In the far reaches of Victoria’s Mallee country, the pink lagoons lie waiting through most of the year — shallow basins of salt and silence baked pale beneath an endless sky. For months they are little more than cracked earth and memory, until a rare torrential rain arrives and briefly awakens them. Then the landscape transforms. Water gathers in thin luminous sheets, and the salt begins to blush again with that improbable tint of rose, as though the land itself has remembered colour after a long drought.
In this photograph, the foreground carries only the faintest trace of pink, delicate as diluted watercolour, while beyond it the lagoons surrender to cool bands of blue beneath the open sky. The transition feels almost dreamlike — a meeting of two temperaments in the same water: one warm and mineral, the other vast and atmospheric. The stillness of the scene makes the colours appear even more fragile, as though the next gust of wind might dissolve them entirely.
And now another anticipation gathers on the horizon. After six long years, Sony is finally preparing the successor to the Sony Alpha 7R V. The familiar cycle begins again: rumours, leaked specifications, late-night reading, the restless calculation of lenses and trade-ins. Somewhere soon, an old camera body will quietly find its way onto eBay, making room for whatever new machine emerges from Tokyo’s engineers.
There is always a peculiar excitement before a new camera arrives — not merely the promise of sharper files or faster autofocus, but the feeling that one’s eyes themselves may become renewed. Two months from now, perhaps, the next journey back to the Mallee lagoons will begin with fresh equipment in hand, chasing once again that fleeting marriage of pink water, blue distance, and silence after rain.
Sony A7RV
FE 20-70mm f4 G
Linking Skywatch Friday

Una laguna pasajera que no deja de ser bella.
ReplyDeleteThey usually don't last long
DeleteTe quedo una foto de gran belleza con una paleta de colores magnificas y creo que si hubieras intentado combinar así no lo hubieras logrado.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
Most of time, it is the opportunistic shooting
DeleteThis is really the perfect image of calm. Hard to believe it just appeared. So how will the new camera be different from the current one?
ReplyDeleteFor me, it is the better dynamic range and colour profile.
DeleteUn paisatge silenciós, preparat per una bona reflexió.
ReplyDeleteSalutacions!
Over time, our techniques change
DeleteFantastic landscape. Unmatched light and color!
ReplyDeleteThe reflection in the water doubles the strength of those clouds. Lovely subtle colors not overdriven by photo manipulation.
ReplyDeleteI preferred little edit these days
DeleteA lovely photograph.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like you will be getting a new camera soon ... enjoy using it.
All the best Jan
I will not have the camera until the end of year I suspect
DeleteThose first two paragraphs are beautiful. They make me appreciate the landscape more deeply. That often happens when you stop and really look at something. The extraordinary becomes visible. I hope you enjoy the new camera you are anticipating, Roentare!
ReplyDelete...another gorgeous image!
ReplyDeleteSomething magical about ephemeral ponds.
ReplyDeleteSo calm.
ReplyDeleteGood.
ReplyDeleteExciting times.
ReplyDeleteEsa línea quebrada de la orilla es muy fotogenica
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Hope the new camera will live up to your expectations, when you get it! :) I've never had a really advanced one. My camera is a compact Sony DSC-HX0 (with 30x optic zoom) - but nowadays I often just use my phone for everyday snapshots...
ReplyDeleteA lovely landscape! Take care, have a great day and a happy weekend.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful lagoon and the colours are good too.
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautiful, lonely photograph.
ReplyDeleteIt looks so peaceful.
ReplyDeleteThat's cool :-D
ReplyDeleteIt's beautiful.
ReplyDeleteWorth a Thousand Words
Leaked, always funny to hear that word. Released would be more truthful. Nice scene here. Oh, and Canon is better, but you probably akready know that.
ReplyDeleteI love the shape f the shoreline. Isn't it interesting, how water does that, curves?
ReplyDelete