}
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

30 April 2012

The Hunter Valley


A great photographic weekend away including hot air ballooning, old buildings and beautiful horses and birds, great people

The Hunter Valley Gardens


Pepper Convent



Statues



Vineyards




Jumping

Well captured, Guy!


12 March 2012

Nobby Breakwater (Newcastle)

I went for a nice walk along the breakwater to stretch my body after crawling on my belly in the mud photographing birds.


1 January 2012

Photographing waterfalls in The Blue Mountains

.
Valley of a Thousand Waters

The Valley of a Thousand Waters (a wonderfully evocative name) is a circular hike that starts at Wentworth Falls and descends extremely steeply into the valley, through beautiful rainforest, and then crisscrosses rivers and streams and waterfalls as you follow the valley, before a gruelling steep climb back up. It's a stunning 5 hour walk, one of my favourites in Australia, and I will never grow tired of the amazing colours of the rocks.











Victoria Falls

Wow, what an undiscovered gem of a place this is.  A steep 340 metre descent into the valley brings you to a beautiful set of cascades.  Then down some more steps to the top of Victoria Falls with stunning views over the rainforest.  Then some more descent to the base of the falls and a plethora of smaller waterfalls and eddies which are all extremely photogenic.  I put my new ballhead tripod through its paces to get some different angles.  And the best thing is there were almost no people at all on the trail, despite it being New Year's eve.  It's right off the beaten track.  I'll definitely be coming back here. It's also a great way to get down to the Blue Gum forrest, less steep than the way I took last year.  All in all, a great find.






For info on how to get to Victoria Falls

Blue Mountains

.The National Pass, a famous part of the hike at Wentworth's Falls. Not for those scared of heights.



The cable car at Scenic World, Katoomba



The distinctive blue horizon of the Blue Mountains.  Where does the blue come from?  Well, The Blue Mountains is densely populated by oil bearing Eucalyptus trees. The atmosphere is filled with finely dispersed droplets of oil, which, in combination with dust particles and water vapour, scatter short-wave length rays of light which are predominantly blue in colour. So now you know!  Consider yourself enlightened!

Abandoned Shale Mine, Glen Davis

I felt a lot like I was Indiana Jones when exploring the abandoned shale mine in Glen Davis.  For several reasons.

Firstly was the nature of the ruins themselves.  They were only abandoned 60 years ago, but the remaining rows of pillars and soaring brickfaced walls and arches make them look a bit like ancient classical ruins, like Ephesus in Turkey or Pompeii in Italy.  

Secondly, nature has done a remarkable job of reclaiming many of the ruins, with huge trees growing inside the old walls and monstrous, thorny weeds, the size of small trees, just as you'd find in an Indiana Jones movie.  

Third was the marvellous natural setting of the ruins.  Set right in the heart of the Capertee Valley with sandstone cliffs on either side.  Not quite like Petra in "Indiana and the Last Crusade", but beautiful nevertheless.

Fourth, I had to do my explorations in secret.  The mine is only open to the public on Saturday afternoons at 2 pm for an hour, so I had to slip over the fence and creep in quietly, and I faced the constant threat of discovery and capture.  

And finally, but most importantly, there were snakes!!!  Not pitfulls of snakes like Indiana faced in "Raiders of the Lost Ark", but I did see two large black ones in the space of just two minutes!  And as I had snubbed my toe the day before, I was wearing open sandals, so totally vulnerable to poisonous bites!  

So all in all, it was a marvellous adventure.  Of course, I was not there to find priceless relics, but to take photos and this I managed to do without capture or being bitten, so mission accomplished.  I think Indiana himself would have been impressed, except for the girlie squeal I made when I nearly stepped on the first snake.

.


















31 December 2011

Scenes from Glen Davis in Capertee Valley

Glen Davis is a tiny town situated in the Capertee Valley. The valley forms a canyon that is apparently (according to Wikipedia, so it must be correct!) the second largest canyon in the world.  Only the Grand Canyon is larger.

From 1938, the town became the centre of an oil shale industry and housed over 2000 people at it's height. However, the township was almost completely abandoned in 1952 because shale oil was not viable in a non-war, non-government supported economic environment. After the closure of the oil shale mine, the skeleton of a town survived in the form of some properties, a post office (that is now closed) and a shop or two that survived intermittently.  Now the shops are closed too.

The creation of the Wollemi National Park has brought a degree of tourism to the area, especially attracting birders like me who can see an unusually high number of species here.  That's what attracted me here in 2007 but this time I was on a mission to photograph the old, abandoned shale mine.


















Clicky