Welcome to Life Images by Jill

Welcome to Life Images by Jill.........Stepping into the light and bringing together the images and stories of our world. I am a photographer, writer and multi-media artist.
Focussing mainly on Western Australia and Australia, I am seeking to preserve images and memories of the beautiful world in which we live and the people in it.

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Tuesday 31 January 2023

52 x 2 - 2023 photo project

 Hi everyone, I hope you and yours are doing well. I am a little late posting this week. At the beginning of January I was 'encouraged' by a fellow photography group member to do another 52x2 photo project - 52 weeks - 2 photos a week - one colour and one mono. It is certainly a good way of keeping up your photography practise and actively looking for things to photograph. 

And trying mono photography too. Mono is black and white - or shades of one colour - for instance you could have a photo which is all shades of blue. I wrote more about mono photography in a previous blog post - click on the link highlighted in the previous sentence. 

I did a 52x2 in 2015 and also a couple of 365's - a photo every day! - in 2014 and 2020-21 during the Covid pandemic. 

I am certainly not going to make any promises about keeping the project up for a whole year - but I have made a start - here are the first 4 weeks - January 1-28th.

It's been very hot - so we haven't been far from home in January. 

Week 1 - colour - for the '50' topic for photography group - 

Week 1 - mono - agapanthus - from below -  



Week 2 - mono - trees along the road from town to home 


Week 3 - colour - sunset over the Leschenault Estuary - 



Week 4 - colour - lavender in my garden - the bees are loving it - 


Week 3 - mono - old spoons - for a 'still life' topic for photography group - 

Week 4 - colour - Australia Dray fireworks over Koombana Bay in Bunbury 

Week 4 - mono - enamel plates and cup on the sink! 

Bonus shot - week 4 - dragon boat regatta hosted by the Forza Dragon Boat Club in Bunbury


That's it from me for this week. Have you ever done a photo a day project? 

Thank you so much for stopping by. I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week. 

I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!
   

Monday 23 January 2023

400 year anniversary of the European mapping of Cape Leeuwin, Western Australia

 Hi everyone, I hope you and yours are doing well.

A little bit of Western Australian history today.... the first European mapping of Cape Leeuwin on Western Australia's south west corner. You can see my previous post here -  Cape-leeuwin-meeting-of-oceans-western-australia

Nine kilometres south of Augusta, the Cape is located on the extreme south-west point of Western Australia, where the Indian and Southern Oceans meet.

A community day in Augusta and the Cape Leeuwin lighthouse was held on Sunday 30 October 2022 to commemorate the 400 year anniversary of the mapping of Cape Leeuwin by Europeans. 

The first inhabitants, the Wardandi indigenous people, called it Doogalup.

Accidental landfalls on the Great South Land by Dutch trading vessels on their way to the East Indies started to occur along the coast around 1616, when they adopted new sailing directions east from the Cape of Good Hope. 

Taking advantage of the Roaring Forties trade winds, sailing time was halved. Ships sailed south from the Cape of Good Hope (S36º-S44º), and then 3865 nautical miles east before turning north. However, inaccuracies in measurement resulted in many ships making contact with the Western Australian coast. 

The Dutch navigators called the Cape, Leeuwin’s Land (Land van de Leeuwin), after the ship Leeuwin (The Lioness) which sighted the Cape in March 1622. Unfortunately the Leeuwin’s log books have been lost, so very little is known of the voyage, although letters revealed the Leeuwin was the first vessel to sail the continent’s most southerly latitudes.  


above is - Hessel Gerritsz, Map of the Land of the Eendracht (1627). Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain

This part of the coastline first appeared on charts (Chart of the Land of Eendracht) in 1627 by Dutch cartographer, Hessel Gerritsz showing the coast between present-day Hamelin Bay and Point D’Entrecasteaux. (see the map above)

Subsequent maps showed other, sometimes accidental, discoveries along the coast between 1616 and 1628 – including Dirk Hartog’s discoveries in 1616.

In 1644 the western and northern coast of Australia was named New Holland by Dutch seafarer Abel Tasman, known for his discovery of Tasmania (Van Diemen's Land) off the southern tip of eastern Australia.

English navigator Matthew Flinders acknowledged the Dutch name, Leeuwin’s Land, when he named Cape Leeuwin, on December 7, 1801 during his circumnavigation and mapping of Australia in the HMS Investigator between 1801 and 1803. Flinders landed in the bay to the east of Cape Leeuwin, today's Flinders Bay.

Aboriginal man Bungaree sailed with Flinders, using his knowledge of Aboriginal protocol to negotiate peaceful meetings with local Indigenous people.

Located on the tip of the Cape, the Cape Leeuwin Lighthouse is the tallest lighthouse on mainland Australia and an important link in the chain of essential navigation aids around the Australian coast.


The official opening of the lighthouse was made by the Premier of Western Australia, Sir John Forrest, on December 10, 1896.

 

Although the Cape Leeuwin lighthouse was officially proposed in 1881, there were several delays including the need to excavate more than 1,000 cubic metres of earth when loose boulders instead of bedrock was encountered on the site.  Constructed from local tamala limestone quarried about 1.2 kilometres away at Quarry Bay, the tower is built on a 6.7 metre foundation, with 2 metre thick walls at the base and an elevation of 56 metres above Mean Tide Level. The light was automated in August 1992 and has a range of approximately 25 nautical miles.



Shallow rocks stretching 7 kilometres out from the Cape, diverging currents and massive swells claimed 22 ships before the lighthouse was built. Winds can reach 100-160 kilometres on the Cape. 

..... dramatic on a stormy day! 



Visitors can climb to the viewing area via 176 steps, but the fascinating tour and the expansive 360 degree views are worth the climb. It is a great place to spot Humpback and Southern Right whales May to September as well as fur seals and sea birds. The first image in this post, and the view of the cottages from above are from the top of the lighthouse. 

 

The October 2022 celebration was forced to move to the Augusta Centennial Hall by bad weather, but featured many activities including a Welcome to Country by Iszaac Webb, unveiling of a commemorative plaque by the Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Marion Derckx, and rollicking sea shanties by the Anchormen.

The Interpretive Centre and tours at the heritage listed lighthouse and keepers cottages precinct reveal its history and the lives of the numerous lighthouse keepers. The lighthouse has been undergoing a once in a century renovation and has now reopened. Check the website for opening hours – usually 9am to 4pm. Refreshments available at the Cafe.

You can also visit the nearby waterwheel (which you can see in the collage above), built in 1895 to supply water during construction of the lighthouse, and later to supply water to the lighthouse keepers’ cottages. Today the wheel is encrusted with calcified lime but it is a reminder of the past.

The Cape to Cape track traverses 135km from the Cape Naturaliste Lighthouse to the Cape Leeuwin Lighthouse. Can be done over a number of days in one attempt, or split over a few weekends, self guide or guided. Maps available from Visitor Information Centres.  I had always intended to do this walk, my son has done it a couple of times, but I am yet to attempt it in its entirety though we have done small sections of it. Cape to Cape - Boranup Forest loop

Where is it: Leeuwin Road, 9 kms south of Augusta, 316 kms south of Perth, Western Australia.  Latitude 340 22’ south, longitude 1150 08’ east.

Thank you so much for stopping by. I hope you enjoyed this little bit of history of Western Australia and that you found it interesting reading. 

My article about the 400 year anniversary of the Euopean mapping of Cape Leeuwin was published in On The Road magazine - Summer 2022-23


I value your comments and look forward to hearing from you. I do really love lighthouses and always thought I would like to stay in a lighthouse cottage overnight one of these days. Do you have a favourite lighthouse? 

I will try to visit your blogs in return. Have a wonderful week. 
I am linking up to the link-ups below. Please click on the links to see fabulous contributions from around the world - virtual touring at its best!
   
Hello there! I love reading your comments. If you scroll down to the bottom you can comment too! I would love to hear from you.

Sunday 15 January 2023

Little blogging break

 H everyone, I hope you and yours are doing well. I am having a little blogging break for a few weeks during a summer January while we have visitors coming and going. Back soon! 

It is summer, and there have been a number of bad bushfires down in the southern parts as well as devistating cylconic once in a hundred years flooding in the northern Kimberley. Much of the north of the state is cut off. 

I took this photo last night over the estuary where we walk in the evening after dinner - the colurs are thanks to the bushfire - it made for brilliant colours - but we could do without the bushfires. Thousands of hectares have been lost. 

A friend has talked me into doing another 52 x 2 project - one colour and one mono image each week for 52 weeks. I have done one before plus a couple of 365 projects (1 a day for a year!). will see how I go - no promises. 

Take care everyone wherever you are and whatever you are doing. 



Monday 2 January 2023

My wishes to you for 2023

 I've thought and thought about what to post for today - and after a year of supporting family and friends through illness (particularly in the first part of the year), housing problems for a family member, and a lost love for a dear friend, my dearest wish is that 2023 be filled with happiness, fulfillment, health, peace, love and blessings for you. We have much to be thankfull for. Treasure every day and those you love. xx

My frangipani is started flowering in my garden again. After many years of not flowering, I think of it as a symbol of new life.


And for those still suffering through famine and war - I wish for you to receive food on your table, water to drink, shelter to keep you warm, and an end to the war raging through your country. May the leaders sit down together and reach a peaceful solution.


Thankyou for your support, comments and friendships over the past year. I appreciate each and every one of you.