Guernsey, first day in Cobo Bay

True to form I am over a year late in getting these pictures on the blog.       

October last year I went on a week long trip to Guernsey with some members of Cambridge Camera Club. The trip was very kindly organised by Ann Miles who had made a rough programme of things we could do each day. We had rented 3 cars between us so that we could get round the island and also so that we could be flexible in what different people wanted to photograph.
We stayed  in Cobo Bay which is on the north east side of the island and arriving in the afternoon of the first day there was only time for a little photography. We were lucky to have a room with a balcony overlooking the sea, so I took some pictures of the other members of the group standing at the water's edge with their tripods. 


The next morning we walked along the broad sands of Cobo Bay until we reached a rocky outcrop at the end. This promontory holds the remains of the Grande Rocque Battery. During the German invasion in the Second World War many existing Napoleonic and Victorian forts were adopted and expanded by the Germans. Guernsey was seen by Hitler as a trophy, and millions of tons of cement were used to build gun emplacements all along the coast to fend off a supposed counter attack by the British. 









The other side of the headland and north of Cobo bay is Salines Bay and I walked around there to get some pictures, mainly long exposures as the sea was pretty choppy.















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