Wednesday, April 8, 2015

The beach at Big Talbot Island SP is littered with trees and tree limbs that are not washed ashore driftwood, but are native to the place.  The wind, surf, storms, and tide take their toll on the trees too near the water, and little by little they succumb and topple onto the sand.  It would be fascinating to come back a century from now to see what's left of the parts I am familiar with...but, hehe..that ain't gonna happen.  However, photographs will inform those who do visit a hundred years hence of how much has been claimed by the sea.  Of course, there may not be much left of Florida altogether as the earth warms, the ice caps and glaciers melt, and the ocean rises.

I did not make this heart, but thought it deserved a picture before the incoming tide made it a memory.   (Film)



4 comments:

dvoss said...

I like this image. You must be morphing into fusion with the terrain. This seems like a very comfortable and interesting photo. There is subtle sense of the Floridian light. Really nice John.

John Voss said...

Thanks, Dottie. I am becoming a bit more accepting about including the hand of man in the land of man. Not too often, but every now and again it can add interest.

DEH said...

Amazingly, I took a picture 2-3 years ago of the same clump of dead trees; but they were still attached to the shoreline. Erosion.
Interesting find of hand of man.

John Voss said...

Yes, D, it's interesting to track these trees over time. Sad how quickly they break away from their safe moorings.