Almost any reference to Britain describes the country as an island nation. With 838 miles from Land’s End to John O’Groats, however, it’s very deceiving to think of Great Britain as a “small” island. That’s about the distance between Portland, Maine, and Durham, NC. What’s a big island?
Still, no place in Great Britain is more than 70 miles from the coast. According to the Ordnance Survey, the small village of Coton in the Elms, Derbyshire, just a few miles south of Burton Upon Trent, holds the distinction of being the most land-locked spot on the island, roughly equidistant from The Wash and the Irish Sea. Remarkably, with its variegated bays, firths, estuaries, and peninsulas, mainland Great Britain is surrounded by 11,073 miles of fractured waterfront. Yes, Britain is a coastline nation.
Let’s take a photographic journey around the coast beginning on the Cornish peninsula:
“I have traveled and photographed a good deal of the British coastline over the past 35 years, and remain constantly amazed at the variety and color of its picturesque harbors, dramatic seascapes and the meld of human and natural history that provides its unique character.”