View allAll Photos Tagged crashingwave
Over forty degrees in Southern Europe fifteen degrees and wet and windy on The Solent UK yesterday😄
At the bottom of Kynance cove, Cornwall, UK
Kynance Cove is a stunning spot located on the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall. This beautiful cove with dramatic rock stacks has become a popular destination for visitors. Adding to its breathtaking beauty are the turquoise waters, white sand and rugged cliff faces. The cove is surrounded by some of the most stunning landscapes in the UK, making it an ideal location for hiking and exploring.
I shot this image at Shore Acres along the Oregon Coast on a very active ocean day. Not King Tides per se, but very heavy surf that exploded onto the rocks and swept the shore. The rock seen here stands more than twenty-feet tall. This wave rumbled as it crashed into the rocks.
A great weekend to all my Flickr friends. And thank you for stopping by. I always appreciate your visits and comments.
Some angry waves and mist on this morning made for a beautiful, almost dreamy seascape as the sun did its best to shine over Miami, rising behind a solid, endless wall of clouds.
( Explored 10/18/2016 # 113 )
www.flickr.com/photos/davidkhaykin/29780742823/in/explore...
This shot was taken off the east coast of Tasmania outside a town called Bicheno. The blue colours were as you see them here. The crashing of the ocean on the small rocky outcrop is constant. Almost hypnotising when watching, as the trees and shore rocks could attest to if they could talk in the human language.
The rocks are shaped by powerful Southern Ocean waves acting on the hard volcanic rocks (dolerite or granite) creating these iconic rugged seascapes, and isolated rock features. Myself, I found the crashing every few secs/mins fascinating and stayed for quite a while until deciding to see a blowhole up the way.
Hope you enjoy and all the best!
Camera: Samsung S23 Ultra 5g.
Sea waves breaking over the rocks at the coast
Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides
Thank you for visiting. Your comments are very much appreciated.
Kynance Cove is a stunning spot located on the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall. This beautiful cove with dramatic rock stacks has become a popular destination for visitors. Adding to its breathtaking beauty are the turquoise waters, white sand and rugged cliff faces. The cove is surrounded by some of the most stunning landscapes in the UK, making it an ideal location for hiking and exploring.
This black-and-white photograph captures the raw power of Storm Darragh as towering waves crash against Portreath's harbour wall. The forceful spray dominates the scene, contrasting dramatically with the dark, churning sea and stormy sky.
Waves crash with raw power against the rugged rocks of a secluded seaside platform, filling the air with spray and foam. The small cove seems both inviting and dangerous, caught between the calm of the horizon and the relentless surge of the tide. Nature’s strength dominates the scene, reminding us of the fragile balance between land and sea.
La mareggiata si abbatte furiosa davanti a Camogli, mentre la luce dorata della sera illumina le case raccolte tra mare e collina.
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The stormy sea crashes before Camogli as the golden evening light warms the houses nestled between sea and hillside. A moment suspended between force and poetry, where the ocean speaks with its eternal voice.
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3491 HDR
At the bottom of Kynance cove, Cornwall, UK
Kynance Cove is a stunning spot located on the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall. This beautiful cove with dramatic rock stacks has become a popular destination for visitors. Adding to its breathtaking beauty are the turquoise waters, white sand and rugged cliff faces. The cove is surrounded by some of the most stunning landscapes in the UK, making it an ideal location for hiking and exploring.
Not a King Tide but a super-sized wave set at Shore Arcres on a very windy afternoon. Taken approx 30-yards away, this particular wave broke at over 30-feet in height at its peak.
Even wind and rain can't deter the avid collectors hunting for agates and Petoskey Stones that can be found among the millions of weathered beach stones washed up onto the Lake Michigan shorelines. In fact windy, rainy days might even be the best days. Rain wetting the dull, weathered stone brings out the color and patterns of fossils in the rock; and, the wind washes more stones ashore.
(Petoskey Stone is limestone rock with a pattern of fossil coral. that is unique to Michigan en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petoskey_stone )
(Agates are are rocks with attractive bands of quartz and chalcedony. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agate )
We had a 35 mph Nor'easter blowing yesterday with the huge waves pounding against the North Pier. I spent 30 minutes capturing images as the sun went down. The power of nature is amazing.
Sheboygan, Wisconsin lighthouse on the Lake Michigan shoreline...
Enjoy, and have a great weekend, everyone!
This crashing wave reminds me on how I feel now, with my second round of Covid. Good thing I've been vaccinated...
This is the Oceanside Pier in California. When visiting a few weeks ago I was so looking forward to some colourful sunsets. This is pretty much what I got every evening. Warm light and no clouds.
I replaced the original post. Corrected for horizon not straight.
Godrevy Lighthouse, watching Natures Pyrotechnics Show: The water, guided by the contours of the rocky labyrinth, shot skyward in dazzling displays. It resembled nature's own pyrotechnic show, a symphony of motion and light. The sea spray catching the colours of the day, creating an ethereal atmosphere that blurred the boundaries between reality and dreams.