Showing posts with label warrnambool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label warrnambool. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

The Crag township near Warrnambool for Sign2

 




It has taught me to lift the camera even when a place feels ordinary, because time has a way of polishing the overlooked into something quietly profound. A frame taken without expectation can later bloom with meaning, like a memory that ripens long after the day has passed.

The Crag near Warrnambool greets visitors not with grandeur but with wind. It moves through broken fences and rattling tin, threads itself between weathered sheds and the bleached bones of old timbers. Salt rides in from the Southern Ocean and settles into every crack, hastening the slow surrender of paint and mortar. What first appears run down begins, on a second glance, to speak.

This stretch of coast was shaped long before any township took root, its cliffs carved from ancient basalt laid down by volcanic flows that once blanketed the plains. Later, waves and weather gnawed at that dark rock, opening hollows and ledges where seabirds nested and fishermen sought shelter. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, small coastal settlements like this grew around modest industry and stubborn hope: rough cottages for labourers, storage sheds for tools and catch, narrow tracks linking paddocks to jetty and road. Some thrived briefly on agriculture and coastal trade; others faded as transport routes shifted and larger towns drew people inland.

The Crag carries that ebb and flow in its textures. Corrugated iron freckles with rust where sea spray has kissed it for decades. Stone footings outlast the timber frames they once held. Disused outbuildings lean into the wind, their doors hanging open like unfinished sentences. These are not ruins of catastrophe but of gradual departure, a place thinned by time rather than shattered by it.

In photographs, the decay becomes narrative. Lichen paints maps across old walls. Grasses reclaim thresholds. The horizon, always restless, reminds the town that it stands at the edge of a vast, unsoftened ocean. What felt unimpressive in the moment reveals itself later as a study of endurance and erosion, of how human intention meets elemental force.

To photograph here is to accept the wind as a collaborator and history as a quiet subject. Every image holds a fragment of a coastal story: basalt born of fire, cliffs shaped by water, dwellings raised by hand and slowly given back to salt and sky.



Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G



Linking Sign2


Thursday, December 18, 2025

Stingray Bay aerial images from Warrnambool Victoria for Water H2O Thursday

 



Yes, it is Stingray bay images from the time I worked in that town of Warrnambool Victoria Australia. I have taken over 2k shots at this location which is only 1 km from where I stayed during the locum assignment. Many people asked if there were any stingrays here. The answer is that I dont dive in this area. In fact, the water is choppy with many undercurrents and rips. over 3k shipwrecks happened here for early settlers as well. 

A good place to work out as well

Linking Water H2O Thursday


Friday, December 5, 2025

Stingray Bay Warrnambool for Skywatch Friday

 


The cloud in the image hangs low and brooding, as if it has gathered every mood of the Southern Ocean and pressed them into a single, slow-moving shadow. It feels impressionable too—alive, shifting, carrying the temperament of a coast known for its sudden turns of weather. Warrnambool has always worn its climate like a cloak: heavy one moment, iridescent the next, a place where wind, light, and water constantly revise the landscape.

Stingray Bay, just beyond the thunder of the Blowhole and the salt-sprayed arches of Thunder Point, has its own long memory carved into this restless edge. For thousands of years it was a quiet gathering place for the Gunditjmara people, who knew the rhythms of the tides and the pathways of eels and rays far better than any visitor blown in by a storm. The bay’s limestone arms once sheltered smooth-gliding stingrays in such abundance that early settlers named it almost without thinking, awed by the dark shapes that moved like shadows beneath the surface.

Throughout the 19th century, the coastline here became a stage for shipwrecks—brutal reminders of how quickly the Bass Strait could turn from invitation to threat. Whaling stations rose and fell along these cliffs. Fishermen hauled cray pots under skies as erratic as the catch. Even now, the rock platforms hold the stories with a kind of stubborn dignity: layered sediment, eroded tunnels, small tidal pools carrying miniature worlds.

So when the cloud presses down like this—thick, bruised, and full of intent—it feels less like a passing weather pattern and more like the landscape remembering itself. Carrying every departure, every loss, every shift in tide and workforce. An atmospheric echo of a region that offers beauty in abundance but demands something back: patience, resilience, and a willingness to stand still while the coastline remakes itself around you.


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G


Linking Skywatch Friday


Friday, November 7, 2025

Stingray Bay Warrnambool sunset for Skywatch Friday

 


This small estuarine inlet adjoining Stingray Bay is a hidden gem, lying less than a kilometre from where I once stayed, with road access that remains remarkably convenient. The still waters below capture exquisite reflections of sky and vegetation, a mirror to the tranquility of the surrounding landscape.

Stingray Bay itself forms part of the sheltered mouth of the Merri River at Warrnambool, where freshwater mingles with the tides of the Southern Ocean. The area is renowned for its tidal flats and rock platforms, rich in marine life and bird activity — herons, cormorants, and sandpipers frequent the shallows, while stingrays glide silently over the sandy bottom from which the bay takes its name.

Along the inlet’s edge, the weathered wooden barrier now stands as more of an ornament than a necessity, its timbers softened by time and tide. Once built to define or protect, it now blends into the natural scene — a quiet relic of human purpose slowly yielding to nature’s rhythm.


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G



Linking Skywatch Friday


Friday, February 21, 2025

Stingray Bay, Warrnambool for Skywatch Friday

 


This secluded part of Stingray Bay lies sheltered from the main expanse. The tide is steadily rising. I wandered through the shallows with bare feet, seeking a reflection, yet found none.

Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G

Linking Skywatch Friday




Friday, August 23, 2024

Stingray Bay Warrnambool for Skywatch Friday


 

Stingray Bay is a good place to walk


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G

Linking Skywatch Friday





Friday, July 26, 2024

Warrnambool for Skywatch Friday

 


Cloudy and gloomy

My feet were soaked wet

Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G

Linking Sky Watch Friday

I finished watching rooftoppers documentary on Netflix. It is exploring the mind of these risktakers. Interesting to find out about their inner journeys 



Sunday, April 21, 2024

Stingray Bay, Warrnambool for Sunday Best

 


This was taken on an overcast day. No good sunset to use but the water reflection creates a lovely pattern.


Sony A7RV

FE 14mm f1.8 GM

Linking Sunday Best


Thursday, March 28, 2024

Stingray Bay, Warrnambool for Water H2O Thursday

 


The tide suddenly came in. The area was rather flat that the sea level instantly raised. 


I caught a bit of turquoise water before retreating.

Sony A7RV

FE 14mm f1.8 GM

Linking Water H2O Thursday



Thursday, March 7, 2024

Hopkins Waterfall for Water H2O Thursday

 


This waterfall is easy to access in western Warrnambool. It was just a slope down the carpark and I can see this falls really close. 

It was in late morning when I took this shot. Funny that it looks ok despite lack of warm tone in the frame 

Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G


Joel and I are heading to an airshow. It is forecasted to be 39 degrees Celsius. 


Linking Water H2O Thursday



Friday, January 26, 2024

Friday, December 22, 2023

Tower Hill Inactive Volcano Lava Tube for Skywatch Friday

 


It was really windy. Actually, windy for the entire month I was in town. I had to take a shot before I left so this will do.


DJ Mini Pro4

Tomorrow I am leaving here to take shots at Xmas scenes in Melbourne CBD!


Linking Skywatch Friday




Thursday, December 21, 2023

Merri Sanctuary Sunset Warrnambool for Water H2O Thursday

 


I caught another moment of golden hour in Warrnambool

DJ Mini Pro4

I will leave this town in 2 days. Joel rang me to confirm our trips during Xmas time. Funny I kind of miss his voice on the phone. We talked like 3 hours! 


Linking Water H2O Thursday


Monday, December 18, 2023

First nation people portrait in Warrnambool for Mural Monday

 


This mural sits outside the restaurant that I had seafood chowder which tastes fabulous. A bit sad looking. 


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4

Linking Mural Monday and FACE OFF



Friday, December 15, 2023

Merri Marine Park Sunset for Skywatch Friday

 


It is all about luck, lighting and framing.


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4


Linking Skywatch Friday




Thursday, December 14, 2023

Merri Marine Park, Warrnambool for Water H2O Thursday

 


Normally this coast is looking bleak and grey. Finally a moment of blessing. 


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4


Check out Water H2O Thursday






Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Merri Sanctuary Sunset, Warrnambool for Treasure Tuesday

 


This dusk took me out of a surprise as weather forecast predicted a whole day of continuous storm. The weather bureau department needs to be sacked altogether 

I think I am done in this region. Another 2 weeks to go then back to civilisation. 


DJ mini Pro4


Linking Treasure Tuesday



Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Mail Boxes in Warrnambool for Sign2

 


The mailboxes stand out more than the signs. 


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4


Linking Sign2



Friday, December 1, 2023

Stingy Bay for Sky Friday

 


This is only 1.3 km from my unit in Warrnambool. So I often come here for a stroll straight after my Thai Dinner. I found a lot of dog poo on the beach though. Sad.


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4


Linking Sky Watch Friday



Thursday, November 30, 2023

Great Ocean Road in Port Campbell National Park for Water H2O Thursday

 


In Warrnambool, a lot of Asian restaurants are run by Aussie cooks. It took me a long time to finally discover a Thai restaurant with original Asian style menu. Now I am eating at it on the daily basis. 


There is a location called Magic Rock off Warrnambool coast. However, I cannot access the location as I do not have a 4WD. That was one of my goal to finally get a pic from there. Pity


DJ Mini Pro4 


Linking Water H2O Thursday