Thursday, April 20, 2006

Oberon reborn

On a day trip to Wilson’s Promontory last Easter Sunday, I was able to take a few snaps of the bush on Mount Oberon to compare with snaps I took almost a year ago, which was not long after the 2005 bushfires on the Prom. Click the images below to view enlarged images.


8 May 2005


16 April 2006



o_O_o

UPDATE
See more Pictures of fire recovery - one year on
courtesy of Parks Victoria.

Bottom revisits Oberon

We visited Wilson’s Promontory (Victoria, Australia) this Easter Sunday and did the obligatory trek to the summit of Mount Oberon.

The Prom had become tent city for the Easter holiday weekend, and access to the Mount Oberon car park, from which one begins the ascent, was closed. Visitors instead were bussed from the Tidal River tent city and back by a free half-hourly service.

Along the 3-odd kilometre hike, we admired the bush surrounds that were slowly regenerating after the conflagration of 2005, which had engulfed the southern half of the Prom. (Many will recall the ‘controlled fuel reduction burn’ last year that went horribly wrong.)

After about 40 minutes of slog, we achieved the summit and the breathtaking vistas thereupon. My only complaint was that the weather was a tad grey and hazy, but that really is small potatoes. The summit was quite busy with our fellow thrillseekers... including the person pictured below, who had donned the equine headpiece.

I didn’t get an opportunity to quiz the gentleman concerned regarding his exotic headgear. Afterwards, however, it occurred to me that Oberon was the king of the faeries in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Further, the plot involved an artisan called Bottom, whose head had been transformed into that of an ass by the mischievous Puck. Hmm, I thought, that must be the meaning of this strange demonstration...

So, full marks for literary allusion to the Bottom impersonator – whoever you are – who enlivened the Mount Oberon experience of some of us that Easter Sunday.


Click to enlarge.
NB: Bystander’s face pixellated to preserve privacy.

The universe at bay

For just a moment I held the universe at bay...
It is the gravest, most meaningful act I shall ever accomplish, but, as Thoreau once remarked of some peculiar errand of his own, there is no use reporting it to the Royal Society.

Loren C. Eiseley
“The Innocent Fox”
The Star Thrower

Image by Jacob A. Stam
Camera: Kodak CX7530 Digital Camera
Location: Mouth of the Powlett, Victoria, Australia
Date: 17 April 2005