Both Joel and I longed to breathe the briny air and hear again the timeless voice of the sea. A fortnight past, we made our way once more to the cliff-tops overlooking Bridgewater Bay at Blairgowrie, drawn by the desire to attempt long-exposure photography in a place yet untried. Though the conditions were far from perfect, the novelty of the location, with its rugged beauty and the promise of new discovery, gave the venture a certain poetry of its own. Joel, ever patient, came to collect me from my home, but through my own misjudgment—having earlier taken my mother to supper—I delayed him by forty minutes. That tardiness weighed heavily upon me, for I felt I had stolen time from both him and the sea itself.
Bridgewater Bay, where we stood, is no ordinary shoreline. It is a place where the restless waters of Bass Strait carve their legend into limestone cliffs and sandstone shelves, where tidal pools mirror the heavens and the wind carries whispers of ancient times. Once a hunting and gathering ground for the Boonwurrung people, who knew the rhythms of these shores long before our cameras sought to capture their moods, it later became part of the maritime frontier of the Mornington Peninsula. The bay has borne witness to shipwrecks and storms, and its eroded rock formations—arched, honeycombed, and sculpted by centuries—stand as natural monuments to endurance.
Thus, as Joel and I set up our tripods against the evening light, I could not help but feel that our own small pursuit of a perfect image was but a fleeting gesture in the vast theatre of time. The bay, with its layered history of people, tides, and stone, seemed to forgive my lateness, reminding me that all human haste dissolves before the patience of the ocean
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Linking Water H2O Thursday
Beautiful photo and your words bing the scene to life.
ReplyDeleteArtistic expression helps souls
DeleteLa exposición prolongada de la fotografía le añade un efecto de seda la agua.Se observa una costa rocosa y unas nubes de variados colores debido a los efectos de las luces del atardecer.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
Thank you for such a detailed description on the photograph!
DeleteRoentare, the results of your long exposure is stunning. You and Joel had time well spent with your cameras and tripods. Both color and reflections stand out.
ReplyDeleteNot much hiking was involved.
DeleteAn absolutely beautiful photo.
ReplyDeleteWow really beautiful
ReplyDeleteIt's a very atmospheric scene. I was just looking at a map and a little further is Spray Point, with a camera mark on the map.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful view with the water and the sunset and the clouds and ... everything else!
ReplyDeleteIt is, as everyone has said, BEAUTIFUL!
ReplyDeleteLovely what you wrote about your thoughts and the area.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful capture.
Beautiful seascape! Take care, enjoy your day!
ReplyDeleteIt’s just about a perfect photo, the inverted triangle of the clouds even sits in the right place in the photo. And of course your poetic descriptions accentuate the feeling that the photo causes.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous. I love the sky :-D
ReplyDeleteAs always beautiful.
ReplyDeleteDecir que lograste una imagen fascinante y esa larga exposición le dio un efecto sedoso al agua.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
Buen texto, la foto muy bonita cromáticamente.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
You show us so much beauty.
ReplyDeleteAmazing photo!
ReplyDeleteA FABULOUS photograph, the colours are amazing.
ReplyDeleteI also enjoyed reading your words.
All the best Jan
Never much waiting for people, I have been late a few times. Good result here.
ReplyDelete"all human haste dissolves before the patience of the ocean..." ~ brilliant, Roentare! It's striking how the lines of the sky are mirrored in the water and beach below.
ReplyDeleteVery beautiful
ReplyDeleteWonderful photo
I can see why you longed to get there. It's beautiful. Have you ever thought of combining your photos and beautiful narration into a book? It's worthy.
ReplyDelete