Showing posts with label Olympus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olympus. Show all posts

Saturday, December 20, 2025

Mount Dandenong Wallaby for Saturday Critter

 


Among the weeds and soft, ungoverned grasses of Mount Dandenong, a wallaby paused—small enough to seem newly arrived in the world, its movements tentative, its attention alert. The young animal stood half-concealed by green growth, as though the mountain itself were teaching it how to remain unseen. There was something quietly disarming in the sight: a reminder that, even here, life continues on its own careful terms.

Mount Dandenong has long drawn people upward from Melbourne, away from the ordered grid of the city and into cooler air and taller trees. Tourists arrive for the forest drives, the lookouts, the gardens arranged with deliberate beauty, and the promise of escape contained within an easy distance. Cafés line the ridges, and cars pull over for views that frame the city far below, softened by haze. It is a place marketed for its charm and calm, its sense of elevation—both literal and emotional.

Yet encounters like this wallaby quietly resist the polished narrative of tourism. Beyond the paths and signposts, the mountain remains a working landscape of lives largely unnoticed. The grasses and weeds shelter creatures who do not pose for photographs, who move through the margins left between roads and picnic grounds. The presence of a young wallaby, still learning its place, gives the area a deeper texture: not just a destination, but a shared ground where human curiosity and older, ongoing patterns of life intersect.

In Mount Dandenong, tourism may set the stage, but moments like this supply the meaning. The mountain offers more than views and refreshment; it offers brief, unguarded glimpses into a continuity that predates and outlasts every visit.


Olympus E520

150mm f2


Linking Saturday Critter


Saturday, December 6, 2025

Butterfly for Saturday Critter

 


The scene glows with a quiet, luminous warmth—the kind of yellow that doesn’t shout but settles, like a secret whispered by sunlight. In the Melbourne Botanical Garden, colour never arrives alone; it drifts in with the breeze, pools at the base of old trees, lingers on petals as though reluctant to move on. But this shade of yellow feels deliberate, almost sculpted by the softness of the afternoon.

It is a colour that seems to hold its own weather: gentle, honey-warm, a counterpoint to the unpredictable moods of the city beyond the gates. It brightens the air without force, casting a mellow radiance along the winding paths and over the rippling lawns. You can feel it filling the space between leaves, turning shadows tender rather than sharp, as though the garden itself is taking a long, unhurried breath.

Nearby, the lake mirrors this gold—broken by the glide of a bird, a passing breeze, or the dip of a willow branch. The trees, old and knowing, seem to lean into the glow as if recalling seasons when the world felt slower. Even the faint hum of city life fades under this yellow hush, softened into something that feels almost musical.

Here, in this light, time loosens. Colours deepen. The ordinary becomes luminous.
It is the kind of yellow that lifts the heart without asking, the kind that finds you rather than the other way around—quiet, steady, and full of its own gentle grace.


Olympus E520 

150mm f2 


Linking Saturday Critter


Sunday, September 28, 2025

Wreck Beach Moonlight Head Beach for Sunday Best

 






Joel and I have journeyed to Wreck Beach on three occasions, each visit impressed upon us by the austere beauty and the peril of that lonely shore. Remote and forbidding, it is a place where the turbulent Southern Ocean pounds without respite, and where the rising tide swallows the sands entirely, climbing high against the sheer cliff faces and leaving no safe passage.

The path thither is no easy one. A descent of more than three hundred steps leads to the long strand, and from there the traveller must endure a walk of nearly five kilometres along soft and yielding sand, each step burdened by the pull of the sea winds. Yet at the end lies a solemn reward: the scattered relics of wrecks long past, anchors and iron fastenings now half-buried in stone and seaweed. These are the remnants of the Marie Gabrielle, driven aground in 1869, and of the Fiji, lost to these merciless waters in 1891. Once proud ships upon the trade routes, they met their fate here, on a coast that mariners dreaded and named a graveyard.

I have shared images of this place twice before, but in revisiting my photographs I felt compelled once again to dwell upon its memory. Wreck Beach is more than a strand of sand—it is a living monument to history, where the power of the sea and the fragility of man’s endeavour stand forever in stark and solemn contrast.


Panasonic G9

Olympus 17mm f1.2 



Linking Sunday Best



Saturday, September 21, 2024

Saturday, June 22, 2024

More critter for Saturday Critter

 


Not sure it is a moth or a butterfly. 

Olympus 150mm f2 

Linking Saturday Critter

I got a new OLED monitor for my desktop in my room. It turned out there was no speaker function. So I had to get Joel to sort it out today. 






Saturday, April 20, 2024

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Lady bug in Camberwell for Saturday Critter

 


It is nice to see green bokeh


Olympus 150 f2


Linking Saturday Critter


Saturday, October 28, 2023

Galah in Ringwood Melbourne for Saturday Critter


 

They are starting to make noises every morning. Really noisy. 

Olympus 150mm f2

Linking Saturday Critter



Monday, September 18, 2023

Collins Street Arcade Mural for Mural Monday

 


This was drawn on the wall of a Chinese restaurant joint. The painting was quite oriental. 


Olympus E520

Linking Mural Monday


Totally buggered after a whole night out with Joel for hunting Milkyway bow in Phillip Island. We got the shot before the dark cloud cover came in. Lucky for us.




Friday, July 14, 2023

Moonlight Head Beach for Skywatch Friday

 


This was one of the take I did in the past at Wreck Beach. I never seemed to get a decent weather there. 


Joel and I are planning to do this adventure again later this year. Mainly for astro photography along the great ocean road. Hopefully weather is better.


Panasonic G9

Olympus 17mm f1.2 


Linking Skywatch Friday



Saturday, March 11, 2023

Butterfly for Eileen's Saturday Critter

 


It is quite difficult to even post on blogspot. I have scheduled all the photo posts on the other street photography 3 weeks ahead. Here, I was planning to post it day by day. Very often, the editing platform just crashed for no apparent reasons either. 

Getting home to my home town in Taipei is always a nightmare. Everyone seems to want to borrow money for their own family dysfunction. I am not a bank. It is really getting to me that things have to get ugly.

I also learnt that I cannot even copy and paste my blog link address to all the weekly event either. I miss my original structure back in Australia. Humans only thrive on restructure. Constant innovation does not bring stability.


Olympus 150mm f2


Linking Saturday Critter






Monday, February 20, 2023

Dancer Mural in Collins St, Melbourne for Mural Monday

 


It is that day of week for Mural Monday

Three more days, I am heading home! I just can't wait! 


Little Collins St, Melbourne


Panasonic G9

Olympus 17mm f1.2 


Wednesday, February 15, 2023

"House of Pisco" Bike Sign for Tom's Sign2 event


I believe "House of Pisco" is a cocktail shop which I should have paid a visit to. On the website, the cocktail looks gorgeous! 


The sign is quite nice to my taste too.


Panasonic G9

Olympus 17mm f1.2


Linking Tom's Sign2


A friend of mine sent me the music clip of Dionne Warwick

It sounds so good in the late night 







Saturday, January 21, 2023

Red Galah for Eileen's Saturday Critter

 


They are everywhere. So loud.


Murray vs Kokkinakis tennis match over night was a nice one to watch. Just feeling too exhausted to do anything today


Linking Saturday Critter




Sunday, December 4, 2022

Anchors of the Marie Gabrielle, Wreck Beach

 


This place is really wonderful to visit. Problem is that the whole beach is immersed under the sea in high tide. It takes about 333 steps to walk down the stairs off the cliff and a 3 km hike along the rocks. 

In fact, this is also a popular astrophotography spot which I would not dare coming alone. 

Panasonic G9 + Olympus 17mm f1.2


Linking Sunday Best




Wednesday, November 30, 2022

A night out - Tom's Sign2

 


After a hard day, it helps visiting some food joints chatting away with friends. Good that there is still one or two left lol


Panasonic G9

Olympus 17mm f1.2


Linking Tom's Sign2 Event







Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Shoes hung up high in laneway, Melbourne CBD

 


I love shallow depth of field at one stage. It was what a lens geek would do. I have tons of shots on the shoes hung up in the laneway of Melbourne. I never quite understood why this was done first place.

My pals tell me it was a way to mark the sales point for weeds. Or it was a mysterious way to play a game. 

Olympus 150mm f2


This is linking Bokeh shots






Saturday, October 15, 2022

Little Wallaby baby for Saturday's Critter

 


A new karate moves 


Olympus E520

150mm f2


This is in link with Saturday's Critter







Saturday, November 8, 2014

Whitsundays sunset view


The sunset from Whitsundays

Sunday, August 3, 2014

One Tree Top View


From One Tree Top on Hamilton Island