Feeding the Worms by Danusha Laméris
Photo collage by me

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Feeding the Worms by Danusha Laméris
Photo collage by me
Really beautiful illustration of a Tulip Shell I found on the Tasmanian Government 'Fishing Tasmania' site by Peter Gouldthorpe
Russel Falls in Mount Field National Park, TAS, Australia
The morning sun cracks above the crags of Procyon Peak on Lake Oberon.
Tasmania, Australia
1969
A View of the Artist's House and Garden, in Mills Plains, Van Diemen's Land, John Glover, 1835
Today’s walk
File:Cushion-plant-atop-Mount-Ossa.jpg
Rebounds, Tasmania
Crown Shyness, Tasmania, Australia: Social distancing is a behaviour that millions of people of around the world are now familiar with, used as a tool to slow the spread of the COVID-19 virus. Some trees have also been keeping their distance from one another. This phenomenon is called crown shyness.. Crown shyness (also canopy disengagement, canopy shyness, or inter-crown spacing is a phenomenon observed in some tree species, in which the crowns of fully stocked trees do not touch each other, forming a canopy with channel-like gaps. Wikipedia
Christmas Spider (Austracantha minax ssp. lugubris)
Observed by simongrove, CC BY-NC
Hiking in the deep south of Tasmania
Australia
1991
Bay of Fires (15.02.23)
Payemmairrener Country
by Nic Wilson
An extinct emu and apparently a wallaby on the cover. Tasmanian friends and foes. 1881.
Internet Archive
Scoparia atop kunanyi (Mount Wellington), TAS, Australia
Eastern Quolls
Eastern quolls (Dasyurus viverrinus) are small marsupials native to Australia and Tasmania. These were illustrated by Henry Constantine Richter and John Gould for Gould's Mammals of Australia, Vol. 1 (1863).
View more mammal posts and illustrations.