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Saundersfoot Beach #1

The harbour wall on Saundersfoot beach, Pembrokeshire National Park, Wales

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The story behind this image

It had been almost fifty years since I last visited Saundersfoot on the Pembrokeshire coast, on a family holiday back in the 60s with my parents and little sister.

So while my wife Liz and I were enjoying a mini-break in Pembrokeshire, staying at Solva and exploring the beauties of the National Park, I made sure that a day trip back to Saundersfoot was on the agenda.

The day we chose for our excursion was just fantastic, with unseaonably warm and sunny weather for late October that had us ditching our foul weather gear in favour of T shirts, and in the end we spent the whole day mooching around this lovely seaside town.

Nothing much seemed to have changed from my vague childhood memories, with acres of golden sand gently sloping down to an azure sea, so shallow that you could paddle out for ages without the water coming over your knees.

Unfortuately paddling wasn't on our agenda, but we did enjoy a long walk from the harbour at the south end of the bay, along the firm wave washed sand and then the recently created coastal path, all the way to the aptly named Pleasant Valley to the north.

Of course I was carrying my camera with me, polarising filter fitted to make the most of those lovely seaside colours, recording the scenery as we ambled along.

This view is of the tip of the harbour wall, right at the start of our walk along the beach, and I was especially taken with the shape and colour of the sand bar at the entrance to the harbour, exposed by the low tide and surrounded by azure sea.

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Image data

Filename - saundersfoot beach 01.jpg

Camera - Canon 6D

Lens - 24-105mm zoom @ 24mm

Exposure - 1/50 sec @ f11, ISO100

Filters - Polarising filter used to remove glare and enhance colours.

Location - Saundersfoot, Pembrokeshire, Wales

This image - 800x450px JPEG

Conversion - Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop

Comments - Hand held exposure using lens stabilisation