Perth is one of very few cities, globally, where such a sight is possible: a large raptor, on patrol above a “great fen”, within a few kilometres of the CBD.
Comments closedNatural splendour, real musics, wines, wordpower
Perth is one of very few cities, globally, where such a sight is possible: a large raptor, on patrol above a “great fen”, within a few kilometres of the CBD.
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“Western Australia’s first carbon neutral commercial building” is also an occasional abstract artist!
These “artworks” have a shorter lifespan than any “street art” produced by Banksy, anonymous graffitists, et al.
They can be highly surprising, truly beautiful.
They are visible – indeed, there at all – only when the pedestrian passing by, the sun, the building’s aluminium tube shade screen, and the building-proper’s sun-facing exterior are all in “Goldilocks” alignment.
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Never-sleeping rust (assisted by the Fremantle Doctor’s salty breezes & the estuarine waters of so-called Freshwater Bay), exposed timber, winter sunlight…
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When you watch young animals at play, you are often watching a safe “rehearsal” of competitive behaviours, which will become more “serious” – much fiercer – when “cute” youngsters become adults.
Homo sapiens is an animal.
Perhaps, today’s photo offers a sneak preview of a future life as yet another “West Australian mining magnate”…
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Did the brilliant winter sun bring out Cottesloe’s “philosopher king”?
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Pictured above: a snake bird, perched above Cottesloe Reef’s landward edge, with surfer-dude in background.
(more formally, the “snake bird” is an Australasian darter, Anhinga novaehollandiae)
Below them: there be dragons!
(photo is copyright Doug Spencer, taken at 3.33 pm on 03 July 2022)
One CommentWhere Postcode 6011 meets the Indian Ocean is not yet nicknamed “The Rhodium Coast”, but the “cap” would fit.
Pleasingly, however, this beachfront belies the extraordinary “effluence” (as Kim would say to Kath) of the folks who live closest to it.
Beachside, “the vibe” is much more egalitarian than is usually true of suburbs so “exclusive” that some of their billboards are placed by Sotheby’s real estate division.
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Properly regulated, zip lining is fun, easy, and safe.
Even young children can do it, as per today’s photo; behind them is something much more dangerous.
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It cost more than ninety million dollars to build.
Does that make it Australia’s most expensive pedestrian bridge?
It may or may not be our longest suspension bridge that carries no cars; certainly, it is more than twice as long as one eastern Australian pretender to the “longest pedestrian bridge” crown.
(I have long since ceased to be surprised that “perhaps we should check to see what has been built or achieved in places west of the Great Dividing Range” is a notion that never occurs to far too many Australians who live east of “The Divide”)
Statistics aside, Perth’s Matagarup Bridge is a singular structure; imagine a pair of swans, in flight…
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Dappled winter sunshine is an ever-shifting delight at Karrakatta Cemetery – a place blessed by geography (Perth’s natural light is remarkably intense) and by the planting of so many different trees, of so many species.
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