Ocean

a year of stories - 26 of 52 by Carey Pace

*This post is part of a collaborative project - a year of stories shared by a group of 15 photographers every Tuesday in 2016.  Please visit JULIE MAK after you read this post to continue the circle.*


Once upon a time there was a girl who thought she loved the Ocean.  

She loved the sunshine. The feeling of the sand, soft and warm on top yet cool and abrasive underneath.  The smell of salt and fish and seaweed and eons of living things jostled in the lapping water.  The water, ever strong and present and consistent. Oh so consistent.  Oh so strong. Never ceasing to chase you.  Presents lurking at every turn in seashells and seaglass and driftwood. 

It was a healing place.  A calming place.  A centering place.  

But then she found her Island.  

And it was then she really knew, with her whole entire soul, that she loved the Ocean like no other place on earth. 

It was there where all distractions are blown away.  It was there where sun and sand and water combine to brush away the edge that separates reality from magic. It was there where Nature revealed herself, softening the fear of humans that all creatures naturally posses.  It was there where evidence of storms long past entrenched itself among dunes and marshes and seagrass with the echoes of Power reverberating off the crests and valleys in the zebra striped sand. 

There will be no other place on earth that feels more like magic than her Island. 

all images are from our latest trip to the shore in June 2016. 


*This post is part of a collaborative project - a year of stories shared by a group of 15 photographers every Tuesday in 2016.  Please visit JULIE MAK after you read this post to continue the circle.*

the creature project by Carey

One of the things I love about photography is how it lets me show others what _I_ see.  It lets you inside my eye to see the world through my own unique 'lens', pardon the pun.  I see such beauty around me all the time. I have always noticed the details and photographed them.  I look for them.  I appreciate them.  I seek them.  One of my hopes with sharing my work online for the world to see is that hopefully one person is affected and motivated to see the beauty and details of their world.

But creatures... I notice details about people and about places.  But I don't necessarily notice creatures.  Something the Buddy has taught me is that if I only but look, and notice, the creatures are all around us.  So often we just hurry and trudge through life, our landscape, and never notice all the untamed wild life coexisting with us.

We spent the last week in my favorite place -- Topsail Island, North Carolina.  The weather was glorious - absolutely glorious.  But not a day went by that the Buddy didn't find creatures.  I would have said they flock to him - and yes, no matter WHERE we go, public or remote, we find them.  But I really think that just as my eye is irretrievably set to see beauty and details, his eye is irretrievably set to notice the life that goes on around him.

We find this, because we seek it.

I believe I will start a new little personal project for him - The Creature Project.

Topsail Island NC beach photo by Carey Pace
Topsail Island NC beach photo by Carey Pace
Topsail Island NC beach photo by Carey Pace

Topsail Topsail by Carey

We spent June 1st through 8th at one of our favorite places on earth:  Topsail Island, North Carolina.  I would probably say that my favorite place to photography in this entire world is at the ocean.  The light and reflections at the seaside are just.... sigh. They are just so beautiful. I love the new challenges of somewhere outside of my norm with such spectacular beauty surrounding me.

I took 3,376 photos.  That is not a typo.  Three thousand, three hundred and seventy six.  WOW!  I am absolutely dying to process them.  Believe it or not, I've never gone back and processed the photos from our beach visit to Topsail two years ago!  Alas.  I have a little girls birthday party to execute, and finances that I'm behind on to do, as well as twenty other around the house projects to do before I can allow myself to DO this set of photos.... but I DID allow myself to edit a handful from our first hour out on our favorite stretch of beach.

beach vacation photo by Carey Pace

Nearly everyone loves the beach, but I find that people's reasons are so varied. It's so fascinating. Some love the ocean waters -- the sights, the sounds, the smells, the feel of the salty spray. Some love to walk along the water's edge, feeling the teasing waters lap along their ankles. Some love to be tossed by the waves, have a glimpse of the awesome power of water and the sea, that unparalleled weightless feeling of being lifted up by an oncoming wave and then suddenly dropped low again. Some love the sand, whether just to wiggle your toes in it or to build mighty sand creations only to be destroyed by the next high tide. Some love searching for treasure with the patience of saints as they seek to find a rare shark's tooth or shell. Some love to explore and find the amazing creatures that make their home at the transition from land to sea, whether on foot or via kayak or larger boat. Some love the intensity of the sun, and it's so amazing how much stronger those rays feel with all of the reflection from the sand and water. Some love a beach rife with tidal pools hiding living treasures of all kinds, while others love a steep beach without much land. Some love to fish, whether from the pier or the surf. Others love just getting away from the distractions at home. Some love enjoying the seashore with others, perhaps a large group from home or perhaps even just meeting new folks staying nearby. Some love a beach so secluded that perhaps you don't see another soul all day long. Some find healing, both physical and emotional, by merely the presence of the seashore where the power of the water and wind are so strongly evident. Some love the creative challenge of photographing in a new place with new scenery and new lighting scenarios (I wouldn't know that person). Some like a rocky beach, while others prefer huge expanses of white sand. There are the Outer Banks beaches with their dark and churning intensity that are so different from Myrtle, which is so different from the hard packed wide expanses at Hilton Head, or any of the other South Carolina Island beaches like Pawley's, or Kiawah, or Folly or Edisto. There are the Atlantic Florida beaches, and then there is the whole other side of Gulf Coast beaches with their completely different scenery of soft white sand and crystal clear aqua water. Even more, all of the Northeast beaches I've never set eyes upon. And yet some, too, enjoy other things about going to the beach that really have nothing to do with the ocean like shopping at boutiques or outlet malls, the tradition of much too expensive but often quite elaborately decorated putt-putt golf, ice cream parlors dressed up in a time long since past, eating seafood at new restaurants, and I suppose there is a party scene or nightlife at some beaches as well.

When I see someone ask "where should we go to the beach this year?" or simply "what's your favorite beach", my heart gives pause. You cannot answer that question without qualifiers. For, my reasons to love a place may be the reasons you loathe it. My expectations for a beach vacation may make you shudder because they vary so much from your own. "Going to the beach" is about so much more that simply visiting a place where the ocean meets land. Particularly to an artist heart.

A few years ago I saw a video of the awed reaction of a group of teenage girls who had never been to the ocean before. It breaks my heart that in this day and age where folks travel around the world in a day, give no thought to how far away something is, there are still people who have never been to the seashore. This place on the earth so teaming with power and awe and beauty and might, where God's presence and influence reverberate, where even grown ups turn into kids again some times... everyone should have that at least once.

We've been visiting the southern tip of Topsail Island, NC for the last few years and adore it. It is the perfect answer for our particular family's preferences. It is an introvert's expanse, a nature and creature lover's dream, a fishing wonder, tide pools and waves and smooth sound waters and dunes and soft sand and shallow waters, shells and beach glass, sunsets and sunrises, meals with each other.

I shot these with my

Nikon D800

Nikon 14-24 f2.8

Nikon 85mm f1.8

Nikon 50mm 1.4D

Sigma 35mm f1.4