Also in terrible trouble are these…
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Natural splendour, real musics, wines, wordpower
At high tide the waters of Perth’s Swan-Canning Estuary can cover 55 square kilometres – a surface area just a whisker larger than Sydney Harbour. Point Walter is where the Swan “turns the corner”, then suddenly gets much narrower and deeper.
One CommentAccording to the first such detailed study/guesstimate, a relative newcomer to our ancient land kills more than one million Australian birds, each day.
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I was born in the middle of the sea…
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Third and final consecutive post on Two Peoples Bay – best viewed after the first pair.
Comments closedThis post’s featured image was taken within the same second as yesterday’s – at 5.18 pm on Friday September 22, 2017.
On a “wintry” Spring day much changes within a few minutes.
All photos in this post were taken in one seven minute “window”, whilst standing on Little Beach, looking across Two Peoples Bay towards Mount Manypeaks.
2 CommentsMore detail in tomorrow’s post; today’s monochrome and tomorrow’s colour picture both taken at 5.18 pm on Friday September 22, 2017.
Click the “read more” prompt for full screen image.
One CommentAll photos taken Friday 8 September, 2017, in the bushland of Kings Park…an easy walk (or free bus into the manicured part of Kings Park, then a short walk into its bushland) from Perth’s CBD.
One CommentYou could describe the British trio’s music as “chamber-folk”, the Norwegian tuba virtuoso’s as “chamber-jazz”.
I am wary of hyphenated “chamber” musics; recordings so-described oft prove anaemic, twee, wannabe.
No such problem here: two very different ensembles have each created something singular, beautiful, with spine.
One CommentFacebook, in fact, is the biggest surveillance-based enterprise in the history of mankind. It knows far, far more about you than the most intrusive government has ever known about its citizens. It’s amazing that people haven’t really understood this about the company.
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