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“Fallen”, not yet “gone” – 4 Tasmanian examples

All photos copyright Doug Spencer. Each is a close view of something wondrous, but easily ignored, reviled as “rubbish”, or dismissed as “dead”.

 

As you can see from my beloved’s fingertip, the extravagantly architectural lichen is but a modest fragment. (a dessicated one, atop the Blue Tier in northeast Tasmania, 2.03 pm, 10 March 2018)

This post’s photos were taken in four very different, special Tasmanian places.

Eventually, each place will have its own post on Pelican Yoga.

For now, I will let the pictures speak for themselves, other than to note that what you see in the above image and in the final one are both the fruit of an uncommonly dry summer.

I suggest that you zoom in/enlarge.

 

Penguin, Stephens Bay, Southwest Tasmania, 2.28pm, 24 March 2018.

 

Long-fallen leaf, Evercreech Forest, northeast Tasmania, 5.24 pm, 7 March 2018

 

Rapidly-drying lagoon, Bay of Fires, northeast Tasmania, 5.26 pm, 9 March 2018.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Published in Australia (not WA) nature and travel photographs

One Comment

  1. Inkku Inkku

    💚

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