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Monday, December 30, 2019

Happy New Year 2019 ... if you can stop thinking about the bushfires


A page from the family album for New Year. 

Not much to say about the season this year ... it's not a very happy time in Australia, with so many people suffering, half  a billion animals perished in the fires already (no that is not a typo), and no end in sight either to the heat, the drought, the bushfires, or the patent stupidity of governments in the east, who seem to think firefighters sweat and die for the fun of it, and should be crowd-funded while they lay down their lives. Don't get me started. So --

In honor of the day, we'll put on a smile, shoot a selfie in front of the Christmas tree, and say --

Happy New Year to family and friends around the world. May 2020 bring major rain, coolness, relief ... and perhaps even a change in leadership at government level, before it's too late for anything to be done at all. Sigh.

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Yuletide 2019 was like this...

Christmas Eve lunch: sushi, potato salad, coleslaw, prawn chips
Christmas Day lunch: reset the table for dessert
Christmas Day Brekkie, while we opened pressies
It's not all about food, honestly ... but sometimes you'd think it might be! We didn't actually get to Christmas Day lunch. Dave made himself a platter, but Mike and I were satiated after breakfast and decided to just slide on into the afternoon! The Christmas tree was pillaged...



...and Zolie had a fine time "helping" to open presents. DVDs, Blu-Rays and books, tropical shirts and cycling apparel, plus bike bits for Dave; cosmetics and a harddrive for self; a harddrive and a Tomcat model kit for Mike ... and of course a day playing with the real gift this season, which has been in place and playing for a few weeks now. We got a 65" 4K TV with Dolby Atmos. And I am sooo impressed. We spent lunchtime watching the Vienna Philharmonic New Year's Eve Concert from last year, streamed in HD. Wow. The picture is so amazing, I couldn't resist grabbing a shot with the phone to see what was doable --

This, from a streaming wildlife wallpaper video:


Having such a nice time in this part of the globe right now, one is almost guilty. There's so much pain and suffering, with the on-going fires, that the crisis is never far from your mind, even when the sky is bright (as it is today) rather than brown with smoke, as it was for days.

On December 18th I was inspired to post to facebook, a message to family and friends, to not be concerned for us specifically, because we weren't in the danger zone, and then just a few days later I had to amend that post with another major message -- because we had our own local crisis in this area! Dang...



...there really is no answer to that, so we won't even try to find one. The mercury is heading due north again, we'll be back to 105 F in a few days. *Sigh* so...

If I had to describe my mind-space to you right now, it would be this:



If I had one wish, it would be for summer 2019-2020 to be cool and wet, and for the fire danger to be over already. Alas, there's about 14 - 16 weeks of danger left, minimum. We can only hope.

To friends and family everywhere, Merry Christmas! 

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Merry Christmas to all, 2019!


To family and friends everywhere ... 
wishing you a very Merry Christmas 
and 
a safe, Happy New Year!


Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Happy Halloween, 2019!




Happy Halloween, Ladies! Have been doing "Halloween Spirit" artwork all week, thought I'd post a few of the pieces here, help to celebrate the *other* silly season! Enjoy these ... They're all done in DAZ Studio, NVIDIA Iray, 3Delight, and Photoshop ... it's a hobby. I started doing this kind of art in August 2009. Yep, there's a learning curve... So, here you have 'Dark Magicks,' and 'Exorcist,' and 'Creepy Cloisters,' and 'Vampire Hunter,' and 'Night Warrior.' Happy Halloween, All!



DARK MAGICKS ... 3Delight raytrace and Photoshop painting
CREEPY CLOISTERS ... NVIDIA Iray and Photoshop
VAMPIRE HUNTER: Iray and Photoshop
EXORCIST ... 3Delight raytrace and Photoshop painting
NIGHT WARRIOR ... Iray and Photoshop

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

This year's 'orchid hunt' turns up treasure





It's been almost three years since Dave and I were able to be in the right place at the right time to hunt down Australian native orchids in their native habitat ... the woods. The last time we had the chance was back in 2016, before Mom passed away, before I was hospitalized myself, and before I was well and truly disabled (fall on a treadmill, banged up knee leading to plantar fascitis; fast forward twenty months from the fall, and I'm still trying to recover fully). The hike was a chore for me, but well worth it. Here's more evidence:




Many of these flowers are so tiny, so delicate and exotic, it's amazing to stumble over them almost in your own backyard. We live only about twenty-five minutes from Belair National Park ... and we know just where to look for these beauties!

Hunting orchids means hiking a long way while staring fixedly at the ground. Along the way, you'll also find a tremendous wealth of other wild flowers, which might not be as rare and exotic as orchids, but they're fleeting and beautiful...






Now, the last time we hunted orchids, it was mainly spider orchids we saw. This time around, we met a gent in the park who certainly sounded like an expert, but he said the spider orchids were all gone, we were too late this year. Here's where it gets a trifle odd: in 2016, we found a wealth of them -- in November. Hmm. I'm wondering if he mixed them up with some other kind, and if it would be worth going back at the end of October, and taking a look. Because we certainly found them in November a few years ago. Worth a try???

Spring has sprung in Belair, and it's the best time of the year:





...and this, above, is the very track we were walking when we found some of the most beautiful orchids. At the very beginning of October, there was real power in the sun. Enough to work up a sweat. Alas, these flowers won't last long ... we were lucky to be there on the right day.




Sunday, September 29, 2019

Grampians -- again ... we're back!

All these images are from my phone. I haven't even started to go through the camera archives yet, but it's simple enough to go through the phone pics and chronicle the trip. (The high-rez images will go up to my travel blog.) This trip all started with a stack of baggage ... you'd have thought we were off to Antarctica for six months! No ... "just" the Grampians for five days:


Getting out early, you cross the Murray River at Wellington...


...and you aim for breakfast in Keith, on the Duke's Highway, only to discover that it's actually lunch by the time you get there! So --


-- the Henry + Rose Cafe, very nice, with good food. The weather was steadily going downhill as we headed east, though, but the sun still shone in patches, between broad cloud banks:


The state line is right there. Welcome to Victoria ... and slow down. The speed limit is lower, east of the border. So -- onward, through little towns and agricultural communities...


Canola fields near Kanvia. The Duke's Highway turns into the Western Highway at the border, but we always think of it as "east," not west! This time around, we left the main E-W highway at Nhill, turning south to take a look at the Little Desert National Park --


-- which, to South Aussie eyes doesn't actually look like a desert at all. Maybe it's seasonal? So much of SA looks like this pretty much all the time, one is reluctant to call it a desert. Then, it's not so far from there to the beautiful Wartook Valley. And whaddaya know --


A rainbow over Wartook Valley. Now, that bodes well. You see the Grampians low down on the horizon from the valley. While Dave stretched the legs I played with the phone, and managed to get a selfie where I didn't look like Marley's Ghost:


There you are -- that proves I was on the trip! Dave did take a few shots of me here and there, and I managed to get several of him. He likes to play around, so pictures of him are often something of a laugh riot. And why not?

You don't have time to tarry long on breaks ... not if you want to get there on the same day! Apparently, you can drive Adelaide to Halls Gap in six hours, but we usually take nine or ten over it. Then again, we always get there safely, without being totally wasted. So.

When you head into the National Park, all at once the road turns UP, and twists and twines constantly for about the next 30k. Glorious views from the roadside as evening settles --


That's Lake Wartook, the reservoir, seen from Reid's Lookout. It was actually quite dark by now; enhancement on the image brightens it up. It had also been raining recently...


Halls Gap was quite damp as well as quite dark. Time to check in, unload, get dinner, sleep. We were booked into the Halls Gap Log Cabins:




Wonderful ... all the comforts of home. Each cabin is like a small house, with every amenity imaginable, with the exception of a washer and dryer. And who wants to do laundry on  trip?!


Rainy, misty and COLD in the morning. Luckily, we'd got brilliant pictures back in March, because the images from Cathedral Rock (seen here off the Mount William road) are gray and soft. Rain was threatening, and the wind cut like a knife. The cold abated a little by the time we arrived at Sundial Lookout and took the Lake View Lookout trail:




Still not warm, but not so windy, and the mist was clearing. I crossed my fingers, hoping to get good photos as the say went on. So, leaving Sundial, we headed to Silver Band Falls, which is a good hike down into a gorge to reach this:



Not a heck of a lot of water in it, when you consider that this is the end of the rainy season, and it should be running hard and fast. Hmm. So -- back on the road. Below, top: Mount Zero Road. Center: Canola fields in Wartook Valley, looking toward the Grampians. Bottom:  Sunset from Reid Lookout. It wasn't spectacular at all ... too much heavy weather.




Next morning we spent a couple of hours at the Brambuk Cultural Centre, which is a chastening experience. One is rocked back by the history of this country's indigenous people. I find it astonishing that any of them survived at all, and ... so sad. One could wish for a time machine, go back and change it, find the people responsible, and stop them ever arriving in Australia...



From Brambuk, we headed outward to explore. Lunch found us on the freezing, wind-swept heights of One Tree Hill above the town of Ararat. Yes, we visited Mount Ararat earlier; I photographed that with the cameras, not this phone. It's not what you'd call spectacular, but we did it! However, the views from the top of One Tree were amazing:


And from Ararat we headed back around the Grampians in a great circle. The area south of Ararat is big on canola, and the afternoon sun shone, making for some stunning photos at last:




By the time we were south of the Gtampians and about to head back up the west side, toward Wartook, we'd run back into gray weather. This is Mt. Sturgeon, near Dunkeld ... the Grampians end (or begin!) right here, on the south tip of the range.


Dunkeld to Cavendish offered some amazing skies. Enhancement on the image here brightens it up, because we're actually almost along to evening now. And --


Yes, Virginia, there is actually a Bunyip Hotel! In Cavendish, in the evening light, before we headed north again up the west side of the mountains...


We'd been hoping to get some great shots of the Grampians in the evening light, but the skies were too heavy, and sunset "didn't happen." Well, it did, for eight seconds, with a few shades of pink. But the drive was lovely, the scenery starkly beautiful.



At last! Like magic, the sky cleared for our last day in Halls Gap. We were at Boroka Lookout in the very early morning. Glorious! Then it was off to Mackenzie Falls, where we spent half the time photographing wildflowers, which are at their best at this time of year. Here's a wild orchid --



-- and below, the actual falls, seen from one of the high lookouts. Again, not much water in evidence, which doesn't bode well for summer, I think. We knew of one more waterfall, Beehive Falls, off thr Roses Gap road, so while the sun shone we thought we'd give it a go...



Perfect weather, a wonderful hike, stunning rock formations, wildflowers in profusion ... but the falls was a mere trickle. Nothing there. But the hike itself was a huge pleasure. Good thing, because this was a wrap on our last day in the region! Time to pack and clean out the fridge in the morning.

We'd decided to come home on the Princes Highway, via Naracoorte, and by the time we reached Mount Arapiles the weather was awful. You can drive to the top of Arapile, and the view --


-- is fantastic. But I barely managed to get a shot of the mountain itself, because the light levels were so low. From Arapiles, we headed for the Princes Highway and turned west...


Stretch the legs at Sundial Park in Kingston SE. The road sign, leaving town, tells all. Adelaide is still almost 300k away, via Salt Creek, Meningie, Tailem Bend, Wellington (the ferry), Strathalbyn, and so forth. Below: top: leaving Kingston SE. Center: You're looking at Salt Creek. All of it. Bottom: Meningie. Not stopping -- it's getting late, and there's still a looong way to go:




Over the river, head through Langhorne and turn northwards for Strathalbyn. Mother Nature had one last treat for us:


Sunset, somewhere on the road home, I actually forget where! Somewhere between Langhorne and Strathalbyn?? From here, you'll be home in about seventy-five minutes. Phew! That's another one to cross off the bucket-list! This time, I actually drove for a while, too. Now, where to next ...?!
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