Saturday, May 23, 2015

Burnum Burnum

Standing at water level at Burnum Burnum reserve in Woronora, looking up at the hill with the same name. It looks a bit like a giant staircase, the sandstone blocks surprisingly squared, and the tree trunks as balusters. I was surprised, given that the lens is pointing at the sky, that it took a 1/70 second exposure at f3.5 to get this shot. When I have the option, I always try to shoot at much faster speeds to minimise the effect of hand shake. I knew I wouldn't be running today (trying to nurse a sore hip through to next week's big run) so I took down my little point-and-shoot Fuji. It's only defect is a lack of manual focus, but otherwise there's not much
you can't play with.

On other shots of the river taken previously, you might have noticed the power lines that parallel the freeway bridge; I always do. Burnum Burnum is the hill that the pylons are attached to on the north side of the river. There's a nice set of tracks up and around the hill, but I suspect many of them were started by the engineers and technicians who put these in. Like all the best engineering, they're simple and elegant in their own way. Presumably the green and white insulators have different functions.

It was a cold crisp morning. The left channel is the main Woronora; the right branch terminates just out of shot at the Sutherland Canoe Club. Liz had a paddling lesson there from one of the great Australian paddlers, Joan Morison. Amongst the extraordinary number of  her extraordinary achievements is the completion of her 26th Hawkesbury Classic (remember, 110 kilometers at night) at 81, in 2012. She's well worth a google. She died last week, so she's on everybody's mind.

The view NNW is of Illawong.
 I just can't resist these shots. Irritatingly the auto-focus has picked out a leaf in the extreme lower left, but it's not too bad.

It's been wet here for the last two or three days, so there are a lot of fungi around.
This picture was intended to illustrate the amazing number of grass trees all at very similar stages of development - I imagine because of a major fire through here around 15-20 years ago. However, looking at it now, I can't see a single grass tree - only the charred tree in the foreground (and the charring is not at all obvious in the picture) with the substantial uncharred re-growth that underpin the speculation about the date of the fire. Anyway, take my word for it, in every picture except this, tens and tens of Xanthorreas

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Woronora Bridge

This is the Woronora Bridge, built by Bob Carr and co. way back when - roughly 2000 - and a very impressive piece of architecture it is. Of course if you live in Bangor (at the top of the hill on the right) your peaceful isolated bush home now has the roar of a six lane highway less than 50 meters away. But you can get to work quickly. The old bridge can be seen at river level towards the background - it's two lanes wide and has a 15 km speed limit on approach.
The walkway under the bridge is broad and handsome. Wooden planks underfoot make it a pleasant surface to walk on, a little springier than you might expect.

The view isn't bad.
Finally an in-focus picture of a spider's web. (Turns out the phone has a "manual" focus facility)
Gum trees from above. Doesn't quite capture the oddness - from the ground the leaves dominate the canopy, but from above the tree seems almost leafless, well on the way to being dead.
The old road, also from above.

Saturday, May 9, 2015

TVT Wolli Creek

Twin Valley Trail

The link goes to a not particularly good video; I have a lot to learn about editing. It's very bumpy. It's taken the 4 days after the heavy rains, so it looks pretty lush.  Usually I run this trail but I'm managing an injury at the moment, so this is at walking speed. Sadly at this stage the running videos are just too bumpy for viewing.

I think it gives a feel for the different elements. It's a heavily compromised landscape; quarry, earthworks, drains, parks and paths. For all that, it has charm.

 After a pruning frenzy, the back garden currently looks like this. This is the two lower storeys; the tops of the two tree ferns and the eucalypt have been cut off. I must say that I quite like the way the tap has held up as an aesthetic feature over the years. It started off as a water feature (and a lesson in the physics of cheap pumps), but now it's just there, gleaming gently. We've just picked a dozen oranges from the tree - considering that we do nothing to really maintain it.
 On Tuesday night Liz and I went to a classical concert at the Angel Place recital hall - this is the lane (China Lane, I think) outside. It was very interesting; a series called "Discovery", with the conductor, Richard Gill, discussing the piece in some detail first, with the aid of both a piano and fragments of the orchestra. The piece was Mahler's "Wanderer", three songs for baritone and orchestra. The orchestra was the Sydney Sinfonia, a training orchestra associated with, and mentored by, the Sydney Symphony. I'm no bigger fan of Mahler than I was previously, but I undeniably know more about what I'm not a fan of.

It was also interesting from the point of view of an educator, because the style was very much what I enjoy, which is a barrage of high speed information, but a well-illustrated barrage with both theory and practice. It wasn't to the taste of all the audience, though, because I heard one punter agreeing with another that the "first bit" had been incomprehensible.
Ability has taken over the whole of the building that we have been occupying for the past seven years now, and thanks to the corporate photos, I got to visit the second floor balcony (senior management). Reflected in the windows are the street trees and the UTS library opposite. I didn't quite manage the light, and the reflection from the upper two thirds has somewhat darkened the lower third.




Tempe Reserve at sunset - Liz is off running somewhere. This is the building site at Wolli Creek station. In the bottom photo you can barely make out the head and tail lights of the traffic on the Princes Highway. Members of the Tempe Motor Boat Association have turned in for the night. It's very tranquil.

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Wet Sundays

 It was wet down at Woronora (Burnum Burnum Reserve) this AM, and has been all week no doubt. There were a lot of fungi on the casuarina litter behind the car park. I had a bit of time to kill post run and pre the Liz return, so I tested the camera's macro abilities. It struggled in both of these to sort out the auto focus; the background seems to be winning. Still, call it art, who knows?

I don't claim to be an expert on fungi - neither of these are familiar to me (not that I pay that much attention to my feet generally).

It was wet for the running, too. I posted some shots from here a few weeks ago - so imagine those rocks with water on them. In fact, pretty much every path was a small stream, causing me to wonder which came first, the path or the stream, in fact, so I ran fairly gingerly. Plus the uphills are hard work; the ridges are very steep.

I've lost track of the rain. The rain gauge has overflowed twice. One night I had 9 pots out collecting the drips coming through the kitchen roof. Factory and office roofs over the city collapsed under the weight of the hail, so 9 pots sounds like an art house movie by comparison.

Saturday AM we had a respite, just enough to get the washing out on the line. And I managed to get out to the inauguration of a new parkrun, at Rhodes, on Canada Bay. The sun almost shone. It's a very nice flat course, roughly half in Bicentennial Park, next to the Olympic stadia, and the other half along the recently reconstructed edges of Canada Bay. My gym is in Rhodes, oddly enough, so I know the area quite well.
This whole area has been built by real estate developers; the land is reclaimed, some amount of toxic industrial residues removed. I was never here before then, so I can't tell you what industrial ambiance has been destroyed. I do know that there is a degree of racial tension between the Asian-Australian flat-dwellers and the European-Australian house-owners. It's a little disappointing that a nation of immigrants has so little respect for immigration other than their own.

Olympic Park looms large in the background - it's not pollution (today, anyway), it's cloud. The weather is the kind of humid where you can't be sure it's not raining. This shot was taken by the marshal at the turnaround point, so it's halfway. Hopefully I'm looking relaxed, but the resolution on the picture isn't up to the enlargement required to check. I did manage a "negative split" - out in in 10:07 and back in 9:58, by my watch. That's quite pleasing, I almost always start too fast.
Autumn footpaths - the day after the storm

Back lane in the threatened Victoria Rd precinct
 On the subject of industrial ambiance, here are some pictures I took last Sunday afternoon, pretty much the first day out in a week. I've been having 2 weeks off running, so I went out for a walk instead. Three of these are in the area tipped for re-development; but whatever happens, it can't be denied that the area does have existing charm. Plus, contrary to some of the propaganda, people. Two printing factories were open. Two recording studios. A couple of shops, and several food factories; a lot of the city & inner suburban restaurant food comes from here. I wasn't the only tourist, either.

The Red Rattler studio/theatre/concert hall was conducting its Sunday afternoon "refresh".pending the Sunday show. And the bowling club was open. although admittedly, not for bowling. But socialising continues even when the rinks are sodden.
Hailstorm - Shepherd Street

Hailstorm - look what blew in!