Thank you for visiting Sealord photography on Smugmug.
Sealord photography focuses on three themes:
Biodiversity with an emphasis on marine life
Sustainability relating to construction & urban development; energy; food; transport; and waste.
The Guernsey community
Guernsey beach cleans and marine litter
Marine debris washes up on the Guernsey shore regularly. Much of it is from ships including fishing boats. Storms bring up broken crab and lobster pots. Beach cleaners often find an odd shoe, cigarette lighters, plastic polymer fishing rope, twine, and line, pieces of polystyrene and insulation foam, plastic bags and plastic bottles, and thousands of pieces of hard plastic including disposable plastic cutlery, plastic bottle tops and plastic toys.
Cooperative plastic bottle of sparkling water at Baie des Pecqueries on Guernsey's west coast on 23rd January 2021
The irony of this plastic bottle litter is that the label has the text "The Great Message in Our Bottle. We donated 3p per litre to water projects in Africa."
This plastic water bottle cost more than 1.5 pence worth of time to collect from the sea shore and would cause more environmental harm than the 1.5 pence it represents in value to African water projects.
File No. 230121 1307
©RLLord
sealordphoto@gmail.com
500 ml bottleCooperative plastic water bottleCoop Natural Mineral waterBaie des Pecqueries beach clean litterThe Great Message in our bottleThe One Foundationplastic bottleplastic water bottlecooperative littersocial responsibilitywe donate 3p per litreplastic bottle littersea shore litterplastic litterbeach litterGuernsey beach littermarine litter
Sealord photography's biodiversity images began with a focus on international commercial seafood species and the marine life of the Bailiwick of Guernsey, Great Britain.
Sealord photography has a growing collection of digital images covering climate change, the environment and sustainability issues.
Sealord photography also covers the Guernsey community and particularly the fund raising activities of Guernsey charities as part of the island's social sustainability.
The fish, shellfish and marine life images would not be possible if it were not for the generosity of commercial and recreational fishermen in Guernsey, and seafood suppliers at various trade shows in the USA, and wholesalers at Fulton Fish Market in New York City.
Many marine biologists have helped identify or confirm the identity of marine species photographed. These people have been mentioned when possible.
Please email: sealord@me.com or sustainableguernsey@gmail.com if you have any questions or comments about Sealord photography. Thank you. Richard Lord