East Coast Branch
Photo Gallery - 2008
The Photo Competition continues through the Summer
of 2008, with prizes being awarded at the Laying Up Supper
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Winner for Winter 2007/8
Chris & Tom Trimby (Where are they !!) |
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Win a Voucher and a chance to win the MOA National Photo Competition
All MOA East Coast members are invited to contribute photographs to this
gallery. All photographs submitted will be published on this web site and you
are invited to add a few words to each, explaining when and why taken, or a few
notes as to why it is special to you.
There are two entry categories:
- Adult - for any member of the East Coast branch.
- Youth - any crew or family member of 14 or less at the time the
photograph was taken.
All photographs submitted will be entered into the MOA National Photo
Competition run by Laurence Gandar, so you might find your photograph on the
Compass cover page!
Click
Here for more details of how to enter and the prizes (opens in a pop up
window).
More information and new items, preferably by email please, to the East
Coast webmaster , or by
post, address on the
team
page.
Viewing The Photo Gallery
Click on the thumbnail images to download the full resolution photos. Note
these can take a while to download on dial up connections.
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This little moorhen was very happy on her nest in St Valery sur Somme
but maybe the owner wasn't quite so pleased!
Helen Krarup
Entry 3 - 28th July 2008 |
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On my trip round the UK, I moored off the National Trust property at
Cotehele on the river Tamer, where the trust keeps a restored Tamar
barge the “Shamrock”. This is a picture of Shamrock’s boat taken from
the mooring.
Ken Moss
Entry 2 - 28th May 2008 |
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'South Deep morning' was taken around 08:00 in South Deep, off the
Swale, in May this year. It was a Bank Holiday Monday, and unbelievably
there was not another soul to be seen. We sat in the cockpit in our
jim-jams drinking tea! |
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Storm Surge in Herne Bay taken last November during the storm surge,
that with different timing could easily have been disastrous.
Fortunately the surge arrived three hours before high tide.
Dick HolnessEntry 1 - 26th May 2008 |