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Parasailing off Dee Why Beach on Sydney's Northern Beaches on Jan 13 2016. It is a warm and clear day for flying with a good breeze.
Thanks Ralph the pilot for the show.
Manly Hydrofoil Dee Why in the process of being dry docked @ Balmain Maintenance Yard.
At this point Dee Why has just recently been floated into the dock and over the cradle that will support her weight - and the dock gate closed. The water remaining in the dock is now being pumped out, after which maintenance work on the hull can commence.
At the time of this photo there was a fleet of five hydrofoils on the Manly to Circular Quay run - with the intention of having three available at any one time. This was usually achieved - but not always. Maintenance requirements of the hydrofoils were pretty high.
Stuart McPherson photo. April 1980.
Much of the coast near Sydney, Australia consists of alternating stretches of sandy beaches and sandstone bluffs. One stretch of bluffs is located between Dee Why Beach and Curl Curl Beach. A trail, called the Dee Why Coastal Walk, runs along the top of the bluffs between the two beaches. In this photo you can just barely see the trail, hidden in the dense shrub vegetation.
Some watch a sunrise, some photograph the sunrise, others photograph all of the above. Dee Why point - Saturday 21st January 2018.
Parasailing off Dee Why Beach on Sydney's Northern Beaches on Jan 13 2016. It is a warm and clear day for flying with a good breeze.
Thanks Ralph the pilot for the show.
Summer is behind us, and the air has a distinct chill to to it. Easter Monday saw crowds enjoying the last of the summer sun before the autumn and winter make beach going unpleasant. To see and witness the last of the summer sun this year I visited Dee Why Beach one of Sydney's northern beaches.