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    Best Nantucket Photos of 2025

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    We rounded up our favorite Nantucket photos from the past year.

    an american oystercatcher chick gets metal band
    An American oystercatcher chick gets a metal band from the Nantucket Conservation Foundation. Read our story about shorebirds of the Atlantic Flyway. – Photo courtesy Nantucket Conservation Foundation

    piping plover eggs
    Piping plover eggs on Coatue. Here are some birding tips on Nantucket. – Photo courtesy of Nantucket Conservation Foundation

    piping plover
    A piping plover on a Nantucket beach. More facts about birding on Nantucket. – Photo courtesy of Nantucket Conservation Foundation


    field of purple and white flowers
    Plants and pollinators evolved together in response to natural light cycles. Here's some tips from Nantucket Lights on how to make outdoor lighting pollinator- and plant- friendly. – Photo courtesy of Bill Hoenk, Nantucket Lights


    spotted turtle swims at windswept bog
    A spotted turtle at Windswept Bog, where a former cranberry bog has been transformed into a natural wetland to support wildlife, the community, and the broader watershed. – Photo courtesy of the Nantucket Conservation Foundation

    two young women wearing clothes that they thrifted on nantucket
    Marley Viselli (left) and Anna Popnikolova (right) wearing Rainbow Fleet mink jackets. Read more about what it's like to go thrifting on Nantucket. – Photo by Ollie Davis

    a young woman wearing an orange prom dress that she thrifted
    Bluedot intern Anna Popnikolova shows off her $30 prom dress, thrifted from Island Treasures. Check out this story Anna wrote for us about riding the bus in the wintertime. – Photo courtesy of Anna Popnikolova

    girl wearing pink princess dress stepping in flooded street
    Isla Hill tests the waters on Easy Street, where stormwater, coastal storms, and rising seas often cause flooding. The town is developing a project to address the issue. – Photo by Leah Hill

    an ariel view of narrow streets on nantucket
    On Nantucket, moving houses is a long-standing tradition — and one of the island’s most sustainable building practices, preserving materials through salvage and reuse instead of demolition. – Photo courtesy of Toscana


    aerial photo of a large pond
    North Head of Long Pond, part of a restoration project by the Linda Loring Nature Foundation, showing how rising seas can affect even inland parts of the island. – Photo courtesy of Linda Loring Nature Foundation








    sarah bois
    Dr. Sarah Bois, director of research and education for the Linda Loring Nature Foundation, leads the ongoing restoration project at the North Head of Long Pond, transforming a once-developed landscape into a resilient, native, biodiverse ecosystem. – Photo courtesy of Linda Loring Nature Foundation

    a dusty trail on a sunny day
    A favorite view: Clark's Cove, looking west. – Photo by Posie Constable



    Check out the Best Nantucket Photos of 2024.

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