A photograph of a Sulphur-Crested Cockatoo who comes down for a feed to the artist’s garden.
Celebration of landscapes everywhere. . . Oil on Board – No Airbrushing 36 X 24 inches / 92 X 61 cm Original : / Sold / contact my Agents at Gallery 112 / .....................................................................
An illustration from the book “Ornella the Owl” where Ornella is woken by a strange sound and the sight of large eyes peering at her while her brothers sleep. This is the story of how an owl who becomes afraid of the dark overcomes her childhood fears.
When at times life has been tough on you, / You learnt to carry on / When there was none to help you bear the load, / It was your own streng…
This is a poem I wrote for my Grandmother.An amazing selfless, women who spent years of her life raising eleven children in tent beside a river while my grandfather was off droving. She never gave up, a stong woman. And in later years her joy was her grandchilden.
This is a pic of a Australian musician invited to play his Didgeridoo aboriginal musical instrument during the “Mont-Tremblant Blues Festival” Quebec Canada. Mont-Tremblant is part of the ” Mont-Tremblant National Park” in the Quebec Province , it is a festival resort in the summer and a ski resort in the winter, the region holds hundred lakes, rivers and miles and miles of forests, it is a fisherman’s and hunters paradise. I love Blues music and I go every year for a week to discover new artist and listen to established blues artist also….
This is a prehistoric-looking Southern Cassowary bird, native to Australia. These flightless birds are about the size of an Emu and ten times as mean! Wouldn’t like to get on the wrong side of this fella! ;o)
Taken at the Butterfly house at Melbourne Zoo. One of the best experiences there.
Wrens are not easy to photograph so I was very pleased with this series of varigated fairy wrens that I captured while at Mungeranie along the Birdsville Track.
There’s a few things that this shot is NOT… including that it is not my usual style (a flower macro taken in my living room while wearing my pj’s), nor is it perhaps a ‘technically sound’ shot..but it IS a shot of something I have never seen before, and doubt I will again. While driving to visit my sister interstate recently, I spotted something on a windmill that was close to the road that just looked ‘different’, and the closer I got, I started to wonder “Could it be….?”. I realised as I was directly passing it that YES, it was indeed a koala on a windmill!!! I braked immediately, did a u-turn and went back for a closer look. This was only the 2nd koala I have ever seen that was not in a wildlife park or zoo, and it was the first time for my 2 captivated little girls! My car boot (trunk) was packed to the hilt, and, shame on me, my camera bag was right at the back. I managed to retrieve my camera, but couldn’t reach the lenses, so I had to work with the 17-55 that was already on there. It was bright and glarey…and I was so in awe of what I was looking at, and so afraid that he would make a move any second, that I literally just pointed the lens at him and fired away. I didn’t even check my settings. But still…I have this wonderful sight recorded, and so I can live with this image’s flaws. I have posted this at the urging of Wayne Bigg (who is usually the one to spot things like this)...and he suggested some humorous titles, such as “This Beats The Old Tree House” and “How Hard Do You Have To Blow To Get This Thing To Turn”!!! I’d love to hear any others! I’ll probably just leave this up for a couple of weeks…but I just had to share :) Canon EOS 30D / Canon 17-55 f/2.8 IS USM lens (@ 55mm) / f/6.3 ISO 100 ShutterSpeed 1/400 sec
I was driving back from Horsham and just happened to have the camera in the car to take this photo of the countryside.
An acrylic painting on linen. 2009 / W 600mm / H 700mm
Medium – Oil
our christmas card picture this year!
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