Post by SeaRat on Aug 3, 2017 10:01:31 GMT -8
Last evening I watched all two hours of this video project, and it is wonderful.
www.pbs.org/program/irelands-wild-coast/
The photography is wonderful; I don't know how Colin Stafford-Johnson got some of his photos, particularly of his rowboat from underwater with a dolphin swimming by.
David Richie Wilson, you have some wonderful and delightful coastlines on that side of the Atlantic. This show really highlights the uniqueness of the Ireland coast, with same incredible underwater scenes. While this is not "vintage," it shows why we go underwater and onto the coastlines.
As Colin Stafford-Johnson says,
Enjoy,
John
www.pbs.org/program/irelands-wild-coast/
About the Show
Follow a unique, personal journey along one of the most spectacular coastlines in the world featuring the wildlife and wild places that make it so special. Emmy Award-winning wildlife cameraman Colin Stafford-Johnson takes viewers on an authored odyssey along Ireland’s rugged Atlantic coast – the place he chooses to make his home after 30 years spent shooting some of the world’s most celebrated wildlife films.
Hanging like an emerald jewel off the western edge of Europe, Ireland has always been a place apart – the last scrap of rock before the void of the Atlantic Ocean. Never conquered by the Romans, Ireland was for millennia the very edge of the known world for Europeans and the last stop for countless animals before they disappeared into the mists of the western ocean on their ceaseless journeys of life.
Follow a unique, personal journey along one of the most spectacular coastlines in the world featuring the wildlife and wild places that make it so special. Emmy Award-winning wildlife cameraman Colin Stafford-Johnson takes viewers on an authored odyssey along Ireland’s rugged Atlantic coast – the place he chooses to make his home after 30 years spent shooting some of the world’s most celebrated wildlife films.
Hanging like an emerald jewel off the western edge of Europe, Ireland has always been a place apart – the last scrap of rock before the void of the Atlantic Ocean. Never conquered by the Romans, Ireland was for millennia the very edge of the known world for Europeans and the last stop for countless animals before they disappeared into the mists of the western ocean on their ceaseless journeys of life.
The photography is wonderful; I don't know how Colin Stafford-Johnson got some of his photos, particularly of his rowboat from underwater with a dolphin swimming by.
David Richie Wilson, you have some wonderful and delightful coastlines on that side of the Atlantic. This show really highlights the uniqueness of the Ireland coast, with same incredible underwater scenes. While this is not "vintage," it shows why we go underwater and onto the coastlines.
As Colin Stafford-Johnson says,
So much of life is an a timetable,
If you don't have a timetable,
You can't be late,
If you don't have a destination,
You can't get lost.
If you don't have a timetable,
You can't be late,
If you don't have a destination,
You can't get lost.
Enjoy,
John