Wednesday, March 12, 2014

As is typical on barrier islands, the sea and the weather take their toll in fallen trees and erosion.  This nearly post-apocalyptic looking beach is on the ocean side of Jekyll Island, Georgia.  That these two trees remained rooted in the sandy soil is remarkable as their supine brothers litter the shore all around them.  Further in from the ocean, similar trees survive and bend away from the persistent wind coming from the sea.  If I return here in another decade, even those may have endured a similar fate.


4 comments:

Donna Luker said...

Oh, I really like this! Especially the shadow!

John Voss said...

Thanks, Donna. I was hoping for a day with a more interesting sky, but, making lemonade from lemons, I realized the shadows were an adequate compensation. :-)

zz said...

This is a fantastic composition, John. Also - the sky, while somewhat blank, is quite interesting via the rest of the photograph. It's very complimentary and the tonal range is really nice as well. Great job!

John Voss said...

Thanks, zz. I used a polarizing filter for the sky that was intensely blue. That set it's value apart from the trees which I expected would remain very light.