Here are some more frames from Balnarring Beach, looking toward Cape Schanck, taken as the day eased into its last light. Joel appears again in the frame, a familiar figure against the widening horizon as I caught the sunset.
The tide had drawn back, leaving the flats exposed and reflective, a broad sheet of muted silver and bronze that carried the sky downward into the earth. To the south, Cape Schanck held its quiet authority, the dark outline of the headland and its cliffs marking the edge where Bass Strait begins to assert itself. This stretch of coast has always been a place of meeting: calm bay and restless ocean, soft sand giving way to ancient basalt shaped by wind and surge over thousands of years.
As the sun lowered, the light thinned and cooled, spreading long shadows across the beach. Joel’s presence anchored the scene, a human scale set against the immensity of sea and sky, momentary and transient in a landscape that measures time differently. The salt air, the distant sound of water moving over rock, and the slow extinguishing of colour combined into that brief, suspended stillness that belongs only to sunset on this part of the Mornington Peninsula.
Sony A7RV
FE 20-70mm f4 G
Linking Sunday Best


Joel is a very prevalent photobomber. 😊
ReplyDeleteTell me about it lol
DeleteA scenery that might tempt one to try digging for gold... ;-)
ReplyDeleteJust thick fine sands there
DeleteSimply stunning photos. Great shot of the tide being out.
ReplyDeleteWe have our weekly photo therapy time
DeleteBello atardecer con la playa iluminada y coloreada por los últimos rayos de sol
ReplyDeleteWe don't stay after that last ray
DeleteWhat a beautifully captured moment. You really convey the quiet majesty of Balnarring Beach and Cape Schanck. I love how you frame Joel against the immense horizon; it gives the scene a sense of scale and human presence without disturbing the tranquility. The way you describe the tide, the reflective flats, and the interplay of light and shadow makes me feel the cool, briny air and the gentle pull of the sea. It’s a perfect Sunday scene, contemplative and still, yet alive with the subtle movement of water and light. The choice of lens and camera seems to have served you beautifully in capturing both breadth and detail.
ReplyDeleteUna llum preciosa a aquestes hores.
ReplyDeleteSalutacions!
Golden hour magic
DeleteA stunning study in contrasts! The first photo looks like the ground is a sheet of silver, and the second one has turned into gold.
ReplyDeleteSimmering yellow
DeleteThese are nice :-D
ReplyDeleteLovely photos of this beach. A walk on the beach is always pleasant, and one never knows what treasures might be found. One of the things you found were some fine photos.
ReplyDeleteSome dog faeces actually
DeleteThe beach appears to be a bit stony but perhaps that's only in one place.
ReplyDeleteDos imágenes increíbles con un color y un tono fantásticos
ReplyDeleteAbrazo
Yesterday was a bit hot (40+c) to lie out in the open sun, but I cannot see any shady areas eg trees.
ReplyDeleteYeah--- those beach surprises can really be--- uh--- annoying!
ReplyDeleteLooks nice there.
ReplyDeletenature is wonderful
ReplyDeleteIndeed a timeless view for eternity.
ReplyDeleteGreat beach photos! Take care, have a wonderful week.
ReplyDeleteNow this is what I love to see when it is five degrees outside! A beach that reminds me that summer will again come!
ReplyDeleteIt looks wonderful.
ReplyDeleteTwo very nice photographs.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
This beach scenes are for a Dream...
ReplyDelete...thank you for sharing at MosaicMonday
Greetings by Heidrun
Wonderful shots, James. Thank you for taking part in the "My Sunday Best" meme.
ReplyDelete