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Tag: forest

Deep South WA, Feb ‘25 (#23 in Series: Porongurup “6”)

 

 

 

This post’s images show the appearance of the forest understory on the lower slopes of the Porongurups at the driest time of year, in an especially dry summer.

The local climate is “Mediterranean”, with cool wet winters, and warm dry summers.

Each photo’s “hero” dead leaf is wedged, approximately as high above the forest floor as would be the eyes of a tall human, standing there.

In such a forest (one dominated by tall eucalypts) it is perfectly normal to see the ground rendered largely invisible – “buried” beneath masses of leaf litter, bark, twigs & small branches.

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Deep South WA, Feb ‘25 (#22 in series: Porongurup “5”, with musical bonus)

 

 

This post’s forest floor “natural abstract” was photographed a couple of minutes later than was the “5” Porongurup image.

Their locations were only a few footsteps distant from each other.

One of the world’s greater guitarists has (unwitttingly) provided a sublime musical accompaniment..

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Deep South WA, Feb ‘25 (#21 in series: Porongurup “4”)

 

 

 

A forest floor’s “natural abstracts” often delight me rather more than do some allegedly “iconic” abstract artworks on “important” galleries’ walls.

As is true of all photos in the current series’ “Porongurup” sequence, the photo is ©️ Doug Spencer, & was taken in mid-afternoon of 12 February 2025, on the northern side of Porongurup National Park.

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Deep South WA, Feb ‘25 (#20 in series: Porongurup “3”)

Any forest’s floor will repay your close attention, at any time.

This is true even when an unusually-prolonged dry spell has ensured that on this day the relevant forest will fail to deliver its usual visual treat in the “fungi department”.

However, in the “Karri trees’ annual exfoliation department” all was as it should be on 12 February 2025 in Porongurup National Park.

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Deep South WA, Feb ‘25 (#19 in series: Porongurup “2”)

 

 

You are looking at the “skin” on a venerable Karri’s trunk, as it was on the afternoon of 12 February 2025.

Six months earlier – or six months later – it would have looked remarkably different, in both colour and texture.

Karri shed and renew their bark in an annual cycle.

“Karri loam” – the particular soil type in which Karri trees grow – is primarily composed of decomposed Karri bark!

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Deep South WA, Feb ‘25 (#18 in series: Porongurup “1”)

 

This series has more birds, but not just yet; the next several episodes look at details of a forest.

These chapters are the fruit of a short walk on a wintry summer’s day.

50 kilometres northeast of Albany, the Porongurups are a “modest” mountain range – only about 15 kilometres long.

They rise no higher than 670 metres ASL, but have enough altitude – and are close enough to the Southern Ocean – to create their own microclimate.

The Porongurups are much cooler and also very much more moist than is everywhere else within sight of them.

They are remnants of what, more than one billion years ago, were much mightier mountains.

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Deep South WA, Feb ‘25 (#2 in series: Harewood Forest walk)

Harewood Forest is definitely not “virgin”.

Until well into the 19th century it was a pristine, very tall, Karri-dominant forest

By circa 1900 no grand trees remained; all millable timber had been “mined”.

Happily, however, the forest has regrown well.

Magnificent as are southwest WA’s tall trees – all, WA-endemic –  they are far from their forests’ only “WA-only”, wonderful/wondrous-strange plants.

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Midwinter on the Fleurieu’s southern edge: Fungi series’ beautiful finale + “weirdo” footnote

 

The featured image was taken at 1.05 pm on 20 June 2023, in the final 15 minutes of a walk in Deep Creek National Park’s old growth stringybark forest.

This particular coral fungus fruiting body (and its particular positioning, midst leaf-litter – it was another “pushy bastard”/ “remover of obstacles”… or, in its case, an uplifter of them) was especially beautiful, I thought…and still do.

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Midwinter on the Fleurieu’s southern edge: “technicolour”, hi-gloss ‘shrooms

 

 

I had never previously seen mushrooms with such spectacularly shiny, exquisitely coloured tops.

If you zoom in on/enlarge them, you should be able to enjoy some Dali-esque, distorted reflections of the old-growth stringybark forest’s canopy.

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