A sweeping view over one of the Anglesea beaches on a rainy Sunday morning. The life savers outnumber the beach walkers.
- Aperture: ƒ/11
- Camera: PENTAX K20D
- Focal length: 28mm
- ISO: 100
A sweeping view over one of the Anglesea beaches on a rainy Sunday morning. The life savers outnumber the beach walkers.
Threatening skies at Anglesea meant that the surf lifesavers didn’t have too many customers.
The Point Hicks obelisk, this commemorates Captain Cooks’ first sighting of mainland Australia in 1770. The plaque reads:
Lieutenant James Cook, R.N. Of the Endeavour, First Sighted Australia Near This Point, Which He Named Point Hicks After Lieutenant Zachary Hicks Who First Saw the Land. April 19th (Ship’s Log Date). April 20th (Calendar Date). 1770.
The Nobbies and Seal Rocks at the western tip of Phillip Island.
The QE2 is pushed into the International Passenger Terminal at Circular Quay.
A flotilla gathered to watch the crossing of two Cunard Queens – the Queen Elizabeth 2 and the Queen Victoria.
Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth 2 sits between the Garden Island Naval Base and Fort Denison, or Pinchgut Island.
The Western Channel Pile Light, or the Wedding Cake, is a lighthouse standing at the edge of the Sow and Pigs reef in Sydney Harbour.
The Heads are the entrance to Sydney Harbour. Seen here from the south looking north.