Show us your photos


Bit hard to understand you AW. Is your deduction from the leaves or the trunks.
You’re a mess mate.


seeds wrote:Bit hard to understand you AW. Is your deduction from the leaves or the trunks.
You’re a mess mate.
Seeds hello. You’re very clever. I’m always a ‘ mess mate’.
Leaves, look at the leaf petiole the little stalk that the leaf is attached to the stem. you can see the oblique angle . AW



Nice photos all.


Some pleasing light, lines and colours from the first weekend of winter. Nice food and wine as well.


blackers wrote:Some pleasing light, lines and colours from the first weekend of winter. Nice food and wine as well.
Blackers. Hi mate. Great work with all those aspects you’d mentioned.
Ornamental Pears. Pyrus ussuriensis or Pyrus calleryana or cultivars of either ? Good stuff. AW


That’s something we don’t see up here much but I’m scoping out a photographers yellowing avenue near here. I’ll be out there in a few days and I think it’s ready.


seeds wrote:That’s something we don’t see up here much but I’m scoping out a photographers yellowing avenue near here. I’ll be out there in a few days and I think it’s ready.
A couple of cold nights will do it. Btw, saw Lake Eyre around 60% full about 15 years ago, place comes alive. Coober Pedy is an odd place so yeah, nah, not sure I'd bother. William Creek, by the lake, is about a small town as you will find, and the Flinders Ranges, Wilpena Pound, is beautiful any time of year.


Cheers Blackers
Have been to Coober Pedy. Never checked the lake out.
Apparently the lake is maxing in a few weeks as full as a goog. Been 50 years since.
It’s tempting to get out there.


seeds wrote:Cheers Blackers
Have been to Coober Pedy. Never checked the lake out.
Apparently the lake is maxing in a few weeks as full as a goog. Been 50 years since.
It’s tempting to get out there.
If you can, do it. Once in a lifetime opportunity. Take your time.




Haha it’d be a perfect winter nudist retreat.
Exhilarating nonetheless swimming at sunrise when air temp is zero and water temps around 38ish.
Magic spot.


seeds wrote:Haha it’d be a perfect winter nudist retreat.
Exhilarating nonetheless swimming at sunrise when air temp is zero and water temps around 38ish.
Magic spot.
Seeds. This show us ya photos is a good thread. Just makes me add spots to my must go to list without having to do the research. AW


Yes messy mate, I love it too. I’m only really happy when I’m not home. It’s just me.
ps. Note those date palms next to the Dalhousie Homestead ruins. It’s nuts that anyone thought they could have any sort of pastoral existence there except for the springs upwellings there.


seeds wrote:Yes messy mate, I love it too. I’m only really happy when I’m not home. It’s just me.
ps. Note those date palms next to the Dalhousie Homestead ruins. It’s nuts that anyone thought they could have any sort of pastoral existence there except for the springs upwellings there.
Me too. Happy when I’m not at home. I become a free bird.
Mine starts next Sunday, carrrrrrnt wait, 6 weeks of bliss.
Those date palms are rock solid tough. You’ve been to some great places.
I’m very impressed you get around a lot, as I say, we are only here for a relatively short time, long time pushing up daisies. AW


Enjoy your Indo travels.
I think I’d like to travel with you on one of your flora fauna avian trips.
It’s good learning something.


seeds wrote:Enjoy your Indo travels.
I think I’d like to travel with you on one of your flora fauna avian trips.
It’s good learning something.
Seeds. Thanks. Supa and I will do our best to keep everyone back here entertained.
Yes, I know you and I would enjoy each others company, get on well and see stuff uninterrupted by others, enjoy serenity and no noise from anyone else.
I’ve deduced over the last few years, the ones I do over about 18 days does the trick, not too long or short, cover heaps of territory and kilometres and see amazing biological life especially birds and plants, often skirting the coast for a wave now and then.
I’m a doer, if I say I’m going somewhere, I go, I always make holiday plans whilst on a holiday.
Let’s try for next year, say mid to late May, I’ll drive up and we can head out west of QLD or NSW, or even duck into NT, I want to be warm.
I’m sure we could work towards a gig like that. AW


Let’s do it.
Imagine if a couple of others came along.
The not surf trip.


i'm in.
(btw, what's the window to enjoy the lake eyre at its best this cycle y'all reckon?)


Do you own any binoculars?


seeds wrote:Let’s do it.
Imagine if a couple of others came along.
The not surf trip.
I’d love it if B6 or Blackers or GuySmiley, Reform, anyone interested in seeing stuff they’ve not seen before or places never visited, you gotta live life otherwise what are we here for. Later this year we can chat about it. Great stuff. AW


basesix wrote:i'm in.
(btw, what's the window to enjoy the lake eyre at its best this cycle y'all reckon?)
Start of July I’m sussing but as it aligns with the cold winter the evaporation will be so much slower and it should extend much longer than usual.


seeds wrote:Do you own any binoculars?
Sure do, only the best, for clarity and vision your gear costs a fair Bob but you invest once for life.
I use Swarovski, most do, $4K for lifetime guarantee binoculars. I’ve got two pair
8x32 which B6 identified in a photo one trip and 12x42 $5K for long range observation. I’d be happy to offer you to use one of them no problem at all. AW


Holy crap that’s some expensive gear.


i reckon @bbbird's in


seeds wrote:Holy crap that’s some expensive gear.
It’s all to do with the glass clarity and composition of materials.
Swarovski glass is incredible, you’ve never seen a bird or anything so clear as when you see it through this glass. As a bird observer minute details can be the key to identifying a species, without this glass you miss important details.
A spotting scope is $12K.
The glass on the visors of the Moon Landing astronauts was Swarovski, made in Austria.
With birds you can sometimes identify down to eye lash detail, they are amazing, I don’t go anywhere without binoculars, because the very day you don’t have them, you miss a bird or some other organism. AW


Some more from the Golbourn River region.


Imgbb playing up @Blackers


Sadly appears to be. Give it a couple hours perhaps.
Edit: working now


Some golden hues.
Not so much golden but 25 years back did a Vicco road trip mid winter. After coming down from Hotham did some nostalgia stops.
Buchan Caves… the pool was fenced off. (Not that I would have swam)
Told the missus no matter we’ll be toasty at Metung hot springs… Springs long since silted up and not flowing.
Next on to Lakes Entrance….as beautiful as ever and while no weeping willows it was magic sitting water side in the late arvos, wetting a line and catching nothing.
Sadly those pics are long gone but that’s the memories you’re pics elicited in me.


Sorry no photo.
After heavy rains in the Arizona desert, a surprising phenomenon repeated itself at Wupatki National Monument: hundreds of Triops, prehistoric three-eyed crustaceans, emerged from eggs that had been dormant underground for years.
They were seen in 2021 and reappeared in 2023 after another monsoon. These “living dinosaurs” live only a few weeks, but their lineage dates back more than 350 million years. Scientists consider them a fascinating example of extreme adaptation.
Nature holds amazing secrets… and sometimes, after the rain, it decides to reveal them in a puddle in the middle of the desert.
In semi lockdown I'm finally sorting through a lifetime of photos and inspired by what Craig and Andy recently posted I thought why not.
We travel a fair bit and there has to be some crackers in the vaults.
Good if we follow the Swellnet tradition of not naming or being too obvious.