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DUKAS_132919287_EYE
Can the Gambia turn the tide to save its shrinking beaches? In a developing country reliant on its tourist industry, the rapidly eroding ‘smiling coast’ shows the urgent need for action on climate change.
Hotels on Senegambia beach are trying to protect themselves from the rising waters due to climate change by building rock dikes facing the sea.
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DUKAS_132919286_EYE
Can the Gambia turn the tide to save its shrinking beaches? In a developing country reliant on its tourist industry, the rapidly eroding ‘smiling coast’ shows the urgent need for action on climate change.
Hotels on Senegambia beach are trying to protect themselves from the rising waters due to climate change by building rock dikes facing the sea.
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DUKAS_132919253_EYE
Can the Gambia turn the tide to save its shrinking beaches? In a developing country reliant on its tourist industry, the rapidly eroding ‘smiling coast’ shows the urgent need for action on climate change.
Hotels on Senegambia beach are trying to protect themselves from the rising waters due to climate change by building rock dikes facing the sea.
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DUKAS_132919300_EYE
Can the Gambia turn the tide to save its shrinking beaches? In a developing country reliant on its tourist industry, the rapidly eroding ‘smiling coast’ shows the urgent need for action on climate change.
Hotels on Senegambia beach are trying to protect themselves from the rising waters due to climate change by building rock dikes facing the sea.
© Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_132919251_EYE
Can the Gambia turn the tide to save its shrinking beaches? In a developing country reliant on its tourist industry, the rapidly eroding ‘smiling coast’ shows the urgent need for action on climate change.
Hotels on Senegambia beach are trying to protect themselves from the rising waters due to climate change by building rock dikes facing the sea.
© Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_132919245_EYE
Can the Gambia turn the tide to save its shrinking beaches? In a developing country reliant on its tourist industry, the rapidly eroding ‘smiling coast’ shows the urgent need for action on climate change.
Hotels on Senegambia beach are trying to protect themselves from the rising waters due to climate change by building rock dikes facing the sea.
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DUKAS_129748636_EYE
With tourism booming, Great Yarmouth dreams of turning the tide. Britons opting not to fly abroad and holiday at home during the pandemic have ushered in new self-belief at the Norfolk resort
Visitors to Great Yarmouth Promenade.
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DUKAS_129748690_EYE
With tourism booming, Great Yarmouth dreams of turning the tide. Britons opting not to fly abroad and holiday at home during the pandemic have ushered in new self-belief at the Norfolk resort
Visitors to Great Yarmouth ride along the Promenade. The Wheel can be seen in the background.
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DUKAS_129748632_EYE
With tourism booming, Great Yarmouth dreams of turning the tide. Britons opting not to fly abroad and holiday at home during the pandemic have ushered in new self-belief at the Norfolk resort
Historic Buildings on King St, Great Yarmouth.
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DUKAS_129748661_EYE
With tourism booming, Great Yarmouth dreams of turning the tide. Britons opting not to fly abroad and holiday at home during the pandemic have ushered in new self-belief at the Norfolk resort
The South East Tower, Great Yarmouth, a Medieval tower, now restored and converted into a holiday rental by Great Yarmouth Preservation Trust.
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DUKAS_129748677_EYE
With tourism booming, Great Yarmouth dreams of turning the tide. Britons opting not to fly abroad and holiday at home during the pandemic have ushered in new self-belief at the Norfolk resort
160 King Street, Great Yarmouth is a Grade II listed building dating from the 17th century. It is the only surviving example of a timber-framed building in the urban area of the town and was refurbished by the Great Yarmouth Preservation Trust.
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DUKAS_129748660_EYE
With tourism booming, Great Yarmouth dreams of turning the tide. Britons opting not to fly abroad and holiday at home during the pandemic have ushered in new self-belief at the Norfolk resort
160 King Street, Great Yarmouth is a Grade II listed building dating from the 17th century. It is the only surviving example of a timber-framed building in the urban area of the town and was refurbished by the Great Yarmouth Preservation Trust.
© Si Barber / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_129748635_EYE
With tourism booming, Great Yarmouth dreams of turning the tide. Britons opting not to fly abroad and holiday at home during the pandemic have ushered in new self-belief at the Norfolk resort
St George's theatre on King St, Great Yarmouth.
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DUKAS_127203150_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
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DUKAS_127203149_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_127203175_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Bonny Holland's beach hut. Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_127203174_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_127203172_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127203171_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127203167_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127203152_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Locks. Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_127203166_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127203173_EYE
Sun, swimming, smoking and seagulls: a day in the life of beach hut Britain. Across the UK, there are long waiting lists for a beach hut – and prices go up and up. A day on Hove promenade reveals why they are so popular and the problems that persist (ma
In Hove, rows of beach huts line the promenade like multicoloured teeth. Six-foot square, they have no sanitation, electricity or heating. You can’t lie down in them, either. All are painted identically, but the doors can be any colour the owner chooses. These wooden sheds hold their value about as well as a new car driven off a forecourt straight into a motorway pile-up. Blustery winds and sea salt spray batter them and corrode them. In winter, there is black mould, and mice are a common problem. Sometimes, the huts are blown off the promenade by stormy winds. A well-made hut will last a decade before it needs replacing, but requires repainting and resealing every year. In Brighton or Hove, a beach hut can be yours for between £25,000 and £35,000 – plus £416 a year in rent. Since Covid, demand has risen dramatically.
Beach Huts. Hove. Brighton & Hove. East Sussex.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649204_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
A general view towards Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall, which is patrolled by the RNLI. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649223_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
A general view towards Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall, which is patrolled by the RNLI. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649206_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard supervisor Beau Gillett (yellow) with lifeguard Louis Seedhouse. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649209_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard supervisor Beau Gillett (yellow) with lifeguards Louis Seedhouse and Athalie Redgrove. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649226_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard supervisor Beau Gillett (yellow) with lifeguard Louis Seedhouse. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649222_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard Athalie Redgrove. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649225_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Lifeguards Louis Seedhouse and Athalie Redgrove operating at inshore rescue boat. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649203_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard Athalie Redgrove. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_125649211_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_125649224_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard Sam Luckhurst. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_125649208_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_125649212_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard Athalie Redgrove. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_125649210_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard Sam Luckhurst. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649213_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
Pictured is lifeguard Sam Luckhurst. RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125649220_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_125649215_EYE
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months
UK lifeguards gear up for busiest summer as millions head for coast. Good weather, foreign travel bans and lockdown exhaustion will propel 30 million to beach in coming months.
RNLI lifeguards on duty at Tregonhawke Beach in Whitsand Bay, Cornwall. This scenic stretch of coastline is surrounded by steep cliffs. Despite being relatively difficult to access, it's very popular with tourists and locals in summer.
© Jonny Weeks / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_124893560_EYE
Norfolk beaches
Beaches on the north east Norfolk coast in England. Picture: Mundesley beach.
© Graham Cross / eyevine
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DUKAS_128328142_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
Clematis smothering a hawthorn bush at Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_128328093_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
Clematis smothering a hawthorn bush at Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_128328154_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
An area of dunes recently cleared of clematis at Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_128328130_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_128328141_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
Marron grass near the beach at Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_128328152_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
A woman rides a carthorse on the beach at Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_128328199_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
A woman rides a carthorse on the beach at Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_128328092_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
A woman rides a carthorse on the beach at Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_128328140_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_128328200_EYE
Hello hawthorn! £10m sand dunes project brings plants back to life. Traditionally, scrub has been allowed to swamp England and Wales’s sand dunes, but now they are being set free
This is the eastern outpost of Dynamic Dunescapes, a £10m project supported by Natural England and conservation groups including Plantlife and the Wildlife Trusts, which aims to bring new life to sand dunes, with a radical approach to their management.Sand dunes are biodiversity hotspots, a sanctuary for rare animals such as natterjack toads and sand lizards, as well as specialist plants such as the Petalwort and Dune Gentian. But the dunes in Lincolnshire, and much of the rest of the UK, are in a bad way.
Saltfleetby-Theddlethorpe National Nature Reserve in Lincolnshire, one of the sites for the Dynamic Dunescapes project to rejuvenate some of England & Wales' most important sand dunes for people, communities and wildlife.
© Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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