Australian Fur Seals routinely bask in the sun on the Goolwa Barrages. In season, the Great Cormorants come in to the rookery there, and every kind of Grebe can be seen fishing in the quiet lee-side of the barrage. Several kinds of Terns, Sandpipers, Dotterels, Spoonbills, and the Pacific Gulls frequent these waters, on the skirts of Coorong National Park, along with Pelicans, Swans, and the shorebirds.
Friday, February 23, 2024
Catching some Zees on the Goolwa Barrage
Australian Fur Seals routinely bask in the sun on the Goolwa Barrages. In season, the Great Cormorants come in to the rookery there, and every kind of Grebe can be seen fishing in the quiet lee-side of the barrage. Several kinds of Terns, Sandpipers, Dotterels, Spoonbills, and the Pacific Gulls frequent these waters, on the skirts of Coorong National Park, along with Pelicans, Swans, and the shorebirds.
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
Wishing for waterfalls to be running as summer ends...
Ingalalla Falls |
Morialta, Ingalalla, Hindmarsh ... they're all dry and dusty at the end of summer. The season has officially outstayed its welcome, and as we begin to yearn for the coolness and rain of autumn and winter, here's a little "sympathetic magic" ... waterfalls, because I'm wishing for rain as Australia simmers and burns through the Long Dry. All these images were, of course, captured in either autumn or winter.
Sunday, February 18, 2024
Some of the flittiest of the flitty critters
Tuesday, February 13, 2024
Many Rivers to Cross
The Wakefield River, at Port Wakefield |
The Murray River, at Younghusband |
The Onkaparinga River, at Old Noarlunga |
The Sturt River, at Coromandel Valley |
Redcliff Lookout, Port Augusta |
The Murray River, at Mannum |
Christie Creek, at Brodie Road |
Onkaparinga River, at Riverbend Park, Clarendon |
Saturday, February 10, 2024
The Year of the January Green
Brodie Road Wetlands, from the roadbridge |
Superb Fairywren at Onkaparinga Wetlands |
Roo family at Onkaparinga Wetalnds |
Flinders Ranges |
Mt Lofty Botanic Gardens |
Gleeson Wetlands, Clare |
Nangawooka |
Something so extraordinary happened that it's worth blogging about. This ... Never ... Happens. I'm not exaggerating. In fact, I've been ransacking my memory for any other year in which the South Australian landscape was green as County Cork in January, ten days after the summer solstice ... and I can't remember any other time. There was a year (1971 or '72, I can't quite recall) when it drizzled until shortly before Christmas, but by New Year the hills were baked brown and the catchments were half empty, as usual. This year? Well --
This never happens. Except, apparently, in an El Nino year with some weird dipole values and a heck of a lot of monsoonal activity in the north and east. Put it all together, and you get a cool, sometimes misty, and rather wet summer for us, which translates directly into ... green. And I have to say, I like it. A lot. The climate could settle into this pattern and stay right there, if it were up to me...
Labels:
bees,
birds,
Brodie Road Wetlands,
Flinders Ranges,
flowers,
kangaroo,
lake,
McLaren Vale,
Mount Lofty Botanic Gardens,
Nangawooka,
New Holland honey eater,
stream,
summer,
Superb Fairywren,
woodland
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