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TweetGood to see a euro splash of colour amongst the usual drab boring inner city Sydney ‘architecture’
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Tweet The Snow Monkeys of Jigokudani near Shiga Kogen, Nagano. After two kilometers of very snowy forest trail we came upon this amazing scene. It’s good to be the king, but judging by the missing finger he’s had to fight for the right to sit in the sauna and been attended to by the gang.
TweetHong Kong buildings remind of some type of coral-like organic life form. A good example of the ‘Porosity’ of Asian city living…
TweetThis Hong Kong street-scene snapped while rolling along up the soho escalator looks like a crazy UX drop down menu design
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Tweet Hidden behind a non-descript hole in the wall was this cavernous venue
TweetDiscovering the AGNSW collection of the Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood art
Clifton Pugh’s portrait of Gough Whitlam in Parliament House in Canberra.
TweetThe Cricketers Arms, Foveaux St, Surry Hills, Sydney
TweetNational Portrait Gallery, Canberra
TweetCricketers Arms, Fouveaux st, Sydney.
My daily walk into town through some sydney history
Tweet Just discovered these guys… a very interesting bunch! Proserpine, 1873-1877, at Tate Gallery, London. Painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
TweetWestminster abbey College garden …u can’t get much more English than that. College Garden occupies a site that has been under continuous cultivation for more than 900 years. It was here that the Abbey’s first Infirmary garden was established in the eleventh century.
Tweet3200 metres from Cime de Caron peak, Val Thorens French Alps.
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Tweet A slow-moving tram, through a comically low-tech tunnel of antiquated 80′s era rope lights, lasers and car dealership ilk inflatables — narrated only by a psychotic stream of random words. Something that might have been interesting at the 1964 World’s Fair, or a quarter-operated Chuck E. Cheese, but would bore even the most provincial ...
Tweet Woke up to this view! Thought it was a great sunrise, then perhaps fog…then i saw footprints… http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/09/23/2693643.htm
Tweet The Pearl tends to polarise opinion; most people either love it or hate it. In all fairness giant pink balls tend to generate a response… well some kind of response either way! I have to admit despite its gaudiness…I love it!
Transits of Venus are among the rarest of predictable astronomical phenomena occurring every 243 years