View allAll Photos Tagged Mudcrab
Heres a new one on me , Live Mudcrab Racing and check out some of the contenders , Lulu , Jo jo , Big Jimmy , Itchy ( that would get any one going ) Nippy Nina ( who's not to be messed with ) . Watch those fingers !
I didn't see this lot race as we where watching cars race up and down a hill , which seems to me to be a little more entertaining ..
Redland Bay Hotel . Brisbane
We got to eat fresh caught mud crab for dinner last night. Yum. Very tasty stuff. Did you know they're black when they're alive? 'Cause I didn't. Also got to try some very fresh Yellow Tail sashimi and some sort of smashed banana and pineapple concoction that were really good. So much yummy food!
Too much Skyrim O_O
Anyways, this is a half hour insomnia build, being finished at 3:40am (UTC-6:00).
No doubt a very tasty meal. I have often wondered if this campsite is still around? There are certainly no other photographs on Flickr quite like the ones I have just posted, so this could be an unique record. The girl in the middle was our cook and housekeeper. I think it was a hard life keeping it all going. Anyway, she was great. I hope she's still around and enjoying life! Thanks for making our visit such a great success,
Seafood Market in Labrador on the Gold Coast, Queensland, August 5, 2014 Australia.
Today we meet up with a person from Flickr who lives in New Zealand and we just happened to be at Surfers that same week. We had a fantastic day together. First of all we went up to the top of the Q1 building. Then we visited the seafood market before having lunch.
Labrador is a suburb located on the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia. The suburb overlooks the Gold Coast Broadwater to the east and Southport on the southern border.
There are many Aboriginal cultural sites across the Gold Coast. Labrador was part of traditional country for several families, due to the abundance of shell fish, mudcrabs, oysters and waterfowl in the area. The two local peoples most spoken of by the early settlers were the Yugambeh and Kombumerri Aboriginals.
Dawn Rix in her book Labrador - The early pioneers writes that a Scottish Engineer Robert Muir is believed to have named the area in the late 19th century after the a local fishery in north-eastern Canada, owing to the similarities both held in the recreational fishing of streams and the peninsula shape of the land.
For More Info:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labrador,_Queensland
Set lunch @ "Smith Marine", Singapore's very own Kelong restaurant, nesting in the waters, between the main island and Pulau Ubin.
I think I have featured the "national dish" of Singapore before - mud crabs cooked lovingly in a sweet, tangy and spicy sauce made from chilli sauce, ketchup, egg, garlic and ginger. The sauce complimented the crab extremely, bringing forth its alluring sweetness and tenderness but yet not masking away its evident seafoody allure. A dish that put the moreish in moreish.
The claw is always the most prized part.....for the generous amount of sweet and tender flesh encased within the armour.
PLEASE READ THE SET INFORMATION.
The idea is that we go native regarding hunting and fishing. We were attended by 3 aborigine guides. Mercy and Phillip would show us how it's done in the mangrove swamps, and Phillip and Thomas the art of spearing crabs in the shallows at the shore!
Mickey T's old man Wally has dragged this boat and his camper (the Wallybago) across the country from Melbourne. It looks like his fishing boat The Godfather will see out its days on the waters around Carnarvon. This, obviously, is good. Thanks Wally.
Seafood Market in Labrador on the Gold Coast, Queensland, August 5, 2014 Australia.
Today we meet up with a person from Flickr who lives in New Zealand and we just happened to be at Surfers that same week. We had a fantastic day together. First of all we went up to the top of the Q1 building. Then we visited the seafood market before having lunch..
Labrador is a suburb located on the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia. The suburb overlooks the Gold Coast Broadwater to the east and Southport on the southern border.
There are many Aboriginal cultural sites across the Gold Coast. Labrador was part of traditional country for several families, due to the abundance of shell fish, mudcrabs, oysters and waterfowl in the area. The two local peoples most spoken of by the early settlers were the Yugambeh and Kombumerri Aboriginals.
Dawn Rix in her book Labrador - The early pioneers writes that a Scottish Engineer Robert Muir is believed to have named the area in the late 19th century after the a local fishery in north-eastern Canada, owing to the similarities both held in the recreational fishing of streams and the peninsula shape of the land.
For More Info:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labrador,_Queensland
Seafood Market in Labrador on the Gold Coast, Queensland, August 5, 2014 Australia.
Today we meet up with a person from Flickr who lives in New Zealand and we just happened to be at Surfers that same week. We had a fantastic day together. First of all we went up to the top of the Q1 building. Then we visited the seafood market before having lunch.
Labrador is a suburb located on the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia. The suburb overlooks the Gold Coast Broadwater to the east and Southport on the southern border.
There are many Aboriginal cultural sites across the Gold Coast. Labrador was part of traditional country for several families, due to the abundance of shell fish, mudcrabs, oysters and waterfowl in the area. The two local peoples most spoken of by the early settlers were the Yugambeh and Kombumerri Aboriginals.
Dawn Rix in her book Labrador - The early pioneers writes that a Scottish Engineer Robert Muir is believed to have named the area in the late 19th century after the a local fishery in north-eastern Canada, owing to the similarities both held in the recreational fishing of streams and the peninsula shape of the land.
For More Info:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labrador,_Queensland
Spotted this Orange Mud Crab resting half-submerged when others were busy with the Grey-headed Lapwing. This >10 cm diameter crab was sighted a Sungei Buloh on 5 Nov 2011.
PLEASE READ THE SET INFORMATION.
The stick was not to stir the pot, but to hold the crabs underwater until they eventually succumbed to the heat! Ugh, not for me I'm afraid . . . but then if I was hungry enough . . . .
I got the feeling we were out on the northern peninsula. There was an uninterrupted view out to sea - either the Timor Sea or the Arafura Sea.
Snapping Shrimp and Mud Crab holes in the mud/sand in the Mangroves. You can hear the Snapping Shrimps popping and if you look carefully into the mud you can see the little crabs scuttling around in and out of their holes.
Collected from empty Busycon shells from "Grunge Bayou", just north/west of St. Joe Preserve Lab on 10 Aug 2011
CW = 21.0mm
I had a pack of Zatarain's crawfish, shrimp and crab boil in the pantry that had been sent in an online exchange! Was going to mudcrabs, but the prawns were on special!
This is home-sweet-home! I imagine there must have been an in-built loo attached!!! Hardly slept a wink due to the incessant racket coming from the nearby mangrove swamp! They said is was caused by bats - fruit bats! Fortunately they don't have a liking for blood!
Collected from empty Busycon shells from "Grunge Bayou", just north/west of St. Joe Preserve Lab on 10 Aug 2011
PLEASE READ THE SET INFORMATION.
You need a permit to visit here. It is the home of the Tiwi aborigines.
Seafood Market in Labrador on the Gold Coast, Queensland, August 5, 2014 Australia.
Today we meet up with a person from Flickr who lives in New Zealand and we just happened to be at Surfers that same week. We had a fantastic day together. First of all we went up to the top of the Q1 building. Then we visited the seafood market before having lunch.
Labrador is a suburb located on the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia. The suburb overlooks the Gold Coast Broadwater to the east and Southport on the southern border.
There are many Aboriginal cultural sites across the Gold Coast. Labrador was part of traditional country for several families, due to the abundance of shell fish, mudcrabs, oysters and waterfowl in the area. The two local peoples most spoken of by the early settlers were the Yugambeh and Kombumerri Aboriginals.
Dawn Rix in her book Labrador - The early pioneers writes that a Scottish Engineer Robert Muir is believed to have named the area in the late 19th century after the a local fishery in north-eastern Canada, owing to the similarities both held in the recreational fishing of streams and the peninsula shape of the land.
For More Info:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labrador,_Queensland