SupaWallace escapades

basesix's picture
basesix started the topic in Sunday, 9 Mar 2025 at 11:51am

cos, y'know.. we're curious.
PB & J, or 'the original odd couple'.
either way, stay social boys.

seeds's picture
seeds's picture
seeds Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 9:35pm
AlfredWallace wrote:
seeds wrote:

I wanna see Supa’s pearly whites!

You can’t see them, the reflection would melt a sun spot resulting in solar flare activity on earth. Just saying. AW

Haha he could get a gig on the next Trivago advertisement possibly.
(You’d have to have seen it)
Good stuff. And only jokes Supa they looked good. Seriously thinking about it myself.

basesix's picture
basesix's picture
basesix Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 9:36pm
seeds wrote:

I wanna see Supa’s pearly whites!

I wanna see @AW's pappadam beige's..

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 9:41pm

A bit of Wallace reflection.

In Tangkoko NE Sulawesi, stumbled across this, I was stoked, my life hero.
Further on into the forest we lucked upon a great troop of Macaques.
Two relatives from different eras.

Indonesian people have been well taught over decades about Wallace and the Line named after him. AW

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seeds's picture
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seeds Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 9:44pm

Well well, I bet that made your day AW!

basesix's picture
basesix's picture
basesix Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 9:49pm
seeds wrote:

Well well, I bet that made your day AW!

epic

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 9:53pm
seeds wrote:

Well well, I bet that made your day AW!

Seeds. Hi mate, certainly did, paused at the large bust and read all that was attributed to him, such an achievement for a young man at his time and place.
I can honestly say I was quite moved by it all.
What a contribution to humanity, devising the theory of natural selection through transmutational change, he was way ahead of the rest of them.AW

seeds's picture
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seeds Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 10:03pm
AlfredWallace wrote:
seeds wrote:

Well well, I bet that made your day AW!

Seeds. Hi mate, certainly did, paused at the large bust and read all that was attributed to him, such an achievement for a young man at his time and place.
I can honestly say I was quite moved by it all.
What a contribution to humanity, devising the theory of natural selection through transmutational change, he was way ahead of the rest of them.AW

I’m genuinely happy for you AW.
And I thank you for opening up my eyes to the real story of evolution, with all its players.

blackers's picture
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blackers Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 10:14pm
GuySmiley wrote:

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On point Guy. The dry July demise.

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 11:19pm
seeds wrote:
AlfredWallace wrote:
seeds wrote:

Well well, I bet that made your day AW!

Seeds. Hi mate, certainly did, paused at the large bust and read all that was attributed to him, such an achievement for a young man at his time and place.
I can honestly say I was quite moved by it all.
What a contribution to humanity, devising the theory of natural selection through transmutational change, he was way ahead of the rest of them.AW

I’m genuinely happy for you AW.
And I thank you for opening up my eyes to the real story of evolution, with all its players.

Seeds. Good stuff mate. There were more players than just Wallace and Darwin, but those two were closer to the achievement than the rest of them.

You know what, often when I talk to people, generally younger folk about evolution, the first name they mention is Darwin, I understand the reason why. Darwin was also thinking along the same lines but couldn’t quite nail it because besides the Voyage of The Beagle he undertook, he rarely went in the field for prolonged periods of time. He was from a wealthy family of achievers , did great theoretical work at home , bit of a procrastinator and took nearly 30 years to come up with his own theory, alas, he was a great friend of Wallace , they both confided in each other.
Most of society attributes the theory to Darwin, I simply say to them that the region i just visited in NE and East Indonesia is called Wallacea for a very good reason.
If Darwin was the man, the region today would be called Darwinia and it simply is not. AW

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AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Sunday, 20 Jul 2025 at 11:24pm
blackers wrote:
GuySmiley wrote:

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On point Guy. The dry July demise.

Blackers. Hi mate. You are the Nostradamus of the AFl, you predicted it.
I take my hat off to you, a few things to tidy up and a few players back in will lead us to a cakewalk like Good Old Collingwood. Just scoffed down a kilo of prawns in a sweet and sour sauce, Padang style. I’m cooked. Catch ya. AW

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 12:39pm

Poso-Sedoa , Sulawesi, 2060m above sea level.

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Moss colonies, like a miniature forest inside a rainforest. AW

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AlfredWallace Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 1:10pm

Four pillars of plant evolution.
1. Cyanobacteria (photosynthetic capable bacteria)
2. Seedless Vascular and non Vascular Plants- Ferns, fern allies, mosses, horsetails liverworts, clubmosses, (no seeds, no flowers, no fruit) but spores are present.
3. Gymnosperms, Vascular Plants, no flowers but produce seeds. Conifers (pines, cypress etc.),Macrozamias, Cycads, Lepidozamias
4. Angiosperms- all of today’s flowering plants, the current lineage of plant evolution.

All four groups still present today, no one better than the other.

I found some ancient Lycopods at 2060m on Sulawesi.
These plants evolved 400-500 million years ago, still thriving today. Mostly found in damp partially closed forests near fringes, attaching themselves to the ground via a clump imbedded into the soil, some also are rhizomatous and creep their way across the ground, putting down new roots at the stem nodes.

These photos are Staghorn Clubmoss ( Lycopodium sp. or Lycopodiella sp.) and found in many places around the world.
They release copious amounts of spores when brushed, the first photo, I had just brushed the plant to show others the ancient way of reproduction.

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Distracted's picture
Distracted's picture
Distracted Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 2:03pm

AW, whether by accident or design, fascinating how similar your images above look to Norfolk Island Pine seedlings.

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 2:29pm
Distracted wrote:

AW, whether by accident or design, fascinating how similar your images above look to Norfolk Island Pine seedlings.

Distracted. Hi mate. Nice to hear from ya.

Not wrong, similarity is clear to the eye for sure.
Araucarias, have familiar key diagnostic features as you know, then when you see other Araucarias from Pacific Islands, in particular New Caledonia, wow, that similarity is right in your face. Nearly everytime i visit a botanic garden I see a different species from New Cal. , species rich diversity that’s for sure.

Lycopods in Australia are found in the Dandenong Ranges and those cold forests east of Melbourne and many other areas, The Otway Ranges and most of the way up the Great Dividing Range and environs, Tasmania etc. They are more widespread than we realise. So lucky to still have them here. Good stuff. AW

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H2O Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 2:38pm

Hi AW , Interested in your comments re appropriate clothing for hot jungle bashing (few pages back). I would have been the guy in cotton caught up in the "wait a while' or some vine with hooks on it . What fabric etc, Love the photos and text- amazing trip!

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 4:32pm
H2O wrote:

Hi AW , Interested in your comments re appropriate clothing for hot jungle bashing (few pages back). I would have been the guy in cotton caught up in the "wait a while' or some vine with hooks on it . What fabric etc, Love the photos and text- amazing trip!

H2O. Hi mate. Thanks for your interest.

I’m going to sound a bit like a brand ambassador, but I’m just speaking from experience.
Firstly, cotton is shit for hiking in cold or hot weather, it’s the microscopical fibre arrangement.
I never thought I would, but for the last ten years I wear synthetic fabrics only, way better, never hot or cold. The Japanese have nailed it.
Contrary to others of our party, I wore a black crew neck t-shirt ( vee neck anything is no good, too easy for mites, leeches and ticks to get on your body). Simply covered my arms with Deet free insect repellent.
I wear cold and warm season clothing made by that Japanese company, UniQlo, stores all over Australia, reasonably priced great gear, t-shirt $20.
For hot clammy conditions we experienced in Sulawesi and other Moluccan islands, I wore the Airism style t-shirts. It’s all about the fibre arrangement.
Minute woven squares that dissipated heat and self wicking of moisture at the same time as well as allowing cooler air to pass through the fabric. Others of our group commented on the fact I had no sweat apparent.
Trousers I wore were North Face lightweight with the zip off shorts, this fabric wets easily but dries quickly. ( any good brand lightweight ones would do, Aldi last year had a great trouser that was cheap and of reasonable quality but I missed the day they were in store).
Lightweight is important especially when packing your backpack to head on home to Oz.
Socks, shin high woollen thin texture, wicks moisture and provides feeling and little friction between skin and inner sole.
Shoes, take brand new hiking/walking shoes or boots. Sole grip is paramount and an arched inner sole is equally important. We were on our feet 15-19 hours per day, a lot of that time walking downhill.
I wear ankle cut Salamon waterproof hiking shoes, personal preference, others wore mid and high cut boots. Myriad brands globally of great hiking/walking footwear.
A hat is compulsory, equatorial heat will fry your brain.
A wide brim hat is preferable, the width helps prevent ticks, mites and leeches dropping off overhanging vegetation and down your neck.
Rain jacket, thoroughly recommend Patagonia’s new iteration of waterproof units.
A 60th birthday present from a friend of a Patagonia H2NO - style Boulder Fork jacket. It’s reputed to be more waterproof than GoreTex or PerTex.
I can vouch that when it rained, which it often did, the water droplets rolled off like marbles, lightweight to carry and super watertight.

Converse to clothing for the tropics, UniQlo make a great range for Winter.
They have t-shirts long and short sleeved, that keep you warm, also synthetic, again it’s all about the fibre arrangement. It’s called HeatTech, there’s three levels going from warm to warmer and extremely warm, obviously made for Japan winters. Layering is the key, I feel the cold easily in Victoria during winter, with aforementioned fabric set up, never cold.
Again very affordable attire.

(Icebreaker garments from a NZ company are made from wool and do all the things I’ve just mentioned, but, I’m not prepared to pay $100 for a lambswool t-shirt)

I hope that helps you choose the right gear for your adventure. AW

GuySmiley's picture
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GuySmiley Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 5:02pm

^^ icebreaker clothing is expensive on purchase but when it lasts for over 15 years, well maybe not so

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 7:06pm
GuySmiley wrote:

^^ icebreaker clothing is expensive on purchase but when it lasts for over 15 years, well maybe not so

GuySmiley.
Hi mate. Their thicker garments do last , their thinner ones don’t, was on that brand for decades. Off them soon as I found out they started putting plastic fibre in so called pure wool units.
No such thing as NZPURE as per their campaign, it’s a very polluted country for the population size and most of it is in their waterways and streams. I know a biologist who works and lives there. AW

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GuySmiley Thursday, 24 Jul 2025 at 7:36pm

^^ true +/- that but reckon that they have returned to their early original NZ made era quality not that I buy much of that clothing anymore, I just don’t have the need, we’re off to the South Island later in the year so maybe I will buy something new in Wanaka.

H2O's picture
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H2O Friday, 25 Jul 2025 at 8:45am

Thanks AW. You live and learn! That answer to my question just caused a 180 in my thinking having been non- synthetic most of my life. Have noticed synthetic stretch threads creeping into supposedly "pure" wool/ cotton fabrics recently though - the truth and marketing don't often align.
Need to return the favor so a couple of book recommendations;-
1) Diemens by Guy Salvidge - publisher Forty South , Hobart - historical novel about sealing ,colonial skullduggery and early interactions between races in Bass Straight and Northern Coast Tasmania - seems well researched.
2) The Wager by David Grann - publisher Simon and Schuster - factual account of the voyage , shipwreck and the marooned crew of the British navy ship "Wager" off the far south coast of Chile in mid 18th century after going round Cape Horn East to West -Incredible story.
All the best,

AlfredWallace's picture
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AlfredWallace Friday, 25 Jul 2025 at 9:25am
H2O wrote:

Thanks AW. You live and learn! That answer to my question just caused a 180 in my thinking having been non- synthetic most of my life. Have noticed synthetic stretch threads creeping into supposedly "pure" wool/ cotton fabrics recently though - the truth and marketing don't often align.
Need to return the favor so a couple of book recommendations;-
1) Diemens by Guy Salvidge - publisher Forty South , Hobart - historical novel about sealing ,colonial skullduggery and early interactions between races in Bass Straight and Northern Coast Tasmania - seems well researched.
2) The Wager by David Grann - publisher Simon and Schuster - factual account of the voyage , shipwreck and the marooned crew of the British navy ship "Wager" off the far south coast of Chile in mid 18th century after going round Cape Horn East to West -Incredible story.
All the best,

H2O. Hi mate.
Thanks for your reply.
I’m a book nerd, I’ll definitely check out those two recommendations.
Both sound very interesting. AW