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  • A young backpacker on vacation on the beach on the island of Koh Pangan
    sfe_010707_0022.jpg
  • Ageing, elderly parents sunbathe with a teenage daughter as the father oddly faces a brick wall while sat in his wheelchair. Looking bored with the family holiday, the young lady of about 18 years of age, sits on a concrete block, the highlight of a vacation at home in Britain, rather than a package trip in mainland Europe. The father has a tanned back but sits facing the brick wall in an eccentric, odd way of sunbathing. He is obviously disabled and can’t reach a beach via steps and perhaps this is why they have opted for this rather desolate corner of the seaside town resort.
    sunbathing_wall01-21-08-1992_1_1.jpg
  • Having just disembarked from a Carnival Cruise ship at the port of Miami, Florida, two tourists carry and pull their baggage along to a waiting coaches that will transport them for onward journeys. Comically they also wear wide sombrero hats bought in Cancun during their vacation around the Gulf of Mexico, the destination of this popular cruise line whose base is Miami. Stitched with garish colours the souvenirs provide shelter from the overhead tropical sun though the woman of this couple chooses to hang hers over a shoulder and keeps her original hat on her head. This may be the couples' honeymoon or just a special annual holiday away from the kids or a humdrum lifestyle where the weather is far from the intensity of Florida, a favourite resort for Americans not liking foreign travel.
    sombrero_tourists_1_1.jpg
  • A makeshift warning sign made from plywood is roughly painted with letters declaring 'oil on beach.' It hangs on some silver railings on an unknown beach in England. The sand is strewn with sharp stones and litter and coloured (colored) a dirty brown stain high up on the shore line and more worrying, a little more distant, a father cuddles his baby child on a towel surrounded by possessions such as a cool box and the seaside toys of a happy family holiday (vacation). We look down on to this scene in disbelief that a parent lies down on such polluted terrain when health and safety considerations might have closed the entire esplanade.
    RB-0112.jpg
  • A man and woman sit on rocks rubbing in sunblock with Atlantic waves coming in the background, on 12th July 2016, at Estoril, near Lisbon, Portugal. Cascais is a coastal town and a municipality in Portugal, 30 kilometres 19 miles west of Lisbon. The former fishing village gained fame as a resort for Portugals royal family in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Nowadays, it is a popular vacation spot for both Portuguese and foreign tourists and located on the Estoril Coast also known as the Portuguese Riviera.
    portugal_estoril-02-12-07-2016.jpg
  • Two generations of seaside visitors sit on the sea wall of the Portuguese Riviera, on 12th July 2016, at Cascais, near Lisbon, Portugal. Cascais is a coastal town and a municipality in Portugal, 30 kilometres 19 miles west of Lisbon. The former fishing village gained fame as a resort for Portugals royal family in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Nowadays, it is a popular vacation spot for both Portuguese and foreign tourists and located on the Estoril Coast.
    portugal_cascais-15-12-07-2016.jpg
  • Sunbathers lie surrounded by rocks on the beach in mid-day heat, on 12th July 2016, at Cascais, near Lisbon, Portugal. Cascais is a coastal town and a municipality in Portugal, 30 kilometres 19 miles west of Lisbon. The former fishing village gained fame as a resort for Portugals royal family in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Nowadays, it is a popular vacation spot for both Portuguese and foreign tourists and located on the Estoril Coast also known as the Portuguese Riviera.
    portugal_cascais-12-12-07-2016.jpg
  • An aerial view of a beach volleyball game, played by young, fit people on the sand at a seaside, on 12th July 2016, at Cascais, near Lisbon, Portugal. A young woman leaps prematurely to block an oncoming serve by her opposition team. Cascais is a coastal town and a municipality in Portugal, 30 kilometres 19 miles west of Lisbon. The former fishing village gained fame as a resort for Portugals royal family in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Nowadays, it is a popular vacation spot for both Portuguese and foreign tourists and located on the Estoril Coast also known as the Portuguese Riviera.
    portugal_cascais-06-12-07-2016.jpg
  • An aerial view of sunbathing individuals, couples and families, on a sandy beach cove, on 12th July 2016, at Cascais, near Lisbon, Portugal. A couple of parasols shade some, and others are topless but otherwise the crowd enjoy the fierce, mid-day heat and sunlight at this seaside resort, a short train ride west from the Portuguese capital. Cascais is a coastal town and a municipality in Portugal, 30 kilometres 19 miles west of Lisbon. The former fishing village gained fame as a resort for Portugals royal family in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Nowadays, it is a popular vacation spot for both Portuguese and foreign tourists and located on the Estoril Coast also known as the Portuguese Riviera.
    portugal_cascais-01-12-07-2016.jpg
  • Passengers enjoy the sea view from their vacation ships deck on 15th May 1996, aboard the Carnival cruise ship Ecstasy, off the Gulf of Mexico, USA.
    gulf_cruise-15-05-1996_5.jpg
  • Vacation tourists interact with holiday resort cut-outs, on 15th May 1996, on Key West, Florida, USA.
    gulf_cruise-15-05-1996_4.jpg
  • A lady wearing a bikini sunbathes on her vacation ships upper deck on 15th May 1996, aboard the Carnival cruise ship Ecstasy, off the Gulf of Mexico, USA.
    gulf_cruise-15-05-1996_3.jpg
  • Passengers order cocktails from a black waiter on a vacation ships upper deck, on 15th May 1996, aboard the Carnival cruise ship Ecstasy, off the Gulf of Mexico, USA.
    gulf_cruise-15-05-1996_2.jpg
  • A four year-old girl pulls at her mother's t-shirt as she pushes a pushchair uphill while her two year-old brother in turn pushes her up the incline of a street in Rennes, Brittany, France. In order of size - from tallest to smallest, they march together up the gradient of this French street, they laugh at this great game of push and pull. The three are on holiday in this town, during a vacation to Britanny. From a personal documentary project entitled "Next of Kin" about the photographer's two children's early years spent in parallel universes. Model released.
    ella+sam15-13-07_2000_1.jpg
  • It is night-time on Blackpool's Golden Mile, the seaside resort in Lancashire, England. Like an English Las Vegas the neon lights glow to entice the holidaymaker inside where slot machines, games and rides await visitors to lose their vacation money. The Golden Mile is the name given to the stretch of Promenade between the North and South piers. It emerged in the late 19th Century, when small-time fairground operators, fortune-tellers, phrenologists and oyster bars set up in the front gardens of boarding houses, This northern seaside resort in the north-west of England is diverse in its transient holiday population whose behaviour can be routinely odd. Blackpool is the largest resort in the north of England and visited traditionally by working people from industrial towns and cities during the industrial revolution.
    blackpool01-30-07-1993_1.jpg
  • Employees in a central London office work dilligently alongside the reminders of vacations that colleagues and friends have taken. Picture postcard souvenirs have been lined up as a display of the perfect holiday when they have returned to work to put their shoulders to the grindstone. It is a scene of wishful thinking, of 'wish you were here!' and of looking forward to the next break from the toil of their careers so by showing the idyllic locations of their dreams with these visual reminders, can they imagine the beauty of these places: Tenby in south Wales, the Lake District in northern England and a country hall set in, perhaps, the Scottish  hills. An out of focus worker stares intensely into his PC, perhaps thinking of escapism and a life outside these four walls.
    ernst+young221-09-08-2007_1.jpg
  • Beneath an ugly breeze block concrete wall, a couple are enjoying their holiday in the English seaside town of Paignton, Devon. Sitting in striped deckchairs they are both curiously touching their own genital areas between their legs, perhaps both scratching an itch. The lady in sunglasses wearing a floral dress on the left looks guilty while her topless male partner appears more amused by the interruption. In this depressing corner of Paignton, also called the English Riviera, the grey construction behind them is a grim reminder of what it is often like to holiday in one's own home country where few exotic luxuries are found. Such squalor is unfortunately common around the UK and a reason why people take their vacations abroad. Even the grass below them is bare with weeds growing and soil at the foot of the wall.
    england_beach01-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • At the famous Butlins holiday camp in the Somerset town of Minehead, a poolside lifeguard overlooks the main  pool from an overhead bridge. Behind him a monorail transports holidaymakers around the resort. Wearing the large letter B for Butlins on his red vest, the young lad sucks on his whistle held between his lips and prominently, the words 'Made in England' have been tattooed on his left shoulder - as if a statement for his patriotic ideals but also for those of Butlins - an institution for the British working classes who after the war had the opportunity to spend their summers at special resorts in seaside towns that provided entertainment and fun. Butlins and other camp businesses went into decline when the masses preferred Spanish vacations but have since been revived as travel costs have again soared and holidays at home are once again popular.
    butlins_pool08-16-1986_1.jpg
  • A sleeping Brit holidaymaker lies on the pavement outside the Exmoor Bar in the Butlins holiday camp at Minehead, Devon. A lady also sleeps with head propped up on an elbow with empty pint glasses on the bench. Butlins and other camp businesses went into decline when the masses preferred Spanish vacations but have since been revived as travel costs have again soared and holidays at home are once again popular.
    burlins_holiday02-16-08-1986_1.jpg
  • Tourists explore tourist sombrero trinket shops during their cruise ship excursion at Chaccoben Mayan ruins. Having disembarked from a Carnival Cruise ship at the port of Cancun, Mexico two excursion tourists walk towards a shop rack of the tacky Mexican hats, displayed under a tropical sun at the archaeological ruins of Chaccoben, Yukatan. Stitched with yellow edging and with a velvet top, the hats are prized by Americans on once in a lifetime vacations.
    tourist_sombreros01-18-05-1996_1_1.jpg
  • The A30 highway runs deep into the South-West of England - from Exeter in the county of Devon to Penzance in the narrow peninsular of Cornwall. On certain dates in the calendar routes like this, near the Cornish town of Bodmin, England, come to a standstill from the huge volume of cars and private vehicles, all heading down to costal resorts and better weather. We see here a huge tailback of traffic that is queueing along one side of the British dual-carriageway (two lanes in each direction) from close-up  to the distance down and up a natural hill in this undulating landscape. The cars have edged forward are nose to tail for hours in summer heatwave and tempers fray, children arguing in the back and an otherwise relaxed holiday mood suddenly goes bad.
    RB_122-28-08-2000.jpg
  • Four young women sunbathe in their bikinis in coastal dunes, on 25th May 1992, in Great Yarmouth, Suffolk, England.
    sunbathing_girls-25-05-1992.jpg
  • A beach shop and fish sign shadows at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. The words 'Buckets and Spades' have been stenciled on the window of this shop on the seafront. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    southwold_seaside01-25-07-2012_1_1.jpg
  • Beach family enjoy late sun in early evening at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk. This shingle is a haven for families who make towards the east English coast towns, known for its lack of branded commercialism. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    seaside_family01-25-07-2012-2.jpg
  • As a boy swings from a tree, canoeists enjoy a day's paddling down the River Lesse, Belgium's prime kayaking destination  in the southern Ardennes region. At Anseremme, south of the town of Dinant, the adventurers negotiate their way down 21 km of gentle fresh water through the beautiful Belgian gorges and forests. Before plunging down a weir (Barrage in French) near a camp site they are pelted by splashing water from campers in the water. The red canoes have been hired for the day from 'Kayaks Ansiaux' and another rival company who rent blue boats. Families and young people make the slow journey along the Lesse, Paddles match the colours of the canoes and they all glint off a strong afternoon sun during the high-season holiday month. Most commonly routes start in Han and go all the way down to Dinant, where the Lesse meets the Meuse.
    germany_holiday39-06082008_1.jpg
  • Union Jack flags flutter on a summer breeze at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. The triangular pennants flutter in the wind in a quintessential scene of Englishness. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    british_seaside02-25-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Expensive real estate beach hut at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box. The huts are an iconic image resorts such as Southwold, the most quintessential of British beach holiday destinations. Today Southwold’s beach huts are most likely to hit the national media because of their value meaning that they sell for large sums of money. Estate agents Durrants say huts on the promenade behind the sale item can go for £100,000. In 2012 a derelict beach hut in Southwold was on the market for £40,000.
    beach_hut04-25-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Expensive real estate beach hut at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box. The huts are an iconic image resorts such as Southwold, the most quintessential of British beach holiday destinations. Today Southwold’s beach huts are most likely to hit the national media because of their value meaning that they sell for large sums of money. Estate agents Durrants say huts on the promenade behind the sale item can go for £100,000. In 2012 a derelict beach hut in Southwold was on the market for £40,000.
    beach_hut02-25-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Expensive real estate beach hut at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk,known for its lack of branded commercialism. A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box. The huts are an iconic image resorts such as Southwold, the most quintessential of British beach holiday destinations. Today Southwold’s beach huts are most likely to hit the national media because of their value meaning that they sell for large sums of money. Estate agents Durrants say huts on the promenade behind the sale item can go for £100,000. In 2012 a derelict beach hut in Southwold was on the market for £40,000.
    beach_huts02-25-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Expensive real estate beach hut at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box. The huts are an iconic image resorts such as Southwold, the most quintessential of British beach holiday destinations. Today Southwold’s beach huts are most likely to hit the national media because of their value meaning that they sell for large sums of money. Estate agents Durrants say huts on the promenade behind the sale item can go for £100,000. In 2012 a derelict beach hut in Southwold was on the market for £40,000.
    beach_hut01-25-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Expensive real estate beach hut at 4x4 car at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box. The huts are an iconic image resorts such as Southwold, the most quintessential of British beach holiday destinations. Today Southwold’s beach huts are most likely to hit the national media because of their value meaning that they sell for large sums of money. Estate agents Durrants say huts on the promenade behind the sale item can go for £100,000. In 2012 a derelict beach hut in Southwold was on the market for £40,000.
    4x4_seaside01-25-07-2012_1.jpg
  • A land rover drives through the worlds largest natural crater meassuring 40 x 10 Kms wide in the Negev desert, Israel.
    cp_isr_0131_1.jpg
  • Kitchen worker sporting old Butlins badges on his lapels. <br />
Butlins issued badges, a different design each year, right up to 1967. Butlins Skegness is a holiday camp located in Ingoldmells near Skegness in Lincolnshire. Sir William Butlin conceived of its creation based on his experiences at a Canadian summer camp in his youth and by observation of the actions of other holiday accommodation providers, both in seaside resort lodging houses and in earlier smaller holiday campsThe camp began opened in 1936, when it quickly proved to be a success with a need for expansion. The camp included dining and recreation facilities, such as dance halls and sports fields. Over the past 75 years the camp has seen continuous use and development, in the mid-1980s and again in the late 1990s being subject to substantial investment and redevelopment. In the late 1990s the site was re-branded as a holiday resort, and remains open today as one of three remaining Butlins resorts.
    099Butlins Holiday Camp 1982.jpg
  • Whilst many English seaside piers are in decline, Southwold Pier is enjoying renewed popularity. The pier sign is at the Suffolk seaside town's seafront. Southwold Pier was built in 1900, and, at 247 metres (about 810 feet) was long enough to accommodate the Belle steamers which carried trippers along the coast. In World War 2, it was weakened by having two breaches blown in it: one by the Royal Engineers to hinder a possible German invasion, and the other by a loose sea-mine. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    southwold_pier03-25-07-2012_1_1.jpg
  • A beach family walk below fish shadows at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. A father and girl make their way beneath the images of the fish known in these east coast English waters as the dad carries a wind screen and paraphenalia for the late afternoon on the sea front. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    seaside_family02-25-07-2012.jpg
  • Expensive real estate beach hut at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. A beach hut (also known as a beach cabin or bathing box) is a small, usually wooden and often brightly coloured, box. The huts are an iconic image resorts such as Southwold, the most quintessential of British beach holiday destinations. Today Southwold’s beach huts are most likely to hit the national media because of their value meaning that they sell for large sums of money. Estate agents Durrants say huts on the promenade behind the sale item can go for £100,000. In 2012 a derelict beach hut in Southwold was on the market for £40,000.
    beach_hut12-25-07-2012_1.jpg
  • Young women, one wheeling a suitcase of luggage, wear face masks to protect against Coronavirus while making their way through Leeds train station as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422.jpg
  • A young man and woman purchase train tickets at a digital ticket kiosk provided by LNER as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_8.jpg
  • A woman wearing a face mask to protect against Coronavirus turns her back on the digital train timetable overhead as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_7.jpg
  • A lone man checks train times on the digital timetable overhead as travellers pass him by as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_6.jpg
  • Members of the public, one a man carrying two carrier bags, checks train times on the digital timetable overhead as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_5.jpg
  • Several members of the public, one wheeling a suitcase of luggage, make their way through Leeds train station as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_4.jpg
  • Several members of the public, one wearing a face mask to protect against Coronavirus, make their way through Leeds train station as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_2.jpg
  • Several members of the public, some carrying or wheeling luggage, make their way through Leeds train station as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_3.jpg
  • Two older people, one wheeling a bright red suitcase of luggage, make their way through Leeds train station as the governments Transport Secretary announces the Great British Rail Sale, a month-long discount offering half-price train fares on tickets up and down the country, in an attempt to boost UK tourism and promote greener travel on 19th April, 2022 in Leeds, United Kingdom. More than one million rail fares have been slashed, most by half, on services by participating rail companies in what is being called the countrys largest-ever national rail sale.
    great_british_rail_sale_200422_1.jpg
  • As a bus drives past arrying a billboard for the latest James Bond No Time To Die starring Danial Craig, a visitor to the West End takes a picture of a woman, on 14th October, 2021, in Westminster, London, England.
    james_bond-01-14-10-2021.jpg
  • Staycationers sit in deck chairs on beach shingle, to enjoy the calm of a low-tide evening sunset, on 25th July 2021, in Whitstable, Kent, England.
    beach_people13-25-07-2021.jpg
  • Staycationers sit in deck chairs on beach shingle, to enjoy the calm of a low-tide evening sunset, on 25th July 2021, in Whitstable, Kent, England.
    beach_people12-25-07-2021.jpg
  • A sea gull takes-off from a sea defence groyne as staycationers walk on low-tide mud flats, on 25th July 2021, in Whitstable, Kent, England.
    beach_people10-25-07-2021.jpg
  • Staycationers sit above beach shingle on a wooden sea defence groyne, to enjoy the calm of a low-tide evening, on 25th July 2021, in Whitstable, Kent, England.
    beach_people04-25-07-2021.jpg
  • A beach hut interior that includes the furniture, utensils and fittings of its small but well-stocked kitchen, on 25th July 2021, in Whitstable, Kent, England.
    beach_hut03-25-07-2021.jpg
  • Staycationers sit above beach shingle on a wooden sea defence groyne, to enjoy the calm of a low-tide evening, on 25th July 2021, in Whitstable, Kent, England.
    beach_people02-25-07-2021.jpg
  • A travel family push their wheelie suitcases over the multi-coloured markings of a crossing at Piccadilly Circus, on 16th July 2021, in London, England.
    multicoloured_crossing06-16-07-2021.jpg
  • Families on a sandy beaches with views of a trawler and wind farm across the river Blackwater on 2nd May 2021 in Mersea Island, Essex, United Kingdom. It is the most eastern inhabited island in the UK, it has a total area of seven square miles, and a permanent population of around 7,000, though the islands holiday parks mean this population swells considerably in peak season. Its attached to mainland Essex by one solitary causeway.
    _51A8929_1.jpg
  • Just Chillin beach hut on a small island with sandy beaches the river Blackwater on 2nd May 2021 in Mersea Island, Essex, United Kingdom. It is the most eastern inhabited island in the UK, it has a total area of seven square miles, and a permanent population of around 7,000, though the islands holiday parks mean this population swells considerably in peak season. Its attached to mainland Essex by one solitary causeway. Evolving from fishermens huts, boatsheds or Victorian bathing machines, beach huts, Small, wooden buildings, typically measuring 12ft by 10ft, often with rudimentary electricity but no plumbing, a beach hut may be a modest thing to look at, but it holds a countrys collective yearning at the seaside.
    _51A8935_1.jpg
  • Child playing on the beach by the beach huts on a small island with sandy beaches on the river Blackwater on 2nd May 2021 in Mersea Island, Essex, United Kingdom. It is the most eastern inhabited island in the UK, it has a total area of seven square miles, and a permanent population of around 7,000, though the islands holiday parks mean this population swells considerably in peak season. Its attached to mainland Essex by one solitary causeway. Evolving from fishermens huts, boatsheds or Victorian bathing machines, beach huts, Small, wooden buildings, typically measuring 12ft by 10ft, often with rudimentary electricity but no plumbing, a beach hut may be a modest thing to look at, but it holds a countrys collective yearning at the seaside.
    _51A8919_1.jpg
  • A group of young people paddle past a riverside period house, lead by a paddle-board instructor  at Thorpe St Andrew, on 2nd July 2021, in Norwich, England.
    norfolk_paddle_boards01-02-07-2021.jpg
  • The rear view of a woman canoeist who his paddling on the River Yare near Thorpe St Andrew, on 2nd July 2021, in Norwich, Norfolk, England.
    norfolk_canoeing03-02-07-2021.jpg
  • Tourists snorkelling in the sea at Gili Kedis, a small island off the coast of Lombok, Indonesea
    DSCF5348cc_1.jpg
  • Departure gates in Suvarnabhumi Airport, Bangkok, Thailand. Suvarnabhumi Airport, also known as Bangkok International Airport (BKK), is one of two international airports serving Bangkok, Thailand. The airport is currently the main hub for Thai Airways International, Bangkok Airways and Orient Thai Airlines. It also serves as regional gateway and connecting point for various foreign carriers.
    DSCF1885cc_1.jpg
  • Departure gates in Suvarnabhumi Airport, Bangkok, Thailand. Suvarnabhumi Airport, also known as Bangkok International Airport (BKK), is one of two international airports serving Bangkok, Thailand. The airport is currently the main hub for Thai Airways International, Bangkok Airways and Orient Thai Airlines. It also serves as regional gateway and connecting point for various foreign carriers.
    DSCF1881cc_1.jpg
  • A boy walks holding a fishing net in a shallow stream known locally as 'the Sheep Wash' on the North York Moors National Park near Osmotherley, North Yorkshire, UK
    A 6745_1.jpg
  • A pair of elderly hikers refer to their map, Rievaulx Abbey, North Yorkshire, UK
    A 6557_1.jpg
  • A man holds a rope used for climbing over his shoulder, Sutton Bank, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
    A 6482_1.jpg
  • A man holds a rope used for climbing over his shoulder, Sutton Bank, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • Portrait of 2 male climbers wearing safety equipment and carrying ropes at Sutton Bank, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • A male hiker with a walking pole wears a plastic case with a map inside at Sutton Bank, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • Portrait of a male hiker with a walking pole wears a plastic case with a map inside at Sutton Bank, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • A pair of hikers take a rest amongst the purple heather whilst walking at the Hole of Horcum, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • A man climbs into a glider at Sutton Bank gliding club, North York Moors National Park, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • A young boy enjoys pond dipping in a shallow stream, Danby, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • Two young boys pond dipping in a shallow stream, Danby, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • A young girl pond dipping in a shallow stream, Danby, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
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  • 2 young women float in Chapel Rock Pool, Perranporth, Cornwall, UK. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
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  • Mousehole Tidal Pool, Cornwall, UK. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
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  • View of tunnels beach Tidal Pool from Beacons Castle, Ilfracombe, Devon, UK. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
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  • Tunnels Beach Tidal Pool, Ilfracombe, Devon, UK. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
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  • The Swimming Pool, Treyarnon Bay, Cornwall, UK. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
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  • Plymouth City Council employees clean Devil's Point Pool at low tide, a man-made tidal pool on Plymouth Sound, Stonehouse, Plymouth, Devon, UK. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
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  • A group of young people play games on the edge of The Rock Pool, Westward Ho!, Devon, UK. Located at the southern end of Westward Ho! beach near Bideford, this renovated pool has been here for 120 years. Until the 1950s and the rise of the heated indoor swimming pool, children learnt to swim outdoors. For those close to the sea, many man-made tidal swimming pools were constructed around Britain’s coastline. Heated by the sun, these tidal pools were often built to keep bathers safe from high and rough seas, which explains why so many of them are clustered in Scotland and around the surfing beaches of Cornwall. Whether they are simple swimming holes made by shoring up natural rock pools or grand lido-like pools complete with lifeguards and tea huts, they are all refreshed by good high tides.
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  • A young child looks out of the window of Jatkankamppa sauna in the grounds of the Spa Hotel Rauhalahti in Kuopio, Central Finland. It is the world’s biggest smoke sauna and is situated in the grounds of the Jätkänkämppä Lumberjack Lodge. Up to 70 persons at a time can enjoy its gentle heat.
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  • Four men relax in a heated swimming pool during the Winter at Spa Hotel Rauhalahti, Kuopio, Central Finland.
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  • The view from the bow of the P&O liner Oriana showing passengers sunbathing on deck and the ocean
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  • Passengers sunbathe and talk on the deck of the P&O liner Oriana
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  • A cow and a man on the ghats in Varanasi
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  • Radha, a low caste Hindu priestess, worships at the River Ganges in Varanasi, India
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  • Sunrise over the River Ganges at Varanasi, India
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  • Radha, a low caste Hindu priestess, worships at the River Ganges in Varanasi, India
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  • Man makes offering to the Ganges, Holy city of Varanasi, India
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  • Sunrise over the Ganges at Varanasi, India
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  • Two elderly women tourists disembarked from a cruise ship chat on the promenade of Taiohae Bay on the island of Nuku Hiva, Marquesan Islands, French Polynesia.
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  • Tourists on board a cruise ship photograph the island of  Hiva Oa, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia.<br />
Hiva Oa is the second largest island in the Marquesas Islands, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean.
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  • Tourists on board a cruise ship photograph themselves in front of Hiva Oa, Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia<br />
Hiva Oa is the second largest island in the Marquesas Islands, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean.
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  • A Wren aboard HMS Victory
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  • Detail of Lord Horatio Nelson's ship, HMS Victory, Portsmouth, UK
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  • A Wren aboard HMS Victory, Nelson's falgship at the battle of Trafalgar
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  • An old hippy traveller outside his beach hut on the island of Koh Pangan, Thailand
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  • Tourist's sandals outside a bar and hotel on the island of KohPangan, Thailand
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  • Sunset over The Thai island of Koh Pangan
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  • Beach houses along Findhorn beach on the 6th November 2018 in Findhorn, Scotland in the United Kingdom.
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