Saturday, April 30, 2011

TODAY'S FLOWERS ~ A New Discovery


Too tired to go on, we went off the beaten track into the backwoods
of the Ottway ranges following a sign to a remote B&B.
The sky was threateningly overcast, evening was drawing nigh
although it was only mid-afternoon.

Way up a dirt track we found it. The erstwhile garden overgrown
with rampant blackberries . . . the owners were as far removed from
gardeners as you could get, yet here and there was historical
evidence of another hand.Some late dahlia heads sought the light
through blackberry tangles and this, to me totally new creeper
shone lanterns of pink into the gathering gloom.


At first, and from a distance, it had the look of a passionfruit ,
yet when I had braved an overgrown ditch where someone had
attempted to cut up a fallen branch with a chainsaw but had
given up and left the logs in the tall grass to trip up strange
wanderers, I came near enough to snap a flower through a
gap in the general disarray.



Is it a relative of the Clematis? I have no books at hand to
investigate . . . does anyone know it more personally than I
who have stumbled on it per chance? It is quite large, approx.
4" across and 6" dangling.

My computer desperately needs a drink and it's lifeline is in
the car, it is also 3 o'clock in the morning and cold outside.

So farewell from your foreign correspondent for now . . .

Thursday, April 28, 2011

SkyWatch ~ A most Romantic Sunset


The little cove at Second Valley, South Australia, is one of those
special places on this Earth. Delightful any time of day but when
the sun sets, well, there is a feeling that is hard to fathom . . .


the sky and sea turn into fluid gold.


I noticed this couple sitting night after night quietly regarding
the spectacle of the sinking sun. They just sat here or there,
while the gold merged into, first the pinks


then orange, heralding the finale


of the sun melting into the sea



and still the couple sat . . .

Do forgive me for not visiting, I am still well away from my service
provider and will do my best on my return.
I do so appreciate signs of life from my dear bloggy friends . . .

All photos enlarge and if you click on the Logo, you will hit the mother lode and
be able to join in or just appreciate this great meme.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

World Bird & Watery Wednesday ~ All at Sea


These were taken yesterday in Kingston, South Australia on
the shore of The Great Southern Ocean.

A soaring seagull . . .


the mighty Southern Ocean , look straight ahead over the edge
of the horizon and you can see the penguins tapping their feet on
Antarctica.


Stars in the sky, stars in my eye, and stars in the dark pool
of the deep blue sea.



Yesterday was your 53 anniversary, we celebrated with a
fresh from the sea two pound lobster on the eve and a
mountain of king prawns and wine in crystal glasses in the
park for lunch. The rest I may share with you another time.

Enlarge if you dare, the stars may blind you.

Have fun, click on both relevant Logos and fly the skies of dive into the waters
but whatever you do, enjoy!

Sunday, April 24, 2011

TODAY'S FLOWERS ~ Sharp and Dreamy


Hallo my friends, I do hope you will comment if briefly, I
will do my best to reciprocate and certainly visit but, for a
while commenting will literally be a pain since some unknown
thing has happened to one of my vertebra which inhibits typing.
Please don't leave me to languish in interpixie darkness.

* * * *

Some things in life are sharp as a tack, like this beautiful
double Hibiscus found in a Tumby Bay garden.


Others are soft and dreamy and lead to introspection, like this
humble geranium transformed by light into the guise of a peony.



Both are equally valid and necessary for a balance life.

They also both enlarge for your convenience.

Do join TODAY'S FLOWERS so we have more wonders to admire,
just click on the Logo and you are there.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

SkyWatch ~ Sunset & Eye Candy


These photos are back to front but, after all, this is a SkyWatch
post so the sky comes first. Sunset at the Tea Tree Plaza in
Modbury where I dashed in to pick up my new glasses.

Sunset and shade sails reflected in the windows of the escalator
enclosure


and looking East . . . camera first, shopping left standing at car,
your's truly trying to capture the wonder of the clouds before it
faded. Just one shot before it was too late.


A few hours earlier, going for a check up at Modbury Hospital,
I stopped for a few minutes to catch my breath since it was up
hill going and entered the inner sanctum of a small walled garden
at the entrance. A haven of tranquility and autumn beauty.

The chairs had gathered fallen leaves and dust but who would
want to brush this beauty away?


The sky just peeked through the gleaming leaves


and those on the ground were spot-lit by the golden sun.


Looking out the glass door of one of the waiting rooms.



Great compensation for visiting a hospital.

All photos enlarge as ever.

Click on the Logo and do join in to all the fun at SkyWatch.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Nature Notes ~ A Walk on the Beach


This is Second Valley in South Australia, a tiny horseshoe bay
with a short but, at high tide, a deep mooring place. There is a
white sand beach with interesting rocks and rounded green hills
around. The fishing is good and the play of light on sea and shore
quite spectacular. On top of all, the water is crystal clear right
to the deep depth at the end of the jetty.


A perfect place to sketch with charcoal from an old camp fire
on the beach


or go exploring along the rocky outcrops as the tide is going out.


Wildflowers inhabit any crevice they find and


limpets and other much smaller tidal sea creatures cling to
the rocks. These tiny invertebrates are less than one tenth
of an inch and smaller (click to enlarge), I could barely recognise
them and I was wearing glasses.


Flat, rounded stones that your hands just itch to fondle and
take pocket-fulls home. I resisted, but just barely. These days
my collecting is done by camera.


The striations on the rocks and the vegetation are enchanting,


as are the bees and butterflies.


and the view is a pure dream.



Thank you Michelle of Rambling Woods for this most gentle of memes.

Do click on the Logo and join in.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

World Bird Wednesday - Crested Pigeon and Tweetie


Oh what it is to wake up in the morning and be serenaded by a
tiny tweetie with a very loud trilling. He kept on and on, first
from the vantage point of the grapevine on the pergola directly
outside my window, then across a tiny bit of lawn into a rosebush -
more trilling. I got up, grabbed my camera and snuck outside, he
was not best pleased and flew across the yard to a faraway bush.
Rats! thought I as I stood in the shade of the rose arch - but then,
wonder of wonders, after trilling in the Melaleuca bush, he flew
right back onto the grapevine and gave me a full blast of his
wonderful song. Such a little bird with such a big voice.
I have a flock of them in the garden and at this time of the year
they seem to think it is mating time, although it is autumn there
is probably still time to raise a family before the cold weather comes.

Yellow-Rumped Thornbill, Acanthiza chrysorrhoa, 11-13 cm


Dawn at Second Valley, South Australia, in front of the verandah
of the hired house we stayed in, a perfect perch for a pair of
Crested Pigeons, Ocyphaps lophotes, to warm themselves up
after a cold and windy night.


We look this way and that way, and then we fly away . . . .



For lots of flapping wings, check out World Bird Wednesday by
clicking on the Logo.

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