Yeah, they're pretty good!
Particularly if you can get them young enough before the internal 'stringy' bit gets too hard.
South coast of nsw is a pretty good option. Great as an accompaniment to snapper or flathead.
Native cherries aren't too bad either.. but it's a tough ask to get them after they lose their astringency and before the birds get them. The broad leaf variety are even harder.
Good stuff. Just about everything in my garden is edible. I'm particularly fond of the midjim berries and Lilli pillis. Still waiting for my Macadamia to flower.
Soy/curry kangaroo wrapped in big blanched Warrigal greens leaves (new Zealand spinach), when you can find them, are also a favourite. Sadly, I don't live where samphire grows any more; it's a good side dish if you can get young shoots.
Lizards are starting to come out in the late winter sunshine.
#teamCurlew ;)
It's... not fun.
I've spent a little time around the Keppels. I remember kayaking out to Humpy island in August 2010, and being astounded by the vivid blue staghorn coral at the reef edge.
I've been back many times since, and though the coral health surges and wanes, the general trend is definitely negative. There are still small hints of colour in the reef around Humpy, but white, and white with hints of brown, predominates. In the last year or so I've started to see a few deeper water corals start to regenerate a little, and some of the more distant bays seem to be surging a little - but they're fighting a losing battle.
We're seeing less of this.
.. and more of this.
.. and fair enough, that second shot shows indications of damage unrelated to heat (maybe a boat anchor perhaps?) - but it's indicative. For better or worse, heat means that coral resilience drops through the floor. Anchor damage, tsunami, cyclone, crown-of-thorns. Things that it used to be able to shrug off in a reasonable timeframe, now cause long term issues.
Around 14 surrounded the boat - didn't seem too worried by us. Kinda wished I had a drone available; with the winter water clarity, it would have been interesting!
Rainbow, looking south towards peel island, during a brief rain squall.
Dugongs on the Amity banks over near Straddie
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Popped out chasing some winter whiting on the weekend.
These guys showed up and checked us out.
- socat
- ngrep
- vim
- pv
- htop
- jq
Generally, everything else I need is there by default depending on the distro.
Home workstation-wise.. maybe:
- meld
- kdenlive
- openscad
- Qtvlm, zygrib and OpenCPN
- gimp extras
- golang
- Inkscape
- Wireshark
- audacity
Fair call, ta.
For those that are interested, here's our culprit's location: https://maps.app.goo.gl/fHD41HSa4yK6yrY18
Actually scratch that one. It just missed the 'last week' cutoff.
Sunrise.
Horizon angle was a bit whacky.. but came out ok in the end.
Fair call.
While I never tire of whales or dolphins when out on the water, a trip up to Lady Musgrave a couple of years back (sailing around the outside of Fraser): we got to the point where we stopped pointing out breaches, the were so many.
It is pretty good seeing them close to home though. Every year, I'll see a few wander down into the bay - as far as Coochiemudlo.
Here's a juvenile, with Coochiemudlo in the background, from a few years back:
Whale season has started
Starting to see whales more consistently while out fishing.
If you're heading out on a whale watching trip, mid to late June, untill early August, are pretty safe bets.
The young humpbacks seem to be quite jumpy around early July - particularly around Flat Rock near Stradbroke island, but off the north east coast of Moreton island is a pretty good option also.