Standing Tough
This photograph was taken on my second to this beach. We had told ourselves that we were done photographing here after we were highly successful on our first trip, but sometimes returning to a place and witnessing how it changes can also be worthwhile and turn out new images with a unique twist. On our first visit, the tide was low and the beach was exposed, letting us get close to the seastacks and use the rocks on the beach as foreground elements.
On this particular night the tide was much higher and we had to stay back along the cliffside, with pounding waves coming right up to the cliffs. Standing further back gave us a chance to see the seaside with a different view and Willie and I knew we had to be more selective in our compositions.
I used a long lens for the photographs on this night. It meant focusing in on particular areas of the ocean to find something interesting in them. I was drawn to this particular group of seastacks. On the far left the cliffside was capturing the faint glowing light as the sun set. Just to the right of it the crashing waves created a waterfall as it drained over a small stack of rocks sticking out of the sea. Then to the center of the scene, a seastack stands tough, blocking the waves and forcing them around it. Lastly, lower in the scene, 2 rocks peak up, directing the waves around it too, creating a sweeping motion for the eye to follow.
Nikon D850 w/Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8:
38mm, f/10, 1.3 sec, ISO 64