The Ocean

Unlike some of my friends, I do not go to see the Ocean to worship its watery depths on a regular basis. I see it sparingly, by necessity, or by travelling from one place to another. It is only infrequently that I set out with the ocean as my destination, or to fling myself into its vast, infinite maw.

For the most part, we have tamed the land. But the zone of transition, between the land and the sea, is a region where our mastery of materials and engineering surrenders to hubris and falls flat against the unceasing tides.

20250823_131223.jpgPhotograph Copyright, @holoz0r / Steven Perdikis (me)

A shoreline isn't always a place littered with bikinis, sunblock bottles, surfboards and romance. In fact, it is probably more often littered with monuments to human failure and ecological and geological process. Other times, it is just rock, sand, or the detritus of human habitation, delivered by currents from the elsewhere.

We never gaze out upon the same sea twice - to steal a phrase from Heraclitus. While the persistence of the ocean - weeping its roiling tears upon the land in great, both powerful and subdued, tempts us to treat it as thought it maintains a personality. Any attempt to give it a personality or a mood, is our humanity attempting to evoke deeper meaning into a mundane fluid that acts upon the mundane solid.

I'm guilty of attempting that with these words. It doesn't stop the ocean from being a beautiful monster.

I saw the ocean today. I saw the point where humanity's effort faltered. I saw an attempt at making artificial boundaries against the ungovernable.

20250823_130925.jpgPhotograph Copyright, @holoz0r / Steven Perdikis (me)

I saw rocks try to tame the ocean. The ocean shifted its form to mist. It persisted. It crashed over the rocks in a violent, pummelling force, reminding them that they will eventually yield to the millennia of force the ocean is eager to continue providing. The mist settled, making the rocks slippery, sure to allow the ocean to claim whatever may attempt to explore its boundary.

20250823_131139.jpgPhotograph Copyright, @holoz0r / Steven Perdikis (me)

I saw the ocean's onslaught upon a fence, erected by man to protect the habitat of a sea bird. The ocean cares not for our fickle attempts at engineering. Water is persistent, insidious, and aggressive. The salt of the ocean sets out to cleanse, yet simultaneously rust whatever it attacks.

20250823_130959.jpgPhotograph Copyright, @holoz0r / Steven Perdikis (me)

The fence, through its ruin, and the ocean's relentless, ongoing attacks, paint a picture where I am humbled, and I know that for all our efforts, as humans, we simply cannot win against the unyielding force of nature.

The fence, through its ruin, is a beautiful monument to human failure, and to a lack of understanding that the planet will do with us whatever she pleases, and that we cannot stop her. Anything we can build, she can destroy. Anything we rebuild, she can destroy.

We must adapt to her, or be swept away.


This interpretation of the Ocean, this fence, this story, was inspired by a recent visit to O'Sullivan Beach, South Australia. Photographs are my own. I am the copyright holder of the images. Captured at approximately: -35.11690 lat 138.47068 long

This region is currently impacted by the South Australian algal bloom.

20250823_130607.jpg



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i felt the wind and the breeze of the ocean while i am listening to the cheer sparkles of the rain on my window.
what a beautiful voyage and beautiful photos.
the ocean and the shore are indeed more rough than any broken hearts.

thank you for sharing 🌻

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Oh, we had torrential rain here last night. Went for a drive this morning to see a friend, and there were massive puddles all along the road side.

I think that there is much more for me to learn by observing the sea. :)

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I agree , we are not meant to be in there . You get bitten , eaten , drown . Pesky sea . Although the dog loves it so he asks me to go sometimes.

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Especially in these here Southern Australian oceans. There's all sorts. Even perhaps a dead prime minister. Harold Holt, for context, was an Australian Prime Minister who went for a swim one day and never came back.

There's even a memorial pool named after him.

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Although I enjoyed your pictures, your writing makes them even better. Your writing is like poetry.

I saw the ocean today. I saw the point where humanity's effort faltered. I saw an attempt at making artificial boundaries against the ungovernable.

Especially this line with the fence picture!

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Thank you! I try to be a bit poetic with these things, but it is also the way I tend to think. I write the same way I think.

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That fence does look so strange, indeed. And a bit like a failure on our part. Or a triumph on nature's part. Or both, perhaps. I love your writing, as always. It's refreshing to experience life, something seemingly mundane to some, with such creativity. :)

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I fell in love with the collapsed fence! I still love the photo, and I am thinking I might even print and frame this one to remind myself of my own insignificance in the light of all the other planetary happenings. :)

If I do not look at the world with creativity, then it is not worth looking at.

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May be its the same place - photo made by a Australian cosplay team called Chonastock (on deviantart.com)
Pirate_27_by_Chonastock.jpg

Pirate_37_by_Chonastock.jpg

Pirate_32_by_Chonastock.jpg

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It is quite possible. A lot of the Southern coasts of South Australia look very much the same, and there is a lot of it!

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I am very guilty of this too.

I remember when my mother's partner -- who was like a dad to me died. I used to stare out to the water on night evenings as if it magically held some sort of reminiscence of his vibes.

Alas, yes, on the surface it is just mundane water that pummels mundane soil.

But it's a gift to my meditation -- because I imagine water lapping over me gently, and boom, before you know it I'm asleep haha.

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The ocean can take you "forever" because it doesn't care about our petty definition of time. That's what I loved about this particular meditation!

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I never seen a fence being built that far into the ocean... what was it for? If it's somebody's private property than the irony if it's demise is even more satisfying.

Nice photos - I can see how they can spark such a reflection.

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I think they're to set a boundary to a bird sanctuary. Not sure which side is which. :)

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hahah yep... if there is a fence, I'm climbing... or in your case, low-tide walking-around.

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Or in this case, just strolling through the collapsed segment, low tide, high tide, whatever tide.

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I love being close to the ocean every time that I get. The fresh breeze from the waves is very pleasing. Only that one becomes salty when too close.

Happy weekend to you, my friend

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What a great picture, for some reason the longer I stare at the more I wonder...my brain jumping, trapped between the beauty and power of the ocean, and the fact someone thought this fence would work; some quality judgments being made.

To be honest, this fence is also a bit like me on a Saturday morning after a hard week; leaning, cracked, and questioning why half a bottle of port seemed like such a good idea the night before.

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Oh, that's such a powerful image. Our bodies and minds just a shoreline for alcohol to crash upon a a coping mechanism. I'm putting that on my list of things to reuse int he future.

The hangover struck him like a delayed wave, emptying the rockpools of his will and ambition. The laundry remained undone.

Or something like that.

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Dang, that's good! The hangover as a delayed wave really does put a stop to the laundry, cleaning, and basically anything except PC games.

I feel a sickie, The tide’s just too strong!

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I noticed you said "attacks" twice - you really don't like the ocean 🌊😂 Others might say caress, lick, slide, rush, fall, flow. The shore opens to, allows, embraces. All that is loving and natural. But man made things, you're right, don't stand a chance.

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assault
bombard
approach
arrive
anihilate
annex
appropriate
reclaim
antoganise
invade
crash

I could go on :P

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Kiss
Hug

Ah I can't be bothered. I so need a surf. It's been like six weeks now!

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Nature reclaims everything, usually slowly when it's on the land, but swiftly at sea. Did you come across any signs of the algal bloom while you were there?

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I couldn't visually see anything, beyond the sign that I took the photo of, but I am far from being qualified as any sort of marine biologist.

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I did hear it's supposed to finally be easing up a bit now, since they turned the desalination plant off

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We're going to need that desalination plant a lot in the future, hopefully there is a more permanent solution.

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I was wondering if they could put it into salt flats or if there's just too much.

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