Showing posts with label sea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea. Show all posts

2014-02-08

swan-rād



Old English poetry was full of a metaphorical technique called kenning, in which regular words were replaced by compounds which gave a poetic flavour to the description. Thus 'sun' can become 'sky-candle', and 'warrior' can become 'feeder of war gulls' - a double modified expression, in which war-gulls refer to ravens, the carrion birds attracted by the dead after a battle (nice, eh?). And what of the sea? In the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf, mighty ships plough the sail-road, the whale-road and the swan-road.

The when light hits the surface of the water, it creates a dispersed pattern of reflection stretching from the horizon towards the viewer. As light scatters off the moving surfaces of the ripples, only those beams which reflect towards the observer are visible. The resulting twinkly surface is called a glitter-path, and when the individual twinkles are summed together (as in this long exposure), the result is a clear, bright bridge. Here, the moon-bridge stretches right across the bay to the old town of Swanage (Anglo-Saxon name: Swanwich, meaning... wait for it... swan-village). Anyone fancy a stroll along the moon bridge across the swan-road to Swan-town?

Captured at Boscombe, Dorset

2014-01-23

underneath the storm clouds...



After an stormy hour, trudging along a pebble beach under ancient cliffs, I rounded a remote, grizzled headland only to find these bright beach huts nestled into the dunes. Surreal.

Captured at Mudeford Spit, Dorset, UK.

2013-03-25

pirate gold



I like to think of the sea as a seducer of young men, bright eyed and open, with adventure in their hearts: Men who leapt gladly from the underhanded, Shanghai-ing, political world of the privateers, into the democratic arms of honest share-and-split-the-booty-alike piracy, cutlass between teeth and a flintlock, tied to end of a colourful silk sash...

2010-04-12

nebulus taxonomy: cloud ray



featuring a luscious scientific stingray illustration. sourced from Wikipedia commons: "The oldest published depiction of a common stingray, from Pierre Belon's , 1553 De Aquatilibus Libri Duo".

2009-10-13

ride it out

2009-06-21

these cirrus clouds remind me of



or perhaps I've been reading a little to much kate beaton...

2008-02-20

yeah?

2007-12-01

How to catch a cloud (9) in Plymouth



long time no sea. here we are again. welcome back!

2007-10-29

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