water photoshoot - ava meadows

 



The Puget Sound is a vast, intricate estuarine system where freshwater rivers meet the tidal currents of the Pacific. Described by Kruckerberg as "tortuous, sinuous, indented," its coastline is a testament to the slow sculpting of water over time. The Sound is not just one estuary but a network of many, interwoven through deep basins and separated by underwater sills, which help regulate the inflow of nutrient-rich ocean water and the outflow of river-fed freshwater. It is a system in motion, ceaselessly shaped by tides, seasonal changes, and the gravitational pull of the moon.

On January 31st, I conducted a photo shoot at Boulevard Park in Bellingham, where the Puget Sound stretched out before me in its winter blues. The air was crisp, and the water mirrored the quiet, gray-toned sky, and the hills in the distance blurred into the sea. Through these photographs, I aimed to showcase the diversity of the sound. The Sound is a living system where rock, water, and air interact in a dance of erosion, movement, and renewal. My images, much like the land itself, reflect the convergence of time, tides, and transformation.

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