View allAll Photos Tagged TeaTree
Aerial view of Elizabeth Beach which is part of Booti Booti National Park at Pacific Palms on the Barrington Coast, NSW, Australia.
Gnarly twisted boughs of the paper bark trees in the Noosa National Park.
ƒ/8.0
26.0 mm
1/13 Sec
ISO 500
moonah (Melaleuca lanceolata) and stormy sunrise, pretty point
hiltaba, the nature foundation of SA's gawler ranges conservation property, eyre peninsula, south australia
For my video; youtu.be/a0yTKQAZbLI?si=qipqqKwgqOUkXU1N
Uploaded 32 years ago to the day this was taken.
Noosa Heads, Queensland, Australia
Noosa National Park, tea trees, palms and eucalypt canopy.
Hell’s Gates is approximately 60 minutes’ walk , 270-degree views across the coast. Hell’s Gates good for viewing local wildlife such as Ospreys and pods of dolphins playing in the waves.
Beside the M1 at Caboolture, tea tree swamp bordering Lagoon Creek.
This has now been cleared for the highway upgrade.
The film, Fujifilm Pro 400H has also been discontinued.
This too shall pass
Lake Ainsworth at Lennox Heads just south of Byron Bay in NSW. I love this lake, its so stunning and you can always walk away with a nice shot. I especially love these paper bark trees that are growing in the water here. The bark tears off easily and resembles paper hence the name. The Aboriginals have many uses for the back including building canoes and houses, carrying and keeping food warm, smoking food, collecting water, artists use it to paint on too and it was even used a nappies!
Lake Ainsworth is at the northern end of Lennox Heads, its a hop skip and jump the ocean and its very very popular with picnickers, swimmers, paddle boarders and kayakers.
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www.bethwodephotography.com.au/ or I can be contacted at bethwodephotography@gm
A pretty show in my garden at the moment from the red-flowering tea tree, a native of this country.
A shrub with deep burgundy/green foliage and lots of tiny, vibrant hot pink flowers that appear from now, through winter and in to spring. Growth is compact to around 1 m and each flower 1 cm diameter.
This cultivar is Leptospermum scoparium 'rubrum nana'.
Reportedly, first British settlers to Australia made tea from the leaves.
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Melaleuca/tea tree swamp bordering Lagoon Creek.
Lovely stretch of water next to the M1 north of Brisbane. Remarkably undisturbed despite its position.
Elizabeth Beach daytime seascape surrounded by the Booti Booti National Park at Pacific Palms on the Barrington Coast, NSW, Australia.
A clump of Swamp Paperbarks (Melaleuca ericifolia) side lit by the last of day breaking through the other trees in the stand.
The Melaleuca ericifolia - also known as Tea Tree is extremely common in swampy areas all around the island. It loves poor soil and wet feet. This stand is between the road and the rocks at Binalong Bay, larapuna country, Bay of Fires. Tasmania.
Saw these on the way to shoot the previous posting of the Milky Way. However, the sky had but a tiny bit of remaining colour in the deep blues/purples so decided it'd work best as a mono.
Nikon Z6, Nikkor Z 20mm f/1.8, 25 secs at f/6.3, ISO 1000.
A very big 'Thank You' to everyone that views, faves and comments on my work! I really appreciate your visit :-)
exp20221024#139
Aerial view of Elizabeth Beach which is part of Booti Booti National Park at Pacific Palms on the Barrington Coast, NSW, Australia.
pretty point storm sunrise panorama
the tree is a moonah or dryland teatree (Melaleuca lanceolata)
hiltaba, the nature foundation of SA's gawler ranges conservation property, eyre peninsula, south australia
I'm back. Computer install wasn't bad at all (one hour with hiccups), but there are a few (129) software glitches that I'll figure out soon (within seven years). Anybody know how to make a font bold in Windows 11 as the default? Download a font?) Back to "business."
For years, I have passed this particular bush, and have often paused wondering how to photograph this spiny, tightly packed bush to get the quarter-inch flowers. Last week, I just bit the bullet and shot. Take what you can.
The flowers are, at least in shape and size, are like the Chamelauclium I've been showing you this past week.
Leptospermum scoparium, commonly called mānuka, manuka, manuka myrtle, New Zealand teatree, broom tea-tree, or just tea tree, is a species of flowering plant in the myrtle family Myrtaceae, native to south-east Australia and New Zealand (including the Chatham Islands).
Media: Art Spectrum water colour and W&N gouache for some highlights
Material: Arches Hot Press A3
Subject: Young male koobaburra. Victoria Australia
Process: Wet on wet for sky and wet on dry for subject
Leptospermum flavescens ‘Cardwell’ is an evergreen native plant. Flowering profusely in late winter through to late spring, the branches are covered by masses of small white flowers. So pretty.
Seen here are also the tiny pink-flushed flower buds.
It is attractive even when not in flower, with a beautiful weeping habit, and the leaves are aromatic when crushed.
Formally described as Leptospermum polygalifolium subsp. tropicum (syn: L. flavescens) which grows around the Cardwell area in northern Queensland.
Growing to 2 m in height.
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Aireys Inlet lighthouse on the Great Ocean Road Victoria. Valuable photography lesson learnt here - always scout out the area before you attempt a sunrise. Found myself and a friend climbing down cliffs, getting muddy and scratched by teatree scrub, then missing the actual sunrise, whoops : )
The northern end of Toogoom, a western suburb of the city of Hervey Bay, is seen here on the pocket in the coastal meander.
The interaction of the sand flows, tidal currents of ebbs and flows and the flood discharges of Beelbi Creek is complex and ever changing in this relatively protected west coast of Hervey Bay.
Storm surges tend to approach from the north as Hervey Bay is open to the north. To the east is K'gari / Fraser Island. Along the east coast of K'gari / Fraser Island there is a northward longshore flow of sand, most of which ends up over the edge of the continental shelf. However there is considerable amounts of sand that are worked into Hervey Bay especially during storm season, some of which is transported to this coast at Toogoom.
The melaleuca swamps through which Beelbi Creek flows add tanin to the water. Melaleuca trees are often called teatrees because of the tea coloured water in which they grow.
Apart from all this geomorphology chat, the scene to me is a masterpiece of nature's artwork.
Burgan / Leptospermum phylicoides in full flower, growing by the O'Shannassy Aqueduct, walking trail above Millgrove in the Upper Yarra Valley.
There are no sealed roads on French Island, just sandy car width streets off which are entrances to the tea Trees , and little tracks leading onto the beach, You might even be able to see the black swans paddling in the water. There are large flocks of jet black Swans on the Island, which always intrigue European Visitors who only see white ones in their home country. Apparently a pair from French Island were presented to Napolean as a gift!
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