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when you are a colony of goose barnacles and the tide comes in–
wip :3 almost done :3 : pen, pencil crayon, dungeness crab, bull kelp root ball, fabric, acrylic paint
Ryan Stalker, “Ocean Drifter.”
Goose barnacles (Thoracica), Portland, Dorset, England,
British Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2024 and Winner of Coast & Marine category.
© the photographers and British Wildlife Photographer of the Year
How about some barnacles on things? Specifically goose barnacles!
Often find these guys wash up after storms. One of those species that utilize the various flotsam and jetsam out at sea.
The ones in the shoe here washed up in 2019 and were still alive! So I threw them back out to sea in order to give them a fighting chance.
Sadly a few weeks later the shoe washed up again with few of the barnacles remaining and very much dead (my dog Inca found it again and had a little much because Labradors will be Labradors). Ah well, gave them a chance all the same. Their home was never going to be permanent, unfortunately.
Have a set of photos of the many I found over the years:
Naturally the inhaler is the most interesting find I had of an animals home.
my finished sheet on barnacles!
this one took a little longer because i started it before exams and i never got back to it but i had some time today :)
if any of the sources aren't clear please say and i can find which ever one you would like again :)
and if anyone would like an alt text for any of these i do please just say!
Elements of Zoölogy: A Text-book. Written by Sanborn Tenney. 1875.
Internet Archive
Inktober 2020 - Day 10 - ‘Hope’
I saw David Attenborough’s ‘A life on our planet’ (or frankly ‘ David Attenborough‘s witness statement’ as that's what he actually calls it in the film) recently. While it was nothing new to me, it was a film I think everyone should see really. Because Sir David is excellent at not only highlighting the urgency of us needing to fix our planet, he offers hope in how it can be easy to change this is we take small steps (and bigger ones to oppose those who are making the big and bad choices).
My home town of Worthing has wind turbines off the coast. They’ve unobtrusive and somewhat pretty (and not nearly as visible as I’ve drawn them here, but lollipop sticks coming out the sea doesn’t look as great). But you’d be amazed by the amount who opposed to such things. When I briefly lived in the tourist trap of Bournemouth- the locals opposed such wind turbines off the coast because “It would be a blot on the landscape and hurt tourism”. Because windmills 8 miles out to sea may blow the tourist away right? Idiots. So they were not built in Bournemouth and instead they were built near Worthing and Brighton, because there are more green minded people living there and in council seats (and one main reasons I was pleased to move back home). Fighting for such things is a really important step we all need to do, because it’s one of the main things we will need in the future.
My own photo of said ‘blOt On THe lAnDScAPE.’
The other thing I do personally (along with many other locals) is pick litter off the beach when we can. I often walk home via the beach. It’s a longer route but it always clams me down. I often see some sweet nature and I take the rubbish I find off the beach and put it into a bin (next step is what we do with our land fills, but like David said- little steps). The object being grabbed by the litter picker is an inhaler that was home to set of deceased goose barnacles. This is based on something I once found myself.
There is a metaphor here I’m sure.
I once found live goose barnacles in a shoe. I did throw them back out to sea but found the shoe washed up with a few dead goose barnacles a few weeks later. I can but give them a fighting chance. I of course binned the shoe once its occupants were dead.