`26.6.2008. 9.00 hours. Cloud level has risen sufficiently to see the heights of the island of Hoy. The margin of existence that I had noticed in North Ronaldsay, with its apparent make do approach to the problem of sea encroachment, is displayed along much of the island`s coastline. As I walk along the shores of the Hoy sound I come to a patchwork of sandbags that have been placed within the fragmenting sandstone of the upper shore. Close by these sea defences an old stone wall encloses a cemetery. Many of the headstones are inscribed with readings of latitude & longitude, indicating that the buried were probably mariners. High & dry upon the shores of the sound, the seamen rest: the sea had taken them & in the fullness of time it will claim them back.` As climate change & the prospect of relentlessly rising sea levels threaten communities around the world, artist & writer John Kelly records this process in words & images. From the high altiplano of Bolivia, through Newfoundl&, the Arctic regions of Alaska & Svalbard, to the Baltic & Orkney, he evokes the dramatic natural transformations affecting our planet & their impact on people & landscapes.