Skip to content

Field notes · Volume IV

Field notes from a vanishing coast.

Seven estuaries on the east coast of Australia, walked at low tide between the winters of 2022 and 2026.

Survey 7 estuaries
Plates 214 silver gelatin
Window 2022 — 2026
Read on

01 — A walking survey

Three states of water.

Ebb Plate 042 · Hastings River, low water, 04:18.

State 01

Ebb · retreat

The hour the river forgets the sea. A long sand flat, four kilometres of mirror, and the wading birds sorting last night's wreckage. Photographs made at f/64, exposures of forty seconds.

Slack Plate 117 · Bellinger mouth, no current, 11:02.

State 02

Slack · stillness

Twenty minutes a day the system holds its breath. The plates that survived the survey are almost all of this hour. The water becomes a flat black lake; the sky comes down to meet it.

Flood Plate 188 · Manning estuary, last light, 18:44.

State 03

Flood · return

The sea remembers the river. By the time the channel is full again the light has gone, and the last sheet is exposed by the meter, the wind, and the count under the breath.

02 — A slow archive

Six plates
from a long winter.

The negatives are stored in a flat file in Newcastle, three blocks from the harbour they were made on. These are the six the editor and I argued the longest about — and the six we agreed, in the end, carry the survey.

Plate 042 Hastings River · 14 June 2023
Plate 089 Bellinger · 2 August 2024
Plate 117 Manning · 19 September 2024
Plate 142 Macleay · 8 July 2025
Plate 188 Camden Haven · 30 August 2025
Plate 214 Manning · 11 February 2026

03 — A standing place

Where the survey
was made from.

Five layers of weather, redrawn from a notebook page. Move the cursor across the frame; the layers separate as they did, an hour before sunrise, on a sand-bar four kilometres from the road.

  • 01 Sky Drift, 8 px
  • 02 Cloud Drift, 14 px
  • 03 Ridge Drift, 22 px
  • 04 Water Drift, 30 px
  • 05 Reeds Drift, 40 px

04 — Correspondence

A letter
once a season.

The next plates will be sent by post, in spring. There is no list, no tracker, no platform — only an envelope, four times a year, with a print and a page of notes folded around it.