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Month: April 2022

Inlet’s western shoreline (“Aspects of Waychinicup” #22)

 

The photo was taken at 1.57 pm on 15 March 2021, a little less than one hour before the one in #21 of this series.

#21 offered a telephoto view, focused on Waychinicup Inlet’s eastern shoreline, as viewed from midway along the inlet’s western side.

#22’s is a wide-angle (24mm) view, taken from the inlet’s northwest “corner”; it looks along the inlet’s western side, out to where the Southern Ocean meets the inlet.

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Almost “done” (“Aspects of Waychinicup” #19)

 

Pictured is the final stretch of the Waychinicup River’s 17 kilometres.

After this spot, the river tumbles into the Waychinicup Inlet; arguably, the inlet is only truly “estuarine” in the narrow section within circa 150 metres of the river-proper’s end. (you will see that section in #20 of this series)

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Word Power: pertinent/impertinent observations on ‘22 Election

This is #1 in a temporary series of not many episodes!

Utterly underwhelming as Australian vote-seekers’ performances have been, a few observers of “Scomo”, “Albo”, “Clive” et al – and of us, their target – have delivered choice, pithy observations…

We have inertia because we have arrived at the era of personal greed and the major parties feel obliged to pander to that greed.

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Christmas in February (“Aspects of Waychinicup” # 16)

 


Nuytsia Floribunda
is generally known as the Western Australian Christmas tree.

In southwest WA (its only home range) most people simply call it a “Christmas tree”.

Enormously more colourful and much more bizarre than any “traditional” Christmas tree, it is usually in full bloom at Christmas.

The world’s largest member of the mistletoe family is hemi-parasitic, rather than merely parasitic; Nuytsia (the single member of its own genus) does photosynthesize, and it has prodigiously long roots.

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Younger flower spike (“Aspects of Waychinicup” #15)

 

The (very) different phases of an individual Banksia flower spike’s development are astonishing.

Over time, the very same spike’s appearance can range from “perfectly symmetrical, colourful, immaculately neat”  through to “grotesque, seemingly shambolic and almost monochrome”, and from “petite” to “gigantic”.

In some species, an individual bush’s different spikes can simultaneously exhibit all of the aforementioned qualities.

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Beautiful, surprisingly “odourless” (“Aspects of Waychinicup” #14)

 


Banksia coccinea
– Scarlet Banksia, also known as “Albany Banksia” or “Waratah Banksia” – is globally popular with gardeners and florists.

Its natural range, however, covers a mere smidgeon of near-coastal southern Western Australia.

Australia has 79 Banksia-proper species.

61 of them occur naturally only in WA’s southwest.

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