Hello, hello! We haven't had a beach walk for quite awhile. But come with me, let's look at the wind tossed, drought burnt dunes and beach.
It all started yesterday when my in-work Googly Jack's mouth and teeth blew away. I looked everywhere---on my deck and yard but no mouth. So today I went out to see if the little wool scrap blew afar, into the lane or the neighboring yards.
It actually turned up, dropped in the sewing room// stuck to my foot?, but I loved the calm and sunshine and carried on.
A bit of garden peeping! This house now has a delightful weathered rooster wind vane. It creaks and spins merrily in the breeze.
And this house on the corner has, as usual, the most profuse and beautiful dusty pink dried hydrangea heads. I never have the nerve to ask this person if I could have a few.
I peeked through the seawall, a rusty hole opens up to see nearby doings.
I carried on towards the beach entrance. Here we are, so windswept and changed after last week's nor'easter. That storm brought winds, luckily from the northeast, but little rain.
Summer is very over. The lifeguard stands toppled for winter storage.
The Covid shell display battered.
The dunes are dry and unkempt.
The roses have a tinge of leaf color but the few berries are dry as raisins.
Only the staunch bayberry bushes are lush with tiny dark blue-grey berries.
I look at them and wonder why and how the colonists of early America had the notion that these berries would make beautifully pale green, fragrant, much needed candles. It baffles me.
With the dunes so dry, only two rains since June, I think, I wonder how the tiny creatures who inhabit the dunes survive. Perhaps the swales behind the roses, in the hollow still have water. I didn't climb down to look.
Lots of tiny footprints.
And a well trodden little pathway.
My beach is large and undamaged,
but to the far west the surfing beach is apparently all gone. The following pics were sent by a friend who walks daily early mornings. The cliffs are shocking, we cannot imagine how the beach will rebuild itself.
This is how it used to look, and may form again. [older pics by me.].
Have a good weekend, back Monday-ish w Halloween and quilts.
love
lizzy
gone to the beach...
Lovely late October beach walk photos, Lizzy;)))
ReplyDeleteI love seeing the dunes....
Can you believe it's almost November already?
Tempus sure fugit!!
Hope all is well with both of you out there...
Hugs, Julierose
What a lovely walk. At Pendine beach there was a heck of a storm one year, which ripped the dunes way back. Changed the look of the beach no end. In earlier days, a similar storm revealed a wreck but then blown sand covered it again.
ReplyDeleteWe expect storms to modify the beach but those dune cliffs! We hope to get over to look at the situation from the back where a park area cottage is or was, but my friend says last he went by it was No Admittance and even the back dune ramps are gone.
DeleteA shipwreck revealed! Did you see it? Do you know what ship it was? I found a wreck's bones a few years ago, maybe a 25 foot wooden boat of some kind. 19th century ketch was my evaluation, for no real reason or knowledge, just the size. Only the ribs were there. I couldn't get any one interested in it historically and then like yours, it disappeared.
I had one of those weeks where I kept losing my spools of thread or appliqué pieces- very frustrating. Thanks for that beach walk tag along.
ReplyDeleteIt was very dry here until this past week..I am hopeful that winter holds off a bit longer. My hydrangeas have turned to a dusty pink brown and I would certainly share with you. Living near Ottawa Ontario means a bit of freezing rain before Christmas and my limelight hydrangea trees would split with the weight of ice on the plentiful flowers. I always feel sad when I have to cut them off. I love your photos , getting back to the ocean is on my bucket list.
ReplyDeleteThanks for visiting! The beach hee is a bit wind tattered but I always love it. Your hydrangeas sound lovely, the ones that turn dusty pink are so beautiful when dried. Hope you'll visit again, love meeting new friends here.
DeleteI'm amazed that the covid era shell display still exists after all this time and shifting sands. The changing beach is similar to our creekside location, it seems the scene changes with every season and flood episode, though some in the family spend untold hours trying to negate mother nature's intentions, lol 😂😂
ReplyDelete