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25.01.2022 Cave Hill series, photo 13. The resilience of nature! It always amazes me that plants can survive in these sorts of locations.



24.01.2022 One thing I do like to do is keep people guessing with my photos. Here's one from earlier this year. I really like the late afternoon light and the shadows it created. Who can tell me where it was taken?

24.01.2022 Cave Hill series,photo 11. Main dam. From 1932 to 1938 Cave Hill was the main rewatering and refuelling camp on the Kurrawang woodline. The area was harvested for timber, providing firewood and construcion timber to Kalgoorlie and the mining districts. The four dams on Cave Hill provided a clean source of water for the locomotives and the timber cutting camps.

20.01.2022 An inquisitive immature black-breasted buzzard hang around me for several minutes, allowing me to capture some fantastic images of it in flight. They are so graceful, quiet and majestic to watch. Wandina Station Wandina Station Stay



19.01.2022 I took this sunset photo on my way home from work a couple of months ago. It wasn't a massively impressive sunset, but really like the colours and clouds. By using a slightly longer lens I was able to capture more detail from the patch of sky where the sun had set.

19.01.2022 At the southern end of Wandina Station there is an old unused airstrip that runs along the banks of the Greenough River. Being cleared and in an area of the station that is not under grazing pressure from cattle, the everlastings are just incredible. #mullewa #wildflowers #stationcountry #airstrip #westernaustralia

19.01.2022 Cave Hill series, photo 9. Just how tough were our farming ancestors! Here are some of the remnants of a fence line built on the rock. Posts were secured by wedging them in place with smaller rocks. I can only assume the fences were used to hold livestock near the dams for watering, and to stop them from wandering up over the rock.



18.01.2022 I would have to say that this is one of the most beautiful places I have ever been to... the Wandina Gorge. The changing light during the day gives you a different aspect as the rock breakaways are in full sun or darkening shadows. The colours of the red, white and orange rocks contrasts with the green vegetation, and the various colours of the wildflowers. I will definitely be going back to Wandina Station Stay.

18.01.2022 Just before entering the Coalseam Conservation Park, I found this old set of stock yards at the side of the road. With the combination of me favorite subjects (history, old timber and rust) I just had to stop and take some photos. This is a 5 shot panorama to take it all in.

17.01.2022 What a beautiful bird the Macau is, and Argyle Aviaries have some gorgeous examples. Being able to get this up close and personal is a privilege.

17.01.2022 Sunset after our first day of the 2020 muster at the Wandina Station homestead. This 100 year old homestead is an absolute beauty!

16.01.2022 There a number of shipwrecks in and around Koombana Bay. I am not sure what this boat used to be, but perhaps someone can tell us. The bones of this boat can be found near the jetty adjacent to the Bunbury Power Boat club, and they are clearly visible at low tide. #westernaustralia #bunbury #koombanabay #shipwreck #boats #oldbunbury #djiaustralia #drone #jetty



15.01.2022 Wishing all of our family, friends and followers a very Merry Christmas, and all the best for a safe, happy and prosperous New Year. Cheers

15.01.2022 A happy client has just taken delivery of this beautiful sunset printed on glass. It was taken in May 2018 on a smokey evening, overlooking the estuary in Australind. I love the variety of colours that smokey skies can have at sunset, and on a still night like this the reflections on the water are just divine.

15.01.2022 Cave Hill series, photo 14. An outback astro... Clear nights, away from any sources of man made lights, the stars are just incredible to see.

14.01.2022 Wandina Station has many beautiful locations, and offers a wide range of sites. Waterfall Rocks is a beautiful section of a waterway that feeds into the Greenough River. The colours in the layers of rock are just amazing!

14.01.2022 A sunset from early in December. I just love those glorious cloud formations.

13.01.2022 Christmas Day sunset at Rocky Point in Bunbury! What a great way to finish the day.

11.01.2022 The station owner pointed out this pink and grey galah to me otherwise I may never have seen it. It is nesting down inside the old pipe that is the main support for the crane frame, that would have been used to lift wool bales onto trucks, situated right outside the Wandina Station shearing shed. There was still no sign of it when I went back to the shed, but after a gentle knock on the pipe, out popped this inquisitive head.

11.01.2022 There is something special about a rock! It has always amazed me the places that some plants decide to grow! This massive boulder in the Gorge at Wandina Station is covered in plants. Nature is so resilient!

11.01.2022 Cave Hill series, photo 7. This really could be anywhere in our great outdoors. I just wanted to highlight that one of the great highlights of Cave Hill is camping under the stars, Can anything beat the solitude and serenity of a camp fire under the gum trees.

10.01.2022 As a photographer, I find the bright yellow flowers of a canola field are so hard to drive past. I went past quite a few as I drove up the Midlands Road, but I had to stop at this one. I have been wanting to get a clear shot of a windmill in a field of canola, and here it is...

09.01.2022 This is what the muster is all about... Getting cows and calves into the yards. It was a thoroughly enjoyable experience to be involved with, and being from a pasture based cattle enterprise background, it was fascinating to see the workings and results of a completely different agricultural production system. I hope you are all enjoying seeing the photos from our week too. Thank you again Wandina Station for the experience and the opportunity.

08.01.2022 Cave Hill series, photo 8. There are 4 dams like this one on Cave Hill. This is one of the three dams on the north end of the rock. The fourth is the main dam, and is located on the eastern side of the rock. It is incredible to think that dams like this exist on so many of the rocks throughout WA. They provide storage for the most valuable resource in these harsh environments... water.

06.01.2022 There's a cow in there somewhere and this is how we flush them out. This overpowered hedge trimmer is just the ticket for rounding up the cattle that we ground dwellers just can't see. Wandina Station muster 2020

05.01.2022 Shutting the gate on the first mob mustered at Pinegrove Station. 2020 Wandina/Pinegrove muster.

05.01.2022 Cave Hill series, photo 12. Another aerial panorama of Cave Hill, which you will need to open to see the detail. To the top left you can make out the three dams area on the edge of the shadows. The two fingers of rock extending to the bottom of the photo head toward the main camp ground on the left, and the main cave parking bay on the right. The two rock faces that contain the many caves on this rock are quite obvious on the right hand side.... Down behind the rock at the right hand end of rock faces is where the main dam and another camping area are. Behind Cave Hill, to the east, you can just make out another rock. This rock is not very high, and is a large U shaped rock. It can be accessed by following the Woodline track, and it also has a number of water catchment dams. See more

04.01.2022 The original homestead at Wandina Station no longer exists. This is the second homestead, estimated to have been built circa 1880's, and would now be 130 to 140 years old. The current homestead was build in 1920 and is now 100 years old.

03.01.2022 I was happy to spot this Tawny Frogmouth today in the beer garden at the local. Only half a metre off the footpath, and it was not at all concerned by the presence of passing pedestrians or the large guy with a camera. Such a cool bird...

03.01.2022 Cave Hill series, photo 10. Another photo of the incredible fencing on the rock at Cave Hill. This is a strainer post on the corner of the fence. An amazing piece of agricultural ingenuity under the circumstances...

01.01.2022 "The Cut" between the Leschenault Peninsula and the Bunbury port. Construction started in February 1950, and broke through during 1951. Ever since it has connected the Leschenault Inlet and the Indian Ocean. It is quite common to see dolphins in this area, and if you look closely, you can see one heading out to sea.

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