Thick mats of seaweed wash ashore on beaches along the Jurassic Coast. Dead seaweed is often automatically viewed as horrid, unsightly, and a nuisance – but if you pause and look, there is beauty in it. There are many types of seaweed to be discovered in the masses on this strandline. Their fronds intertwine in a kind of accidental natural weaving. Each species has its own characteristic shape, texture, and pattern. Their combined presence forms greater abstract designs of infinite variety, the individual fronds making strands or threads as in a tapestry. The puckered patterns of the crinkly Sugar Kelp stand out as the most decorative features of the assemblage. The colours change from deep olive brown to golden yellow and cream as the algae decompose. The textures range from leathery to satiny, from slimy to crispy depending on moisture content. Opaque and hardening on exposure to air; or translucent and soft when floating in shallow water rock pools.
love Kimmeridge Bay
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I don’t know which I like better, your photographs of the kelp or your singing narrative about them. So glad you gave us both. There is so much beauty in the world that we ignore; thanks for not doing that.
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It is very interesting, isn’t it. I haven’t been there for a while but I know there is a new fossil museum. Have you seen it?
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Thank you for your comments, Linda. I am pleased that you like the posting.
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I spend hours gloating over my seaweed photos. I wonder how many other people are similarly fascinated? I love the second one of this set.
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I am sure there are others who appreciate the wonders of seaweed but they are a limited group.
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