Saturday, 10 December 2016

Westward Ho! Again


I spent a couple of days last week back in Devon.  With limited time for photography, I stuck with  two of my favourite places, Westward Ho! and Hartland Quay.  I was able to make a couple of trips to Westward Ho!  The lower set of images are from the first day.  I arrived in Devon on a foggy afternoon and made it there in time for the last hour of daylight.  The low light, freezing fog and vast expanse of sand gave a surreal and empty landscape, that I struggled to do justice to. 

The next day I was able to spend more time there.  It was a grey day, but I was also there at low tide, so I was able to see and shoot a couple of relics of Westward Ho!'s history.  The first is a series of pillars at the rocky end of the beach.  These are all that remains of a Victorian pier.  Built in 1870, it only lasted 10 years, due to the battering it took from Atlantic storms.  The second is an oval of decaying timbers buried in the sand.  This is all that remains of an 18th century shipwreck, thought to be the merchant ship Sally.  The amount of the timber visible changes from year to year, due the shifting sand.  At this time, most of the outline is visible.  Given the conditions on the day, I felt both features would benefit from a moody, mono 10-stop treatment.





 
 

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