Showing posts with label Sunshine Beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunshine Beach. Show all posts

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Very Early on Sunshine Beach



Let's take the steps
down to Sunshine Beach


before the day has really begun
before breakfast
before the beach lovers arrive
before the heat builds
before the usual routine begins
while we are new and fresh
the day is young
and life begins again
Let's stroll in the relative cool
of 24C at 5.30am


a dawn Icarus
rises high 


across the path of sunbeams


a loyal pup


awaits his swimming owners


the clouds cluster and swell
as they experiment with shape
using the blue of blue as their canvas
and the wet sand 
as their mirror


and the sea rolls glass green
Oh happy day...

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Misty Morning Walk


A misty haze filled the sky


a mist made of smoke
humidity 
and sprinkled rain


the sun rose from the Pacific
as usual 
eager to pierce through the gauzy veil

Walking today 
down the wide swathe of foreshore


the high tide nibbling our ankles


to the Headland of the National Park
where dogs are given free reign


to run and scamper chase and swim
without restraint


the persistent sun finds a portal


a misty sky is pierced


however temporarily
and the world below remains


enshrouded...


Tuesday, November 1, 2011

From Sunshine Beach

Dull and cloudy but warm today


I left from Sunshine Beach village
and walked the high tide mark
until I reached the headland


then climbed up the dunes
and entered the windswept wallum


gnarly and bedraggled
but as I slipped over the high dunes 


I entered a sanctum
the path was wet and soft
from last night's rain


the roar of the ocean subsided
and the forest stood still
waiting
I too stood still and watched
looking above me
in the eucalypts and melaleucas


I see a native orchid flowering


and another


I observe the tangles


of interwoven branches


The hanging nest of leaves
which is a spider's web



It is silent
no birdsong
I wait 
and wait
like the web
stillness hangs in the air



so I move along
deeper into the bush
where the wallum is more protected
from the coastal winds


a tree of blossoming tiny white bellflowers


drops a carpet over the sandy track


and I take a path 
winding further into the forest 


still listening for birdsong
I hear wrens and sweet singing
and above the canopy
I hear the wail of the black cockatoo


crossing the little bridge 
I climb higher into banksia country


and stop to note the colours 
on the forest floor


the rust of old banksia flowers




and the greens of mossy growths


the texture of the knobbly banksia trunks
and begin to make my way into low wallum


where the banksias are more stunted varieties




mindful of anything buzzing
I know the march flies are out today
and they nip


I catch the silhouette 
of a tiny splendid blue wren
with a bug in his mouth
and listen to his family calling him
in such a gentle sweet song


near my exit I stop to look 
at the bent flower stem of the grass tree


as it begins to flower
attracting little native bees


to do their work


in this beautiful and tranquil environment 

Oh Peaceful Day...


Monday, September 14, 2009

Sunshine Beach Birds

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Sunshine Beach Birds...







Monday afternnoons
at 3.30pm
has become a Sunshine Beach
and Wallum walk ritual
for my Wallum walking friend
and I











Our walk begins
along the beach front
through a little shaded glade
of Banksias
and Pandanus trees
where we have noticed
the birds love to congregate...


This little wren
does not appear
in my bird identification book











But the Black Faced Cuckoo Shrike does...
Commonly known as a Blue Jay,
he has a black face and throat


He likes to eat berries and fruits
and can glide like a hawk
searching for insects


His call is a long rolling "cheeeer"
often uttered
whilst in undulating flight












The mighty Yellow Tailed Black Cockatoo,
the biggest of the cockatoos,
is the harbinger of rains...












He loves to tear apart
the banksia nuts
which is what he is doing here
Click the first image
to see his big tongue
and strong beak


While I stood under the tree
I was pelted with chewed chunks
of banksia nuts...


He also rips open gums,
wattles, casaurinas and grass trees
with his powerful beak
to find grubs












A more delicate and refined creature
is the Bar Shouldered Dove
Notice the beautiful coppery
feathers on his nape

The commonest native dove here
he has a rollicking "cook-a-wook" call
and feeds on ground seeds












I can't resist tossing in
another of these grevilleas
one of the more unusual varieties
The Coastal Gem













My son sent me these pictures
taken on his iphone
whilst he was on the building site

The friendly young kookaburra
alighted beside him,
pecked him playfully on the arm











and allowed himself to be patted
He has been accustomed
to hand feeding
I imagine
and therefore
quite tame...





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