Sunday, April 12, 2026

Cape Schanck Sunset, Mornington Peninsula for Sunday Best

 


Last Saturday unfolded less as a journey and more as a slow unwinding of intention. Joel, with quiet mischief, stretched the road to Cape Schanck into something elastic—time dilated between interruptions. A call taken mid-drive, his friend seeking the kind of counsel that always seems to find you without ceremony. Then the pause at a petrol station: the soft rustle of paper bags, the salt-warm comfort of chicken nuggets, the sharp clarity of mineral water.

The road resumed, though not faithfully. It bent and strayed, slipping into detours that felt less accidental than deliberate, as though arrival itself was being deferred on purpose. By the time we reached the lighthouse, the coast—your intended destination—had already slipped beyond reach, claimed by the dying light.

So we stayed where we were.

Beside the tower, under a sky dissolving into amber and ash, we caught what remained of the day. The sun sank without waiting, brushing the horizon in quiet resignation. No descent to the shore, no salt on the skin—just a fleeting stillness, and a photograph taken at the edge of something almost reached.




Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G



Linking Sunday Best


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