Monthly Archives: October 2011

Fossil Rock Too

Some other photos taken at the Leo Sayer Concert in Parachilna.

Local girl, Jasmine Reschke from Blinman sang several songs she has written along with a couple of her favourites.

Well-known local singer-songwriter John O’Day was popular with the crowd as usual both as a support act and after the concert.

A young musician that’s got as good future in the industry, Harry Hookey from Victoria who is also completing his final year in Law.

Main Street, Parachilna transformed for the big event. Even a grand sunset turned up for the occasion.

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Fossil Rock

Q: What do Parachilna, Flinders Ranges town, population 2, and 70s and 80s British rock legend Leo Sayer have in common?

A: The staging of a great rock concert.

Yep, believe it or not it was Saturday night rock complete with full lighting and sound stage, four piece band and almost 500 people to watch the diminutive rocker turn on a really entertaining performance.

Although there were plenty of ‘locals’ , people came from over 500 kilometres away in cars, planes and even a helicopter to attend the concert staged by the Prairie Hotel.

The show, called Fossils Rock 2011 included a lot of the songs he made famous like ‘One Man Band”, ‘You make me Feel Like Dancing” and ‘When I Need You”.

Leo, now lives in Sydney and became an Australian citizen a couple of years ago. While he’s in his early 60s, the ‘Fossil” reference was not about him.

The night was organised by the Prairie Hotel to raise funds for an interpretive area in the town to highlight the Ediacaran fossils that have been discovered close by.

The Ediacaran plant and animal fossils have been dated between 570 and 540 millions years ago, the oldest known life on earth..

As you might image the Sentimental Bloke doesn’t get many opportunities to photograph live concerts so there was some uncharted waters to navigate here.

I often get requests for the technical information on a lot of my work and in this case it was all shot with a Canon 5D Mk 2 with a 50mm f1.2 prime lens – very good for low light conditions.

All were shot at ISO 1600. The first shot f1.4 @ 1/320 sec. The other three were taken at f1.8 @ 1/250th sec.

A few more pictures from the concert including local artists, John O’Day from Orrorroo, Jasmine Reschke from nearby Blinman and Harry Hookey from Gippsland in Victoria have been posted in the Overflow.

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The Station Homestead

This photograph was taken two summers ago.

It was an extremely hot night , thunder and sheet lightning all about.

Shot at f5.6, exposure 31 seconds. ISO 200

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On the Road

The machine is an old Indian motorbike, Second World War vintage.

A beautiful old bike, unfortunately a little banged up.

Not half as bad as the rider though. The pair came a cropper on a dirt road in the central Flinders.

The rider got a broken collarbone in the spill.

And with the rest of the journey with his mates still to go, the prospect is a little daunting.

First they are heading up the Birdsville Track to Birdsville…no mean feat on a heavy bike like this over hundreds of kilometres of dirt and sand.

From there the group is before heading East and home to Sydney….a journey of many hundreds of kilometres.

That’s keen. But he did say he had plenty of pain killers.

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Rock and Water

Lately I’ve been shooting in country with a lot of creek beds and gum trees. Despite that, the pictures I have been posting lately seem to be working on a different theme……rock faces and waterholes.

Travellers around Australia might have seen this scene in a number of places spread across Western Australia or the Northern Territory.

Add the northern Flinders Ranges to the list.

Yet another non-permanent waterhole where the stages of a decreasing water level can be seen in the wet mud of the foreground.

When the water is gone and the summer temperatures soar, these rock faces radiate enormous heat….quite breath-taking and I’m not talking about their natural beauty either.

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Ancient Rock

In a post a few days ago entitled ” Disappearing Act” the emphasis in the photograph was on the massive rock formations and the strata of rock that make them up.

That was Brachina Gorge in the Central Flindfers Ranges but here in the northern ranges, the rock formations are volcanic – quite different in colour and make up – and much older.

In both images water at the base of both formations is not permanent.

My interest in this photograph along the Arkaroola Creek though, was to allow the rising sun to cast a golden glow on the beautiful rock face and the pool of water.

f22, 1/25th sec, ISO Canon EF17-40mm f4L USM @ 22 mm. Canon 5D camera

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Hyperactive

A Rainbow Bee Eater – fast moving an elusive. Fairly common to a widespread area of central Australia. His name also describes his main source of food together with other insects too.

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Last Glow of Day

The same creek as the previous post. A little up stream, a different day, different weather and a different mood.

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Blue Skies

Seemingly endless blue skies can pose a real problem for landscape photographers. Those acres of blue can take up a serious amount of a photograph and to put it bluntly, stuff up a good scene.

Here is one solution to the problem which you start looking for when day after day the skies above remain the same – something that is not unusual in the Flinders Ranges and Outback.

As usual the trunk and the branches of the river red gum provides interesting patterns, while not perhaps as evident, the banks of the Parachilna Creek are at least three metres (8-10 feet) high.

The twisted hills and mountains of the ABC Range are in the background.

f 22, 1/13 sec ISO 100 focal length 70mm

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Disappearing Acts

Creeks in the Flinders Ranges can be deceptive. Sometimes they flow on the surface, then disappear, only to resurface again somewhere downstream.

The Brachina Creek, which flows through Brachina Gorge in the central Flinders Ranges is a case in point.

Here the stream is flowing quite strongly, only to disappear underground a few metres behind me.

Brachina Gorge is well known for it’s towering rock faces. In the foreground the many sedimentary layers which make up this part of the ranges can be clearly seen.

The layers cover geological activity spanning hundreds of millions of years.

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