Stikkord: jersey

  • Portelet Bay, Jersey

    Portelet Bay, Jersey

    On the south coast of Jersey lies a small bay with an interesting story, the story of Janvrin’s Tomb, which is not a tomb after all. If you take out from St Helier towards the west about 8 km and follow signs towards Portelet bay you end up in a parking lot near a pub called Portelet Inn. From here you go down some stairs, bend your neck under a few branches and you soon find yourself on a beautiful sandy beach. Light yellow sand between your toes, the sun in your face and the view! Crystal clear water, and at high tide a tiny island in the middle of the bay.

    Janvrin's Tomb
    Janvrin’s Tomb

    As you lay on the beach, working hard on your tan, you wonder about this little island and the stubby, round tower on the top of it. As I said, there’s a story buried there. The island’s name is L’Île au Guerdain, and in 1721, the seafarer Philippe Janvrin from nearby St. Brelade returned from France, ill with fever. As there was a plague in France, the ship was to be held in quarantine. Philippe Janvrin died after two days of the quarantine. He was buried on this little island.
    It is said that his body was later moved to the churchyard in St. Brelade, but according to The Island Wiki, there is no sign of a tombstone in St. Brelade, nor is there any entry of his reburial in the church registry.

    At low tide it is possible to walk over to the little island, and you can explore the tower, which is a Martello tower like many others throughout the coast of Jersey. The tower was erected in 1808 during the Napoleonic Wars. Only the ground floor of the tower is accessible, and it consists of one room with one window. In it’s day the tower was occupied by a sergeant and 12 men and armed with a cannon.

    Portelet Bay
    Portelet Bay at low tide

    More about Jersey:
    Photo location: La Corbière Lighthouse

     

  • Photo location: La Corbière Lighthouse

    Photo location: La Corbière Lighthouse

    I must admit I have a certain fascination for lighthouses. I haven’t photographed many, but whenever I see one, I get a feeling of safety. Their function is to guide the seafarers and to warn about dangerous coastlines, leading the way to safe ports. I have a childhood memory about lighthouses. There was one quite some distance from where I grew up, but when there was fog I remember laying in bed at night, hearing the faint sound of the foghorn at the lighthouse. It was a very comforting sound.

    Anyway, this summer I was in Jersey, Channel Islands, and I got several chances to photograph La Corbière Lighthouse. This lighthouse is situated in the South West corner of the island, on some rocks a bit off the coast. At low tide it is actually possible to walk all the way out there on a causeway, but there is no access to the lighthouse itself. Always expect a lot of people with cameras, especially at low tide and around sunset.

    The thing with Jersey is the extreme difference between high and low tide, normally around eight or nine meters! This means that the whole landscape is constantly changing, and you get a lot more opportunities to get nice pictures. At low tide a completely new landscape is uncovered, and when the relation between the tide and the sun is changing every day, oh my! I highly recommend keeping track of the tide times, for example with an app like My Tide Times.

    Here are some images that I took of La Corbière Lighthouse:

    Corbiere Sunset
    Sunset at La Corbière
    Corbiere Lighthouse Night
    The light is on
    Corbiere Lighthouse Day
    Corbière Lighthouse in daylight

    More about Jersey:
    Portelet Bay, Jersey