The Avoca River has known both erasure and excess. There were years when its bed lay bare, a pale ribbon of stones and dust, the water reduced to memory and promise. At other times it has risen without restraint, spreading across paddocks and roads, reminding regional Victoria that absence is never permanent and that return can be forceful.
I had intended to stop in town, to step inside the renowned heritage general store where time is measured in ledgers and worn timber floors. Instead, the river detained me. Beneath the bridge, I paused, and there the Avoca offered something quieter. Trees leaned toward the water, their reflections drawn long and patient, doubling themselves in the slow current. Eucalypts, hardened by drought and fire, softened in the mirror below, leaves trembling between sky and stream.
This river is an old traveller. Rising in the Pyrenees, it winds north through box-ironbark country, sustaining red gums, reeds, and the careful lives of birds that wait for water as others wait for seasons. Long before bridges and stores, it shaped paths for people and animals alike, a corridor of nourishment in a land that demands resilience. Even now, its flow is uncertain, shaped by rain, heat, and the long human habit of taking more than is returned.
Standing there, camera lifted, I understood why the Avoca refuses to be merely useful. It dries, it floods, it pauses in reflective stillness. Under the bridge, with trees duplicated in its surface, the river held both its history and its warning: that survival here has always been an act of patience, and that beauty often appears when plans are gently undone.
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It looks so tranquil. Rivers can be so deceptive.
ReplyDeleteAlmost too calm
DeleteVery pretty view of the river, lovely photos.
ReplyDeleteTake care, have a great day!
I like the tranquility too
DeleteDos imágenes de un mismo lugar que expresan la abundancia y la sequedad. Bien captado.
ReplyDeleteYeah it dries out pretty quickly
DeleteThe intense colors and the reflections are gorgeous. The second edit is lovely, too. Making it a more somber scene.
ReplyDeleteThe green in Australian landscape is often hard to metre
DeleteLa naturaleza siempre da señales de que las cosas pueden cambiar de un momento a otro, el encontrarlo con caudal pudiste tomar unos bonitos reflejos.
ReplyDeleteAlgo que me hizo fijar con detenimiento es el nombre de la cordillera en la que nace ese río, de nombre Pirineos como la cordillera entre España y Francia.
Saludos.
Yeah we must have stolen the names off yours lol
DeleteBeautiful shots. It's always better to have the water than not.
ReplyDeleteThank you for joining the Awww Mondays Blog Hop.
Have a fabulous Awww Monday and week. ☺
I was going to ask if that was a billabong, but if I understand correctly, a billabong would not be part of a river.
ReplyDeleteVery beautiful to see
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas
Great blue.
ReplyDeleteIt is a quintessential Australian bush scene, as are droughts and flooding rains.
ReplyDeletePreciosas las dos fotos. Los colores son excelentes y los reflejos los embellecen doblando esa realidad y convirtiendola en dos.
ReplyDeleteUn abrazo
Bellas escenas de naturaleza, amigo.
ReplyDeleteCalm times with the beautiful reflections. Looks great both of them.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
The colors are so unique!
ReplyDeleteTruly amazing
ReplyDelete...the natural world is always a treasure, thanks!
ReplyDeleteMolt boniques les dues fotos amb aquests reflexes.
ReplyDeleteAi si tinguéssim una aixeta per controlar la pluja!
Salutacions!
A lovely scene.
ReplyDeleteThank you for joining the Happy Tuesday Blog Hop.
ReplyDeleteHave a fabulous Happy Tuesday. ☺
Wonderful colors,
ReplyDeleteespecially those shades of blue!!