This post continues from Sunday, returning again to Bushrangers Bay at Cape Schanck—a landscape that asks for effort before it gives anything back. The walk itself was a reckoning for our sedentary bodies, every step a reminder of distance, weight, and time. The tide was high, erasing the intricate language of the exposed sea floor, denying us those fleeting revelations of rock pools and marine scars. At high tide the coast becomes uncompromising: corners cannot be navigated, passages close without apology, and the land reminds you that access is always conditional.
From there, the drive inland told a far more unsettling story. Melbourne to Bendigo, through Ravenswood—now spoken of in the past tense after a major bushfire tore through. Natimuk, near Horsham, an old town where I once visited nursing homes, burnt down as if memory itself were expendable. Longwood near Shepparton followed, acres reduced to ash. It felt less like isolated disasters and more like a state collectively alight, one ignition bleeding into the next.
And hovering over it all is the hollow ritual of government response: the loud, performative cry of “total fire ban,” repeated like a broken clock striking the wrong hour. While slogans echo, services are cut. Fire response capacity is thinned. Farmers are left to defend their land, their stock, their homes—often alone—despite paying special fire levies meant to ensure protection. Responsibility is devolved without consent, risk privatized, and accountability dissolved into press conferences.
What burns most fiercely here is not only bush or town, but trust. A government that substitutes warnings for action, bans for preparedness, and rhetoric for resourcing is not governing risk—it is outsourcing survival. And the cost is written plainly across the landscape, in blackened paddocks, erased towns, and the quiet exhaustion of people who were told help existed, only to discover it had been cancelled.
Sony A7RV
FE 20-70mm f4 G
Linking Treasure Tuesday






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