(Recent Posts, Top Posts, Subscribe and Search at bottom of page. Clicking image doubles size (on PC). Summary and posts for this trip . .)
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Sea Lake, Victoria, to Cape Jervis, South Australia, 4 July 2024.
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Patchewollock Silo Art.
This was a day of travel, including some detours to silo art locations.
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Walpeup Silo Art.
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Not all silos are painted.
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Pinaroo street corner.
Perhaps I could have photographed country towns but this is just a street corner in a small town where we stopped for coffee.
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Lameroo Silo Art.
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Harley Methodist Church ruin.
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We are in Victor Harbour, looking along Granite Island Road and the Victor Harbour Horse-Drawn Tramway towards Granite Island. We are too late in the afternoon to see the horses and the tram though.
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West Island.
We are at Newland Head Conservation Park, just south of Victor Harbour, looking north at West Island and Granite Island in the background (with the tramway out to the left).
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Sunset at Cape Jervis.
We are staying overnight at Cape Jervis to catch the ferry to Kangaroo Island very early the next morning.
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That would have been the end of the post but here are some supplementary images from the previous trip in Tasmania. I had thought I had lost the SD card on the ferry back to Melbourne but it fell out of my waist coat pocket last night, so here they are.
We are looking towards the Tulip Farm at Table Cape.
I thought to have a coffee there and photograph some tulips but they wanted $16 per person just to enter so we changed out minds about that. Hence, images from a distance. The weather is rather different from that with the previous images; rather than fine it is somewhat foggy with intermittent rain.
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(Note on cameras and lenses: The Victorian images are mainly with the Nikon Z6iii, all but one with the 35mm f1.8. Two are with the Fuji X-T5 and the 70-300mm. The last four Tasmania images are with the Fuji X-E4 and the 200mm f2.)
(I will probably remove the last four images in a week and put them in with the correct Tasmanian post).

















I really love the country’s silo art. The Lameroo piece is exceptional.
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I agree. A few more in a while on the way back from Adelaide.
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