Atherton Tablelands, Queensland, 11 August 2022
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Click on any image to see it larger (If you are on a PC at least).
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In our third full day in Atherton Tablelands, we first headed off to Mount Hypipamee National Park. Here we are walking the Dinner Falls circuit.
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Falls on Barron River near Dinner Falls.
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Dinner Falls.
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Next we walked on to the Mount Hypipamee Crater.
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This is of course a volcanic crater.
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From the viewing platform, there is a drop of 130 metres to the lake which is then a further 73 metres deep. It’s a long way down.
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I was intrigued by the patterns on the surface of the lake.
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These are partly natural and partly created by people who frequently throw rocks down into the lake. (Personally, I’d prefer it just to be natural).
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Panoramic view.
After that, I decided to head off to Zillie Falls again. I had carelessly exposed my images there at high ISO the previous day so thought to try again. This image is from a viewpoint on the way.
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Zillzie Falls.
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In the late afternoon I was shooting into the light and I didn’t bracket enough, so there is no detail in the sky.
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I decided to head back via the bird hide at Hastie’s Swamp. That meant a long trip on the back roads, late in the afternoon. I can’t show you much of what we saw because often the light was fleeting and the narrow winding roads often meant nowhere to pull over.
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At Hastie’s Swamp I took some more photographs of the plumed whistling-ducks in challenging low light conditions of the late afternoon.
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This is the opposite shore, which about 200 metres away.
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Back with the night life where we were staying, the sugar gliders were there initially but when one or two much larger striped possums turned up, they made themselves scarce.
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Here you can see the elongated fourth finger with a long hooked nail that it uses to extract insects and caterpillars from bark and cracks. In this it is similar to the very weird Aye-Aye from Madagascar. They are not related though. The Aye-Aye is a lemur and a very primitive primate whereas the striped possum is a marsupial found mainly in New Guinea and West Irian but also in coastal North Queensland.
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