Bones of the Beach
This photo was captured with a DJI Mavic pro drone and a PolarPro Cinema Series filter.
This photo was captured with a DJI Mavic pro drone and a PolarPro Cinema Series filter.
Boneyard Beach is named for the driftwood that is pulled in on the tide and deposited on the beach to be bleached bone white by the sun, salt and sand. It's a quick 30-minute excursion from Isle of Palms Marina and well worth the trip. The island really lights up as the sun sets, drawing long shadows on the "bones" that litter the beach.
This photo was captured with a DJI Phantom 3 Professional drone and then converted to a Plotagraph.
This photo was captured with a Sony a6300.
Boneyard Beach is named for the driftwood that is pulled in on the tide and deposited on the beach to be bleached bone white by the sun, salt and sand. It's a quick 30-minute excursion from Isle of Palms Marina and well worth the trip. The island really lights up as the sun sets, drawing long shadows on the "bones" that litter the beach.
This photograph was captured with a DJI Phantom 3 Professional drone.
Thinking about buying a drone? Before you do, check out my drone and drone accessories buyers guide.
Take a close look at Boneyard Beach and you will understand where the name comes from. Driftwood is pulled through the nearby channel, and deposited on the protected beach, where it is bleached by the sun amid other "bones" that have washed ashore over the years.
If you're visiting Charleston, call the owners of the Delphinus and charter a sunset tour of Capers Island and Boneyard Beach one evening. You won't be disappointed!
This photograph was captured with a DJI Phantom 3 Professional drone.
Thinking about buying a drone? Before you do, check out my drone and drone accessories buyers guide.
Remember that photo of Alligator Lake from Thursday? If you want to go check out Capers Island and Boneyard Beach, give the captain of this boat — the Delphinus — a call. They ship out of the Isle of Palms Marina and do sunset and daytime exploration trips out to Capers Island every day.
This photograph was captured with a DJI Phantom 3 Professional drone.