I was born near the sea and therefore I feel a very profound bond to its smells, colours and landscapes. Now that I live near Whitstable, I go there often and never without my camera. Therefore, it will probably not be my first or last post with photographs of the Whitstable landscape.
On this photo, you cannot clearly distinguish the sand from the water as it is a low tide. however, the persons walking are an indication of where the sand seems to be.
Not only their energy is clean but I find that they embellish Whitstable horizon as long as they are not too numerous. There is a pattern on that picture which I noticed only after I started treating it. Indeed, the number of "Aeolus' children" as we call them in French is receding and it gives something interesting to the shot.
We've seen Barneville's huts and Scarborough's, so now let's admire Whitstable's.
I like these three photos of the Whitstable's seagulls. Just as the wind turbines were receding on the horizon, the number of seagulls is increasing with the same pattern.
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