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(Castlerock beach, with the hills of Donegal in the distance.)

 

Somewhere out in the middle of that stretch of sea is the border which separates the Republic of Ireland from Northern Ireland.

 

Borders usually indicate division, demarcation and separation; a line which cannot easily be crossed.

 

The Bible says that our sins have created a kind of impassable border between ourselves and the God who created us:

 

But your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear.

(Isaiah 59:2)

 

This explains why so few people are totally content and happy with life. We were created in God's image, to have a relationship with Him, but our fallen, sinful nature makes such a relationship impossible.

 

It has been said that we are all born with a "God-shaped hole" - a hole that only God can fill.

 

Since we could not bridge that gulf, or fill that hole, God took action to make it possible...

 

In this was manifested the love of God toward us, because that God sent his only begotten Son into the world, that we might live through him. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.

(1 John 4:9-10)

This is a close-up photo of light reflecting on the contours of a wet, wave-washed beach rock.

Clearwater Beach, Florida

Track Marshall 55 crawler produced over 60 years ago by Fowlers of Gainsborough, Lincolnshire on The Stade, Hastings. It might look like junk but these ancient tractors are still used every day to launch and haul up the fishing boats. In the background - RX52 'Elsie Rose' registered as a netter/potter and RX142 'Valerie Ann', fibreglass hull, produced Sussex 2013, registered as a netter.

I love walking on the beach. It is such a treat for a desert dweller. I collected pretty rocks and shells, filling my pockets with the treasures and mementos. I loved all of the flat grey rocks. Farther up on the shoreline the rocks were deep and made a tinkling sound as you walk across them.

 

115 Pictures in 2015-#24 Feathers

My 115 in 2015 Pictures

  

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Icebergs washed up on the black sand of Diamond Beach in Iceland

North Myrtle Beach

In front of North Beach Plantation

 

Taken 9/14/17 with Sony A7s

I keep going back to this spot. The sand has loads of particles of sea coal in it and the stream running across the beach creates these amazing patterns. yet I find them very difficult to photograph as it's something that is really outside my comfort zone.

Rolleiflex Automat

Opton Zeiss Tessar T 75/3.5

Kodak TMAX 400 (expired 1999)

Kodak HC-110 1+47 7mts@20c

DsLr DiGiTiZeD

PS

To see the ocean in motion, is to live.

  

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LDR enhancement and Topaz filtration.

Beach Huts Findhorn, Scotland

Photo of Luskentyre beach - Haida litle stopper and a 0.6 ND hard grad to bring out detail in the sky. Took loads of these to try and get the water streaks down the beach.

Buttonwoods Cove beach

Empty beaches, dark clouds and some rain. The weather at the beach couldn't have been better!

Mochima, Sucre, Venezuela

Beach house, Indian Rocks Beach, Florida.

Okay i'll stop uploading now, my bad :P

Family Photoshooting at the Beach

There are 100 statues on the beach at Crosby Liverpool uk

Beach in Seychelles, La digue island

Fire Island National Seashore

A Beach in Sardinia. One single handheld exposure with a 10x ND filter fitted.

www.johanhannes.com

Newport Beach, California

North Bondi beach, in Sydney.

Photographed yesterday, Thursday 11th February, 2021.

A summer evening - at about 7.00pm (19.00 hrs)

It was a very hot summer's day in Sydney and obviously a lot of people headed off to Bondi after work.

 

My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV, with the Canon 16-35mm lens.

 

Processed in:

Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software

I found four flints with holes in them.

I intend to use them for dowsing experiments - pendulums.

Aldeburgh.

 

The Suffolk Psychogeophysics Summit 28th August to 3rd September 2011

www.psychogeophysics.org/wiki/doku.php?id=summit2011:thur...

www.psychogeophysics.org/wiki/doku.php?id=summit2011:desc...

I believe this to be a sea sponge. I managed to find this on a clean beach with no foot prints or marks ,It was a bright sunny day day with the brightest light at the top of the image towards the low sun so I have a nice little shadow behind the sponge.

VOLEVO RIPRENDERE LA VEDUTA DI QUESTO MERAVIGLIOSO PAESAGGIO,CON MIA GRANDE SORPRESA,HO VISTO LA FOTO AL PC,E MI SONO TROVATO DAVANTI ALL'IMMAGINE UN PICCIONE.GIURO NON ME NE ERO PROPRIO ACCORTO AL MOMENTO.BE' CI VUOLE ANCHE FORTUNA ALLE VOLTE....I WANTED TO TAKE THE VIEWS OF THIS WONDERFUL LANDSCAPE, MUCH TO MY SURPRISE, I SAW THE PHOTOS TO THE PC, AND I FOUND MYSELF IN FRONT OF THE PICTURE A PIGEON.I SWEAR I DON'T I JUST NOTICED AT THE TIME.WELL IT TAKES EVEN LUCK SOMETIMES.

The gently sloping beach at Worthing is sand and shingle, with most of the sandier parts being covered as the tide moves in. This means low tide is definitely the time to visit as there are also some rock pools uncovered. Popular activities on the beach include fishing, windsurfing and swimming, although there is no lifeguard service. There is zoning for water sports.

 

Worthing is a vibrant seaside town with plenty of shops and no shortage of places to eat and drink. The Dome cinema by the seafront is one of the oldest working cinemas in the country, having been running since 1911. The Worthing Festival is held during the last two weeks of July each year. It includes a fairground along the town’s promenade.

 

Worthing Pier is found along the beach. It was originally built in 1862. Today, there is a café on the pier. The Pavilion Theatre sits at the end, and is a Grade II Listed Building.

 

Worthing Pier is a public pleasure pier designed by Sir Robert Rawlinson. It was opened on 12 April 1862 and remains open to the public . The pier originally was a simple promenade deck 960 ft (291m) long and 15 ft (4.6m) wide. In 1888 the pier was upgraded with the width increased to 30 ft (9.2m) and the pier head increased to 105 ft (32m) for a 650-seat pavilion to be built. It is a Grade II listed building structure.

 

The pier has been named Pier of the Year by the National Piers Society on two occasions, first in 2006 and again in 2019.

 

www.thebeachguide.co.uk/south-east-england/west-sussex/wo...

 

coastradar.com/places/united-kingdom/west-sussex/worthing...

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worthing_Pier

Nice beach that's not too crowded.

A drive and a walk over a lava field is part of the experience to get to this beach.= - Kona-Kohala coast of the Big Island, Hawaii.

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