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Category: nature and travel

Mou Waho: Lake Wanaka’s treasured island (1 of 3)

New Zealand’s South Island has a number of large, deep, glacier-carved lakes.

Each is jaw-droppingly beautiful…but all are far from pristine.

Only long after ancient Rome’s “fall” did Aotearoa/New Zealand first “enjoy” human presence; available evidence suggests that Maori settlement began a little less than 750 years ago.

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Wilds of West Leederville, April 2019

All photos taken in recent days, from local footpaths, less than 10 minutes – by car, bus, or train – from Perth’s CBD.

It is often pleasingly difficult to believe that our metropolis is home to more than two million humans.

At least some things are flowering, at any time of year; the featured image’s eucalyptus was photographed just before sunset on 8 April.

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Word power: Moby Trump

“My” local daily paper – The West Australian – has recently become relentlessly parochial and adopted inane journalese as its house style.

Its headlines especially grate: almost all are prime examples of what smug dullards consider “clever”, of what twits mistake for wit.

The West‘s editor may or may not be a bona fide idiot; perhaps he is just a bright young lickspittle, fulfilling a brief to “dumb everything down, cut every cost and cross-promote the linked TV station, endlessly”.

So, it was a particular joy/relief to encounter some actual journalistic flair…

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Dining “off-piste”, at Fleurs Place, Moeraki, NZ

Sitting beside a very rustic little jetty in a hamlet on New Zealand’s South Island is a delightfully “unlikely”, internationally renowned restaurant.

Fleurs Place (pictured above) is a one-off.

Fleur (real person) serves teethsqueakingly fresh seafood, cooked simply and superbly, without pretension.

However, the “diner” closest to us preferred to catch and prepare his (or her) own lunch!

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Lemurs (4th in series): Diademed Sifaka

Propithecus diadema  – the Diademed Sifaka or Diademed Simpona – is a large, utterly distinctive lemur.

It is critically endangered, but relatively easy to see in the (rapidly diminishing) wild, only a few hours away from Madagascar’s capital city.

The next image will explain why many people regard the Diademed  Sifaka as the loveliest lemur.

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