Saturday 5 March 2016

S is for Sculptures on the Beach: Cottesloe Beach, Perth

Cottesloe Beach, Perth, from the Pier.
We have been chasing daylight, flying 5 hours across from Sydney to Perth. This morning a sunrise over the Pacific Ocean and this evening a sunset over the Indian Ocean!

Inel sent me information about an outdoor sculpture exhibition at Cottesloe Beach, Perth so we hired a car for the afternoon and headed for the beach, along with plenty of other folks.

The Sculpture by the Sea was certainly popular.

The pieces are monumental, some edgy, others classical in nature and others just down right weird.
Some of the Sculptures by the Sea, Cottesloe Beach, Perth
My favourite piece was a gossamer fine wire sculpture by the Australian artist, Barbara Licha, called "Listen time passes.." The figures are captured in their boxes, or spaces, the light catches the wire and they seem to have movement and tension. Quite magical and haunting.
My favourite piece, gossamer fine, haunting piece.

Friday 4 March 2016

F is for Farewell: leaving Australia

Guy and Inel, thank you!
Our transition starts.
We leave Killcare with Guy to Sydney. Sydney to Perth and Perth to Johannesburg.
Thanks Guy and Inel for our welcome in your homes.

Sunset, Cowra, NSW

Seascape, Killcare, NSW

B is for Bushwalking: finding a Bowerbird and a Pitta

Female Satin Bowerbird.
Blue eye of the Satin Bowerbird
Guy got us going early this morning and we drove across the headland, down Patonga Drive and we all went walking through the Patonga Creek Wetland.

It was buggy, enormous spiders and their vast nests, huge biting fire ants and we were following Guy as he tracked off path through the mangroves and the adjacent forest with its thick understory.

We all stopped dead at one point having heard a loud hissing noise which we hoped was not a snake. To my amazement it was the alarm call of a Satin Bowerbird, a female or perhaps a young adult, we had great views as the bird warily kept an eye on us.

The birding bonanza continued.

Guy noticed a colourful bird hopping through the leaf litter along the path, I could not believe it, a pitta, my first ever! We had a Noisy Pitta in our scope. Fred was just a little frustrated with not having brought his main camera along, but at least these photos can tell the story.

The Noisy Pitta creeping among the leaf litter, still grinning from this amazing sighting.

W is for Wool Bombora: an installation for The Nest@Killcare

Wool Bombora, an installation at The Nest

Detail of the wool bombing.
I have been keeping pieces of broken jewellery to use in craft projects.

The idea for an installation for The Nest@Killcare evolved when I saw a photo of some drift wood decorated with wool bombing.

Then the pattern for a knitted bird popped up and the installation started to take shape.

I knitted the birds and suspended them from pearls, water pearls, beads and pieces of jewellery.

The knitting of the sleeve is decorated with pearly white buttons. Two I-cords add texture along the drift wood.

Inel already had the nest hanging among the wood. She found the wooden knitting needles at an Op Shop and they are a quirky addition to the piece.

I am pleased with the result and it is a privilege to be able to add a piece to this beautiful home which is filled with original art works by my sisters Inel and Doreen and even by our mother.

The installation is named for the rocky reef off Putty Beach, the 'Bomby" or Bombora. We sit, either with our early morning coffee or with an evening G&T and watch the waves break over the Bomby.

Wool Bombora at the top of the stairs.

Tuesday 1 March 2016

K is for Killcare: family time at The Nest

Pasta making at The Nest

A week at The Nest with family
Inel's sketch of The Nest@Killcare
A family converging and spending time together at Killcare, Central Coast, New South Wales.

Jason, Elly and Carmen from Sydney, Jossie from Orange, Fred and Sharon from Johannesburg and Doreen from Hilton.

Just wonderful.

Special memories of time on the beach, walking, swimming and pottering around the area.



Putty Beach from the veranda of The Nest

R is for Rainbow Lorikeet: and the coast banksia


The flowering coast banksia in the garden here at The Nest attracts the wonderfully colourful Rainbow Lorikeets. Both are common along the east coast of Australia and the parrots fly in early morning with lots of shrieking and almost seem excited to start feeding.