Shafts of sunlight break up the gloom into luminous green rainforest rooms every moist step and touch of the earth another experience of the wonder of life
You gave my day a lift with the words you gave me as a gift and the things you did I don’t know if you knew but especially coming from you I took them straight to heart and I’m grateful for your part in making my day special right from the very start that was a nice thing that you said and nice things that you did
Just confirming I'm the right bird in the right place Lakeside - check Reed beds - check Tasty aquatic life - check Big grey bird, yellow legs, long neck, spear like beak, white face.
This photo was taken while creating a lakeside accessible walking map for people who use mobility aids. You can view it here: Edwardes Lake Accessible Walk.
Photography days #03. All work is my own. I do not use AI.
A photo a day revisited #01: The Muttaburrasaurus at McNish playground in Yarraville loves to have children in his belly.
There is also a great walking path along Stoney Creek here. You can view the Victoria Walks’ walking map I have published here: https://walkingmaps.com.au/walk/5731
Where the river meets the sea I’ll wait patiently until your ship comes in carrying you to my smiles we’ll walk the miles and miles to a place to begin again
upriver to where small streams become the water of river dreams where meadows grow green under skies of sun and thunder there we’ll settle on high ground ever fertile and sound
we’ll labour to work the earth and give a family birth a family that will grow to work together and sow under that mantle of blue and grey after years and many a day we will turn to each other and say
the life we chose has been a good one as good as the river is long to its banks we will continue to go hand in hand watching the river flow
Like paper to the wind my thoughts I scatter here unable to rescind I let them travel where I know not what they’ll achieve succeed with or accomplish I fear they’ll find readers with care only to admonish then there is the question why bother anyway?
so many smarter and stupider minds have so much more to say and louder voices because they so often agree to speak their thoughts only to celebrity
a different purpose is theirs to be heard no matter what without the necessity of thinking intelligently of sharing something of value they have got
I speak simply of observations of thoughts I mull over instead I speak of imagery of the wonders of earth that crowd inside my head
Fragile like a bubble floating gentle on a breeze uncertain airy eddies dropping it and raising it with ease a dip toward a branch and a child waits for it to pop breath held eyes wide standing still mid hop then it spirals up just before the moment a random push to nowhere special rescued by chance bound only by circumstance the brittle coloured shiny shell wafer thin and precious we await another chance buffeting the waiting is delicious to influence things the child waves hands and blows with her small mouth she hopes to help it survive the ground disaster beckons from the south her little puffs send fragile bubble in unintended directions she watches amazed the effect she has on the subject of her affection her will her thought her decision to act on the outcome she desires embolden her to further acts beyond bubbles she aspires eventually the bubble pops its streaky rainbow skin we both sigh in satisfaction at its inevitable oily end as it bursts in prism lit spray asunder the fragile bubble also releases wonder the child and I are compelled to create more of these globular gems to see what control we can exercise what we can contrive with them
Feeling jaded I walked around the block on one of those particularly clean and crisp Melbourne autumn mornings the type only Melbourne seems to have the sun was bright and immersively warm every time you emerged from cold dark shadows the sky was a spectacular sky blue blue blue all the way to the top everything was precisely defined like it had been edged with the blackest finest fine liner pen I found a banksia bud on the ground and picked it up for closer examination nature had loaded it with deep brown lidded eyes in a repeating pattern designed to go on forever lighter brown probosci with vivid tan tips emerged from between each eye and the nett result was glorious awe and wonder jaded faded
the joyful anticipation of time spent together is heightened by the inevitability of separation whether one waits for the other to arrive or the timing is perfect buoyant hearts rush to the coming
the anticipation of separation casts a shadow over time spent together time to dread and then watch the leaving heavy hearts drag at the going
both will love and hate the preoccupying delirium of the in between
The sun is a furnace around which we orbit. It sits in space 152 million kilometres away, providing just enough heat to keep our planet and its inhabitants alive. Every time I recognise this fact I have the same response – what are the chances? WOW!
This is a fantastic day walk in the Victoria High County near Mansfield. Autumn laid on a delightful smorgasbord of wildflowers and clear skies. For the full map, photos and description see my online publication here: https://walkingmaps.com.au/walk/5822
Natural places struggle to survive man’s built environment – Albert Park Lake, Melbourne
Man built over grassland built into sky built atop mountains to nature defy built into forest built under water built in the desert built bricks and mortar built with cut wood built with the earth never understood non stop building is death
every built patch a carnage every built patch an ending every built patch a destruction of what nature would have seen every built patch an obliteration of what nature could have been
This crumbling old bridge was once an entrance to the town but these days another road goes another way around and the old bridge isn't even a walking bridge today as its rotten frame collapses in an advanced state of decay I'd like to see we walkers reclaim this historic bridge and road reimagined and rebuilt it would easily take that load we would walk both sides of the water accessed by its span travel both embankments knowing we safely can return by the old bridge to where we began to roam enjoying nature's reclaimed beauty right here by our town
Sydney Harbour is a beautiful place The water, the bridge, the ferries, the space To love Sydney and Melbourne is no disgrace Both cities are really to everyone's taste
Horses of the Australian High Country – near Corryong.
At the crack of thunder a handsome young colt took flight down the alpine spine he dashed and crashed through alpine scrub until he had arrived in the sheltered valley amongst his mob that gave him comfort and respite from the raging storm that crowned the mountain turning day into night
his tremor settled as he sidled up to his grazing mother the elder mare she turned her head to see the sweat on his flanks the rolling eyes of fear she nuzzled licked and settled him with a maternal stare curious young Brumbies wander alone all to often with reckless care
and all to often intelligently they navigate and interrogate the delicate high country strong and predator free they browse moss fields and trees leaving only debris as well the large wild Brumby mobs roam freely about as if the place were theirs to own they churn the creeks and chop the wafer thin soil to its rocky bones
the wild horses of the Australian bush are part of history myth and legend but their introduced arrival on colonial fleets often goes unmentioned noble creatures of the northern hemisphere they cast dark highborn shadows across native southern habitats their hard hooves and heavy weights disrupt natural indigenous flows
Today Dora asked we poets to write to a general prompt about horses. She included several remarkable sample poems you might like to read here https://dversepoets.com/2024/07/23/poetics-running-with-horses/ I chose to write about our local Australian wild horses, Brumbies. As an introduced species, Brumbies are controversial, both celebrated and appreciated. I hope to have developed the reasons why in my poem.
During the fires even the soil burnt hot Many places recover some do not New forests grow green under dead wood thick Skeleton forests are bone white and ground is black
Melbourne has a rich architectural heritage. Sadly, much was lost to development in the 1970s. However, an innovative present is some consolation. I love to walk around the city taking photographs of the preserved buildings/facades of yesterday and the creative designs of today. I hope you, my reader, enjoy the view too.
These black shoes made prominent display in their window on a cold, wet day the sole remainders of a winter sale thrust forward beyond blue veil walk in my shoes for the rest of the tale