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Month: July 2024

Winter light, Flinders Ranges, 05/06/2023 (#1 in series: misty)

 

All photos in this series were taken on 05 June 2023.

All locations were within a morning loop-walking distance of Wilpena Resort, or a deal less than one hour’s driving distance from Wilpena Pound.

The Flinders Ranges region is a unique and beautiful part of Australia.

Winter is the best time to go there, and most of it is less than a full day’s drive away from Adelaide.

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Winter light plays with Perth CBD (2 of 2)

 

 

Even as a spectacularly distorted reflection on the facade of another, lower and more “glassy” edifice, St Martins Tower is unmistakably itself.

Since we moved to Perth in 1983 many different tenants have “badged” St Martins Tower; as you can see in lower right hand quarter of the above photo, the current logo is that of  ICBC – a Chinese bank.

From 1978 to 1988 St Martins Tower (140 metres) was Perth tallest building.

In the much more crowded and taller 2024 skyline, it is  #10.

The #1 ranking, however, has remained unchanged for 32 years; Central Park (249 metres) still looks down on all other WA rooftops.

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Winter light plays with CBD (1 of 2)

 

Architecturally speaking, much of what stands tall in Perth is depressingly typical of what stands tall in just about every other substantial city on “our” planet.

Most post-1960 “towers” are both bland and brutal.

However, Perth’s unusually intense winter light can work “magic”, when combined with the happy fact that “vertical”, “flat” glass panes are hardly ever truly vertical or truly flat.

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Bigger than a Komodo Dragon – South Perth’s “big lizard” weighs 9 tonnes…

…and it’s “companion animal” is a 5.6 tonne numbat!

Together, they make one hell of an “entry statement” – or “exit statement” – for those who travel by ferry to and/or from the South Perth foreshore.

Not coincidentally, South Perth’s major attraction is Perth Zoo, which is within easy walking distance of the ferry station.

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Triple K “expedition” (final, in teaser series: “backstage”, in a Kashgar tea house)

 

 

This particular tea house was commendable: the ambience was authentic, unfussily lovely, its tea & “goodies” were very palatable, and the “live” music was of a high standard – not merely “close enough, for tourists”.

Keyboards, synthetic “beats” and excessive reverb + compression were all pleasingly absent.

“Attracting tourists” was part of this tea house’s equation, but only part; very evidently, many local people liked it.

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Triple K “expedition” (#45 in teaser series: tip-top bottoms, Kashgar)

 

The above photo was taken in Kashgar’s livestock market – a fascinating place, which Pelican Yoga will eventually explore in much more detail.

The particular characteristics that define “premium” sheep are partly environmental, and partly cultural; the “best” sheep on offer in China doubtless look “highly exotic” to most Australians.

To most Chinese people, Australia’s highly-prized merinos would doubtless appear equally  “strange”.

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Triple K “expedition” (#44 in teaser series: technicolour tea)

 

 

Uyghur teas do not necessarily primarily involve leaves of Camellia sinensis.

(Camellia sinensis is the leaf source for nearly all of the world’s non-“herbal” teas)

Leaves – of whatever species – are not necessarily the key element in Uyghur teas.

More than one species was sourced for the pictured “loose” tea; its “hero” ingredients are flowers.

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