View allAll Photos Tagged TeaTree
I do not know what Leptospermum this is, but my goodness, the flowers are simply gorgeous! (Yes, I see the ant, ha ha!) [Royal National Park, Sydney, NSW]
Lea & Judy canoeing on the Noosa River, Nov 1989.
No motorised boats are allowed on this part of the river. Its beautiful dark colouring is caused by the tea tree tannins.
After a lengthy pause at Tea Tree loop for a crew change, TR11 and TR13 slow for the level crossing at Tea Tree Road with their containerised freight train from Boyer, near New Norfolk. Taken just a couple of days out from Christmas, the two locomotives are adorned wtih custom LED panels which light up with preset patterns and colours on their overnight journey north.
Now that I'm making soap for fun, I can do what I want. I like a cubey soap with all kinds of botanicals, herbs, spices, etc.
Ingredients: olive oil, palm kernel oil, coconut oil, water, sodium hydroxide, bulgarian lavender oil, tea tree oil, cardamom oil, dead sea clay, black walnut & various botanicals
One of the most obvious features of the Brolga’s behaviour is its courtship display, an elaborate dance. The dance begins with a pair of birds picking up grass, tossing it into the air and catching it again. This is followed by the birds repeatedly leaping a metre into the air with wings outstretched, followed by stretching their necks upwards, bowing to one another, bobbing their heads, walking about and calling. Sometimes the dance is done alone or in a group, with the birds lining up opposite one another.
I was driving along the Fogg Dam wall and spotted this pair of birds seeking some midday shade. The big male was making a few dips and springing up to his full impressive height and opening his wings but no full on leaps. still to be able to step out of the car lay flat on the wall and this pair are less than 50m away as they just slowly dance away
It is very disheartening to see a dry dam and flood plane at a time when this area should be at least 1m deep under flood water. just hope that the rain today has helped...
Perched lakes occur above the water table. Saucer-shaped depressions with a hard, impervious base of organic matter and sand, form a catchment for the rain eventually creating the lake. They are mysterious, moody and beautiful, they are excellent subjects for photography, great places to see birds, other fauna and flora and a welcome oasis on hot summer days
Tightly packed flowers on this beautiful teatree which was growing in profusion at Cradle Mountain National Park, Tasmania.
Best viewed large - just click on the image.
Daily Dog Challenge: Just Do It
Kahn soaking in Tea-tree coloured creek.
I was hoping to get Etta swimming again in this pool in the creek but she didn't oblige so this is the alternative.
I slipped on the gravel road going down here; I'm grazed and bruised so we're not going back soon! :(
www.youtube.com/watch?v=QIeQbXukmBw
Where there is no Echo there is no description of space or love.
There is only silence.
Mark Z. Danielewski, House of Leaves
© All rights reserved Anna Kwa. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
Adult Crimson Rosella among the partially-feathered juveniles at Tidal River on Wilson's Promontory.
tea hill of Moc Chau Son La, it rain then difficult to see all sight
landscape, hill, tea tree, đồi chè mộc châu, nông trường chè, chè Mộc Châu
You make my heart feel like it’s summer
When the rain is pouring down...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmPJBXnTI8Y
You make my whole world feel so right when it’s wrong
That’s how I know...
You are the one
© All rights reserved Anna Kwa. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission
Leptospermum ist eine Pflanzengattung in der Familie der Myrtengewächse
Leptospermum is a genus in the myrtle family
the enchanted forest, a unique remnant of moonah ( Melaleuca lanceolata ) 'jungle' suspended between limestone cliffs on the great south west walk near cape nelson
discovery bay coastal park, victoria, australia
Otupae Station is located about halfway between Taihape and Napier and covers an area of 8632ha, of which 5100ha is in grass with 165 paddocks.
About 16% is cultivatable, 41% moderately steep hill country and 43% very steep including mountainous country within the northern Ruahine Range.
The area is normally regarded as summer safe in spite of the annual average rainfall being only 900mm. It is normally evenly spread throughout the year, one of the strengths of farming in the area.
Soils on Otupae consist of various sedimentary rock types – mainly greywacke and consolidated sandstones and limestones – overlaid on all but the steep slopes with volcanic ash from either Taupo or Tongariro eruptions.
As would be expected on such a large station with contrasting contour, soil nutrient levels are extremely variable.
Satellite imagery suggested this site might contain rainforest. So, I had a look today. There was a small amount of rainforest, but the area was mostly swamp forest, dominated by paperbark trees.
This area is on the edge of a rainforest, with plenty of rainforest species present. The sunny aspect and numerous paperbark trees make this definable as a swamp forest. It was very wet underfoot. Amazingly, there were no leeches and no mosquitos encountered today.
Tasrail's TR17 and TR15 slalom around around the fields and hills of Tea Tree with a Boyer to Burnie freight train.
The first Leptospermum flowers I have seen in a long while! I was so excited to find these growing in moist heath in the King’s Tableland. I am unsure which tea tree it is. Perhaps Leptospermum juniperinum given the wet grounds. [Upper Blue Mountains, NSW]
Tolmie rocky clearing in December, 2014. Wildflowers include everlastings, native dogwood, teatree of 3 different species, native pelargoniums..
Xerochrysum bracteatum, commonly known as the golden everlasting or strawflower, is a flowering plant in the family Asteraceae native to Australia. Described by Étienne Pierre Ventenat in 1803, it was known as Helichrysum bracteatum for many years before being transferred to a new genus Xerochrysum in 1990. It grows as a woody or herbaceous perennial or annual shrub up to a metre (3 ft) tall with green or grey leafy foliage. Golden yellow or white flower heads are produced from spring to autumn; their distinctive feature is the papery bracts that resemble petals. The species is widespread, growing in a variety of habitats across the country, from rainforest margins to deserts and subalpine areas.
Otupae Station is located about halfway between Taihape and Napier and covers an area of 8632ha, of which 5100ha is in grass with 165 paddocks.
About 16% is cultivatable, 41% moderately steep hill country and 43% very steep including mountainous country within the northern Ruahine Range.
The area is normally regarded as summer safe in spite of the annual average rainfall being only 900mm. It is normally evenly spread throughout the year, one of the strengths of farming in the area.
Soils on Otupae consist of various sedimentary rock types – mainly greywacke and consolidated sandstones and limestones – overlaid on all but the steep slopes with volcanic ash from either Taupo or Tongariro eruptions.
As would be expected on such a large station with contrasting contour, soil nutrient levels are extremely variable.
Tea Tree (Melaleuca) tannin colours the mirror like water in places on the Noosa Everglades near Lake Cootharaba.
Lake Cootharaba is a lake on the Noosa River within the locality of Noosa North Shore in the Shire of Noosa, Queensland, Australia. It is the gateway to the Everglades, a popular tourist attraction for Noosa, being 20 km away from Noosa. The lake's major access is the town of Boreen Point, as well as the smaller camping-spot of Elanda Point.
A walk in the National Park at Woodgate Beach, in Queensland Australia takes you through these beautiful wetlands.