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The Pembrokeshire National Park, Wales, is mostly all about the coastline.
With dramatic cliffs, pristine sand and turbulent seas, set against a backdrop of somewhat variable weather conditions, it was no wonder Liz and I spent a lot our our time during our mini-break here enjoying the stark beauty of the many coves, inlets and beaches adorning the coast.
One of the larger stretches of sandy beach is at Broad Haven, on the west facing coast at St Brides Bay, a favourite spot for surfers with big rollers sweeping up the beach.
Flat sand is very nice for water sports, but only provides marginal interest for the outdoor photographer.
Fortunately for me, the beach at Broad Haven is bounded at its northern end by some dramatic and fascinating rock formations which are uncovered at low tide and make for some much more interesting photographic compositions.
So as the tide receded my wife Liz and I advanced into the rocks, photographing as we went.
Shooting from a low viewpoint gave me the strongest images, with lines of rock stretching through the image frame to the distant horizon.
Mind you, I got very soggy trousers kneeling in the wet sand!
Filename - broad haven beach 01.jpg
Camera - Canon 6D
Lens - 24-105mm zoom @ 24mm
Exposure - 1/8 sec @ f16, ISO100
Filters - Polarising filter used to remove glare and enhance colours. Two stop neutral density filter used to darken the sky.
Location - Broad Haven, Pembrokeshire, Wales
This image - 800x800pxpx JPEG
Conversion - Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop
Comments - Tripod, mirror lockup and cable release used to prevent camera movement
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