As you can see, this headland is an exceptional vantage point for Milky Way photography—its horizons open, its darkness relatively unspoiled, and its coastal contours lending themselves to striking compositions. Yet I have never quite arrived at the right convergence of season, weather, and celestial alignment to capture the Milky Way here. The journey itself is considerable, and with fuel prices rising steadily, the prospect of returning solely for that elusive shot feels increasingly impractical. For safety reasons, this particular image was taken during the daytime, when the terrain and cliff edges can be navigated with far greater certainty.
Perched along the dramatic shoreline of Inverloch, within the broader region of Gippsland, Eagles Nest is a coastal formation shaped by millennia of wind and wave erosion. This striking outcrop—often referred to locally as “Eagles Nest”—stands as a solitary sentinel against the Bass Strait, its weathered surfaces bearing the quiet testimony of geological time. The surrounding coastline is part of the Bunurong Coast, an area of significant natural heritage, where sedimentary cliffs and fossil-rich rock platforms reveal layers of Earth’s distant past.
Historically, this landscape forms part of the traditional lands of the Bunurong Land Council Aboriginal Corporation, whose custodianship of the coast stretches back tens of thousands of years. The intertidal zones, cliffs, and hinterland were—and remain—culturally and ecologically significant, providing sustenance and shaping stories embedded in the land.
Today, Eagles Nest is reached via a modest track that opens onto sweeping ocean views, where the interplay of sea, sky, and stone creates an atmosphere both austere and contemplative. By day, it is a place of wind-swept grasses and crashing surf; by night, when conditions allow, it transforms into a stage for the cosmos. It is precisely this duality—the grounded weight of ancient earth beneath an infinite sky—that makes it so compelling for astrophotography, even if, for now, the perfect moment remains just out of reach.
Sony A7RIV
FE 16-35mm f2.8 GM
Linking Skywatch Friday

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