An update on the Rowville Chimpanzee, a little further up the Stud Road by Emmeline Row.
- Camera: Pixel 3 XL
- ISO: 52
An update on the Rowville Chimpanzee, a little further up the Stud Road by Emmeline Row.
Connor checks out the rest of the hard rubbish while I photograph the Telecom Australia Optical Fibre Digital Communication fridge magnet. Telecom Australia became Telstra in 1993, so the magnet is at least 30 years old – and seems to be holding up way better than the filing cabinet.
It’s amazing the kinds of car you find on the streets of country towns. A 1948 Plymouth Special Deluxe is seen here in Binney Street, Euroa back in 2011.
The derelict garden store on Binney Street, Euroa, back in 2011.
The Federation Bell Tree outside the Pakenham Library. This work is by Dr Anton Hasell, and was installed in 2011, in the background is the Pakenham Memorial Container.
Details of the window of the Euroa Community Centre in Binney Street, Euroa.
A close-up of the corner bracket details of the verandah outside of the AP Gardiner building in Euroa.
The AP Gardiner Building, 45-47 Railway Street, Euroa, is named after the original owner. It was built in 1901 after the first weatherboard store burnt down. The AP Gardiner building has been the home for a variety of businesses since it was built. One of the residents is the local weekly paper, the Euroa Gazette.
One set of gates into the Euroa Showgrounds – Austral Gates Ringlock Fence.
Seeing the back of the Geelong Mime bollard makes it worth going back and looking at the front again. The mime is holding a ticket “Admit 1 February 14th”. Looking at the front, you can see that the mime has a broken heart and appears to be crying. The bollard also has one of the many bollard bunnies, a feature of this great outdoor artwork.
Ian MacDonald, Engineer and Surveyor for the City of Geelong, he designed the Eastern Beach complex. He holds the rolled-up plans. A very chunky, and casually attired me in the middle. On the right is Robert de Bruce Johnstone, three-times Mayor of Geelong and Geelong MLA for 13 years.
The cinema attendant in the Geelong Bollards outdoor artwork by Jan Mitchell. The Joy Ark was a short-lived cinema on the shore and extending into the bay at Geelong’s Eastern Beach, very close to the bollard’s location now.