
21st November 2009, Salamanca market
There isn’t much good about this photo, I just like it ![]()
Popularity: 25% [?]

21st November 2009, Salamanca market
There isn’t much good about this photo, I just like it ![]()
Popularity: 25% [?]
Tags: Panasonic DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens, Salamanca market
Posted in 2009, Hobart, Street Photography, Summer 2009 / 2010, Tasmania | Comments (0)

21st November 2009, Sullivans Cove
Sea gulls are one of the lucky animals that coexist reasonably well with people, sometimes profitably. Although I’m guessing the quality of their diet isn’t too good especially in these fast food areas.
In the busy streets of Hobart you can see them flying along just above the traffic. If you stop and watch them, they are pretty amazing. Sea gulls and sparrows seem to go unnoticed by most of us, so they get more comfortable in our presence. I have seen the same with cows, willy wag tails sitting on their backs, sometimes even trying to pluck out hair for their nests. Or standing attentively by the cow’s nose while it eats in the hope that some insects might get stirred up in the process.

Popularity: 31% [?]
Tags: birds, Panasonic DMC G1with 45-200mm kit lens, Street Photography, Sullivan's Cove
Posted in 2009, Hobart, Spring, Spring 2009 Tasmania, Street Photography | Comments (0)
Tags: DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens, Salamanca market, Street Photography
Posted in 2009, Hobart, Spring 2009 Tasmania, Street Photography, Tasmania | Comments (0)

21st November 2009, Sullivan’s Cove
These were taken a while ago, but today is Christmas day.
Wiebke took the one of me above, I took the one of her below.
I think I was shooting a seagull poking it’s head over the top of the wall.
Wiebke is huddled up on the ground to look through the view finder for a low shot of me taking a low shot of her. One of the advantages of my camera is it has flip out screen
I hope you all enjoy your day.

Popularity: 33% [?]
Tags: Canon EOS 450 with 18-55mm kit lens, Christmas, Panasonic G1 with 45-200mm kit lens, Sullivan's Cove, Wiebke
Posted in 2009, Hobart, Spring 2009 Tasmania, Street Photography, Wiebke, photography | Comments (0)

Top: 4th December 2009, Boat Harbour Beach
Middle: Stanley
Bottom: The Nut
Stanley is an interesting place. It reminds me of Wyndham on the Kimberly coast which is squeezed between the Bastion range and the sea. Stanley is the same, it is squeezed between the Nut and the sea.
The Nut protects Stanley from the Westerlies; the prevailing strong winds. Views from the top of the Nut are pretty good. There’s also a track around the top with look out points so that you can see the coast to the East and West and 180 degrees of sea when you look North.
There’s a steep concrete path up to the top and a chairlift; I took both.
In the middle of town is a seafood cafe with lots of interesting photos plastered around the walls. They look like snapshots from one family and their friends mostly from the 70’s and earlier. Snapshots of them working on fishing boats or in the Cafe. From them you get a great idea of life in Stanley and what it would be like to live there. In most of them the sky looks overcast and grey. You also get an understanding that people have to work at several occupations to make an income - like the inhabitants of Lord Howe Island.
Fishing is still a significant industry - for a little town there are a lot of fishing boats. You can still see some of the infrastructure left over from when they used Stanley as the port to ship out iron ore from the Savage River mine.


Popularity: 35% [?]
Tags: birds, Boat Harbour trip, Panasonic DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens, Stanley, The Nut, Travel
Posted in 2009, Summer 2009 / 2010, Tasmania, Travel | Comments (0)

5th December 2009, Boat Harbour
For Tasmania, the days probably don’t get much better than this. Although I still haven’t seen anyone swim without a wetsuit.

Popularity: 35% [?]
Tags: beach, Boat Harbour trip, Panasonic DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens
Posted in 2009, Summer 2009 / 2010, Tasmania, Travel | Comments (0)

5th December 2009, Boat Harbour
This fellow lives in Boat Harbour. We saw him about often, doing the rounds. He was happy to spend time with any of the beach patrons for a while, then wander off to someone else. His owner would start walking home, and he’d immediately be at her side without a word from her.

Popularity: 32% [?]
Tags: Boat Harbour trip, dogs, Panasonic DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens, Travel
Posted in 2009, Summer 2009 / 2010, Tasmania, Travel | Comments (0)

3rd December 2009, Boat Harbour
I’ve often tried to take photos of birds in flight. At full zoom (400mm at 35mm slr equivalent) it is hard to even track a bird if it is flying and reasonably close. This is the first camera I’ve owned that can lock focus quickly enough on a moving object - I still shot a lot of photos to get a few good ones. It also took me a while to begin to figure out how to do it best with this relatively new camera - the Panasonic G1.
Rather than read and research the camera, I’ve just been using it, then trying to find out how I can do what I want with it. I have discovered a few things:

Popularity: 31% [?]
Tags: birds, Boat Harbour trip, Panasonic DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens
Posted in 2009, Summer 2009 / 2010, Tasmania, Travel | Comments (0)

Tue 1st December 2009, Freycinet Peninsula
I’m sitting on a beach somewhere on the Freycinet peninsula eating breakfast with a spork
No, it isn’t a porky stork sitting next to me. It’s an eating implement made out of tough nylon. It has a spoon one end and a fork the other. The fork has a serrated edge for cutting. I suppose they couldn’t fit knife in the descriptive name somewhere.
I got here late afternoon, set up camp, and then thought I’d see if I could get to the top of Mt Amos and back before night. I was advised against doing this by the caring ranger back at the parks building. She said it is wet, and you might slip. I immediately thought that she is used to dealing with denizens of concrete jungles from around the world who only see trees in pictures.
I soon understood her warning. To get to the top of Mt Amos you have to traverse, or climb straight up, great slabs of rock. There is pinkish rock and dark rock. The pinkisk rock is worn from running water. This is the slippery stuff when wet. And the angle is steep, even on dry rock I was on all fours at time looking for holds.
I got to the top at about quarter past seven. i took some photos of sunlight shining through a hole in the clouds to spotlight the sea in the distance.
There are water restrictions on Freycinet. An effective way to save water is to have no hot water - cold showers
. I had a very quick shower, then went to my tent to eat and read. With my head near the wall of the tent something from outside the tent was pushing against my ear and sniffing. It could smell the bananas. I asked what it was up to, and it wandered off. I think it was a wallaby; wombats, from experience, are more persistent.![]()




Popularity: 22% [?]
Tags: Boat Harbour trip, Freycinet National Park, Mt Amos, Panasonic DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens, wildlife
Posted in 2009, Summer 2009 / 2010, Tasmania, Travel | Comments (0)

21st November 2009, Hobart
This picture has nothing to do with the following blurb. It was taken on Davey Street as we were leaving the Salamanca market.
Saturday 28th and Sunday 29th November 2009, Eagle Hawk Neck.
Well, the rain doesn’t ‘fall’ up.
I stayed Saturday night at Eagle Hawk Neck with a friend. It rained non stop all of Saturday. From my kayaking days I knew it was the sort of rain to bring up the rivers.
On Sunday morning we headed off, in the rain, from Devil’s kitchen to Waterfall bay. It’s graded family, meaning easy enough to do it with a class 4 hangover (class 5 being comatose) or a broken leg
It is a spectacular piece of coast which is mostly sheer cliff. Water was pouring off the rock; this mixed with the rain and was picked up by wind driving up the rock face and blowing the big drops in our faces. We could see curtains of water suspended in mid air, folding and floating like the Aurora Borealis, then rising upwards over the cliff edge.
I don’t have any pictures. It was too wet for my regular camera, and the batteries for my waterproof one have just died of old age - at the same time!
This was the start of my holiday - I’m off to Boat Harbour, slowly.
Popularity: 23% [?]
Tags: Boat Harbour trip, Eagle Hawk Neck, Hobart, Panasonic DMC G1 with 45-200mm kit lens, Street Photography
Posted in 2009, Hobart, Spring, Spring 2009 Tasmania, Street Photography, Tasmania, Travel | Comments (0)