When Lake Tyrrell dries in the height of summer, I tend to stay away. The vast salt pan lies exposed then, a pale and unyielding sheet, its surface crusted and fissured like an ancient manuscript left too long in the sun. The horizon shimmers with heat, and the air tastes faintly of mineral and dust. There is a starkness to it — beautiful in its austerity, but spare, almost ascetic. In those months, it feels less like a lake and more like an absence.
But these images are from more than five years ago, when I first began coming to this region regularly, still new to its silences and its immense skies. Back then, I did not yet know when the water would linger or when it would retreat. I arrived without calculation, simply drawn by the promise of space.
In wetter seasons, Lake Tyrrell becomes a mirror laid carefully upon the earth. A shallow sheet of water transforms the salt flat into a luminous plane where sky and ground negotiate their boundaries. Clouds float twice — once above, once beneath — and dusk pours colour across both realms at once. Standing there, one feels momentarily unmoored, as though gravity has softened and the world has tilted toward reflection.
I remember the first visits: the wind brushing across the surface in delicate ripples; the faint crunch of salt beneath my boots at the lake’s edge; the way the light lingered, reluctant to surrender the day. I had not yet learned to be selective about timing. I went because the map showed a lake and the road led there. What I found was a place that refused spectacle on demand, offering instead a lesson in patience.
Now, when summer empties it to a hard white plain, I sometimes choose absence as well. Yet those earlier visits remain — held in memory like a thin layer of water over salt — reminding me that even a place that appears barren can, under the right conditions, become boundless and radiant.
Panasonic G9
Leica 12-60mm f2.8-4 G
Linking Sunday Best



These are remarkable photo of all the dried salt and minerals deposited as the water evaporated. They have an other worldly look that looks like a disaster.
ReplyDeletePost apocalypse world
DeleteRealmente es un lugar espectacular. Una imagen que parece de otro planeta.
ReplyDeleteUn testimoni de la buidor absoluta, del no-res.
ReplyDeleteSalutacions!
Expanse of nothingness
DeleteAmazing photographs from more than five years ago . . .
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
The surface looks incredible.
ReplyDeleteSo unusual!!
ReplyDeleteWow! These are amazing shots.
ReplyDeleteIt's interesting when lakes, rivers dry like that.
ReplyDeleteAmazing views of the salt flat! Have a great day and a happy week ahead.
ReplyDeleteWhat a strange artefacts here.
ReplyDeleteThat is a sad sight, though amazing. I hope the dry periods are not lengthening.
ReplyDelete...we aren't in New York for sure.
ReplyDeleteThat's a remarkable transition from dry to wet. The dry images look like some sort of science fiction or desolation movie. I see why you stay away at those times.
ReplyDeleteIt feels so extreme. Great shots.
ReplyDelete"I went because the map showed a lake and the road led there." A simple motivation with a compelling result, Roentare. I love how you juxtaposed the ripples with the crunchy salt.
ReplyDeleteother-worldly for sure.
ReplyDeleteSuch intermittent lakes are unknown to me in this part of the world.
ReplyDeleteWhat an exciting landscape it creates
ReplyDeleteUnas imágenes espectaculares que en ese momento parecen mas unos paisajes de otro mundo que un lago.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
Great photos :-D
ReplyDeleteI wrote my comment and think it's lost. This slightly melancholic retrospective touches me deeply. And yes, I can relate to it very well. The wistfulness about how things have developed. Here in our region around Augsburg, too, we are concerned about the so-called ‘land consumption’ [I don't know how to translate that]. Meadows are disappearing! And on the other hand, many buildings stand empty, left to decay.
ReplyDeleteYour impressive pictures are fantastic.
Thank you for the link to MosaicMonday.
Greetings by Heidrun
Awesome area and impressive images! Actually I read the book "Traces" by Robyn Davidson and your gorgeous shots fits perfectly.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shots. We do need rain desperately, though... Thank you for taking part in the "My Sunday Best" meme.
ReplyDelete