is particularly true when shooting things like shipwrecks where the tides and weather combine to paint new layers of decay with each passing season. But although this provides a fantastic opportunity to document what is in effect a new life cycle –or maybe I should call it a death cycle- there is always a nagging fear that one day you’ll turn up to find a boat shaped hole where your favorite wreck used to sit; either because the sea has finally reclaimed it’s prize, which of course is perfectly acceptable, or because someone with a clipboard has decided that it poses a risk to the public and warrants removal. These people are not usually photographers.
And so, when I come across something like this I tend to go a little overboard with my shooting just in case it’s the last chance I get. Which explains why I have several hundred shots all showing the same thing, with some minor variations in angle. But that’s ok, I guess- at least I feel I have done my part in documenting a tiny piece of nautical history. In fact, my only disappointment is that whoever left this boat here clearly didn’t check PhotoPills first for the best orientation before abandoning it. As a tip for the future- if your ship is about to be wrecked on the shoreline, perhaps you could just turn it slightly to make the most of the sunrise in that location. A generation of photographers will then surely love you forever.
Of course, all of this elaborate blurb is really just a thinly veiled excuse to post yet another archive shot as I haven’t been able to get out recently. But now the clever scientists seem to have come up with a possible covid vaccine, maybe life will slowly begin to return to normal ………
Thank you as always for your wonderful support.
In memory of my mentor, who taught me so much about medicine and life. 1939-2020. RS.
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Mid morning at Lonely Bay beach, in the Coromandel region on the north island of New Zealand.
Nikon D800 & Nikkor 16-35mm, HiTech 6 stop filter. PP in PS CC using Nik Software and luminosity masks.
Sintiklia - Hair Olivia - @ Trés Chic
~LGL~ One More Time . (Mauve) shorts & top @ Trés Chic
Blog:
bewitcheddifference.blogspot.nl/2017/05/stranded.html?zx=...
Love Be x
I found this on the beach at Bamburgh when the weather was starting to become 'interesting'. This is in Northumberland on the north east coast of England.
A bit more time needed taking long exposure shots is required i think. 60sec exp, f11, B&W ND110 filter.
Thanks everyone for your kind comments.
Nov. 4, 2021 — Namely Sun & Sea – an opera performance created by three female artists from Lithuania: Lina Lapelyté, Vaiva Grainyte and Rugilè .awarded the Golden Lion as the best entry at the Venice Biennale 2019.