The 16m tall Kiama Light, or the Kiama Harbour Light, on Blowhole Point.
- Aperture: ƒ/8
- Camera: PENTAX Optio A20
- Focal length: 7.9mm
- ISO: 64
The 16m tall Kiama Light, or the Kiama Harbour Light, on Blowhole Point.
Kiama is the home of two blowholes, this is the little one. When there isn’t much swell the little blowhole is the more spectacular of the two. And so we found it on our visit in 2009, with the big blowhole managing barely a splutter.
The view down the Kangaroo Valley from the Fitzroy Falls. Later the Kangaroo River will run under the Hampden Bridge.
The big problem with waterfalls is that you need rain to make them look good. but you go to see them on holidays, and rain is not what you want. The wind has come along and shifted the Fitzroy Falls sideways in this photo.
A panorama of the 80m Fitzroy Falls in NSW’s Morton National Park.
The view from the Cambewarra Mountain Lookout. The vista takes in the Shoalhaven River and the town of Bomaderry.
The side view of yesterdays Hampden Bridge over the Kangaroo River. This shows the slender grace of the timber-decked suspension bridge.
The Hampden Bridge is a heritage-listed single-span suspension bridge that crosses the Kangaroo River. The bridge was opened on 19 May 1898, and is named after Lord Hampden, the Governor of New South Wales (1895 to 1899).
The Quoraburagun Pinnacles is a section of coast where red clay sits on top of the white sand, leaving red and white stripes.
The Bert Egan Memorial Lighthouse (replica) in the Eden Killer Whale Museum complex. The replica lighthouse houses a section of the staircase from the Gabo Island lighthouse and a display on fresnel lenses.