Wild Island Sands


Book Description




Islandeering


Book Description

Walk, scramble, cycle, wade or even swim around the outer edge of our wildest islands. Islandeering provides all the information you need to circumnavigate 50 amazing hidden islands off the shores of England, Scotland & Wales. From Essex, Somerset and Cornwall to Pembrokeshire, Northumberland and the Hebrides; follow wild foreshores and remote coast paths. Complete each journey to discover a magical archipelago world. 50 islands to bag, with routes from easy to difficult and detailed directions with GPX downloads. Beautiful photography and maps. Hidden islands for the best wildlife, local food, swimming, wild camping, secret beaches, coasteering, legends and foraging. Engaging writing charting historical, geographical and wildlife highlights. Tips for coasteering, scrambling, camping, wild swimming and kayaking.




Long Beach Wild


Book Description

Each year, more than a million people visit the spectacular sweep of sand that stretches along Vancouver Island's west coast between Tofino and Ucluelet to watch waves crash ashore on a series of beaches-essentially one long beach separated by small rocky headlands, a shoreline steps away from howling wolves and towering red cedars. In Long Beach Wild: A Celebration of People and Place on Canada's Rugged Western Shore, local resident Adrienne Mason uses her intimate knowledge of the area and a selection of historic and contemporary photos to explore the region's rich natural and cultural history. Mason shows how Long Beach was shaped by many forces, including volcanoes, glaciers, and torrents of water. She describes how the deposits of gravel and silt that this tumult left behind allowed offshore kelp beds and sea otters to thrive and supported the growth of countless other organisms, from lichens and ferns to waterfowl and deer. She also describes how First Nations people found inspiration and sustenance in the area for thousands of years, hunting whales on the open ocean using harpoons with mussel-shell blades and great lengths of cedar bark rope. As well as describing the traditions of the area's First Nations, Mason




Wild Island Nature Hunting Island State Park and Saint Phillips Island by Carol Corbin, Ph.D.


Book Description

Welcome to a place that is constantly changing.Hunting Island State Park and Saint Phillips Island's beaches, lagoons, and forests shift with the twice daily changing of the ocean's tides. One visit and you're implored to return again and again to observe these dramatic shifts. Inside the pages of Wild Island Nature, you'll enjoy visual landscapes artistically captured by the area's dedicated photographers who are drawn to chronicle these fascinating islands. Author Carol Corbin, the Friends of Hunting Island and park staff share observations and information about the historical and cultural significance of these islands, as well as their important natural habitats, making Wild Island Nature the next best thing to being here!Explore a wild place, or twoHunting Island State Park, one of the South Carolina barrier islands is shaped by the crashing waves of the Atlantic Ocean. This dramatic landscape of 'boneyards,' beaches and maritime forests is home to an abundance of creatures-among them, birds, alligators, and loggerhead turtles. Its dramatic, black and white lighthouse watches over the daily drama on the beach and in the lagoons. Its sister island, Saint Phillips Island, accessable only by watercraft, is one of six National Natural Landmarks in South Carolina. Like Hunting Island, Saint Phillips Island was inhabited by indigenous people who left evidence of artifacts and oyster mounds. Saint Phillips is home to tabby ruins and ruins of Fort Beauregard, a Confederate fort set up to guard Port Royal Sound during the Civil War.




Wild Swimming Hidden Beaches


Book Description

The fully revisied second edition of Wild Swimming Coast now includes even more for walkers, swimmers and explorers: Full national coverage of Britain's most beautiful beaches Lagoons, sea caves and amazing places to snorkel. New 1:10,000 Ordnance Survey mapping Best beach cafes, local food, pubs and campsites Where to sea kayak, coasteer and swim with dolphins Best activities with children and families This revised and expanded edition of the best-selling coastal classic features the same winning formula of stunning photography, engaging travel writing and practical guidance. It is set to continue as the definitive guide to Britain's secret beaches and hidden coastline.




The Singing Sands


Book Description

'The Singing Sands' is a detective novel written by Josephine Tey, the pseudonym used by Elizabeth MacKintosh. It follows a Scotland Yard inspector named Alan Grant, who while on sick leave, happened upon a dead man in the night train he rode on his way to Scotland.




Natural Gases of North America


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Where the Ocean Meets the Sand


Book Description

She woke up on an island with no memory and no name, and found herself in the midst of the last thriving civilization of fairies. Now she is one of them, and quicjly making friends. But her past, or lack therof, continues to haunt her. Evil is lurking in the happy shadows of the Island, and it's up to Melody to keep them safe.




Louisiana Lady


Book Description

"Left an orphan after her father's untimely death, Leander Ondine fought to make a place for herself in the world. With the promise of her family's plantation, Beaux Rives, becoming her own next year on her eighteenth birthday, she tried to hold on to her independence. But until then she was forced to live in a small room in a house of ill repute. She was able to maintain her virtue - until the night Justin Salvador stumbled upon her by mistake." -- back cover.




The Island Horse


Book Description

"Ellie believes that she will live in her little village on the coast of Nova Scotia for always. But when her father gets a job on Sable Island, she must say farewell to her beloved home and her mother's final resting place. Not even the idea of seeing the wild horses that roam the island can ease her pain of leaving. And after arriving on the sandy, windswept crescent of land, Ellie feels adrift and alone ... until one afternoon when she wakens on a dune to find herself looking into the curious eyes of a wild stallion. Little by little, as the days pass, Ellie gets closer to the beautiful chocolate-colored horse. Yet she soon discovers something that could take him away from his home, his herd, and her. Ellie has lost too much already. Will she loose her island horse, too?"--P. [2] of cover.