04-23-2019, 04:18 PM
Time for us to head north, up Freycinet Peninsula way.
Shell covered Kelvedon Beach.
The blow hole at Bicheno going whoosh!
Pics on the rock beach.
"Amelia what do we do if the water rushes in and covers us?"
"Cry?"
I know beaches aren't normally made of rock, but this one had some great scenery and photograph taking opportunities. I saw a big seabird, but it flew away too quickly for me to take a picture of it.
A view of Oyster Bay from the Devil's Corner (they love their devils down here) Winery.
A couple of random shots at the quirky convict built Spiky Bridge.
We found a tiger! I don't know his name, but he seems friendly. The Tasmanian Tiger, or to give it its correct name thylacine, isn't a tiger at all. It's a marsupial wolf, but because of the stripes people called it a tiger. It did actually occur on the mainland, but thrived in Tasmania due to the island's isolation. The last known one sadly died in Hobart Zoo in 1936. It is officially extinct, but there are reports of sightings or evidence that it still lives in the wild, however nothing has ever been officially confirmed or proven.
Shell covered Kelvedon Beach.
The blow hole at Bicheno going whoosh!
Pics on the rock beach.
"Amelia what do we do if the water rushes in and covers us?"
"Cry?"
I know beaches aren't normally made of rock, but this one had some great scenery and photograph taking opportunities. I saw a big seabird, but it flew away too quickly for me to take a picture of it.
A view of Oyster Bay from the Devil's Corner (they love their devils down here) Winery.
A couple of random shots at the quirky convict built Spiky Bridge.
We found a tiger! I don't know his name, but he seems friendly. The Tasmanian Tiger, or to give it its correct name thylacine, isn't a tiger at all. It's a marsupial wolf, but because of the stripes people called it a tiger. It did actually occur on the mainland, but thrived in Tasmania due to the island's isolation. The last known one sadly died in Hobart Zoo in 1936. It is officially extinct, but there are reports of sightings or evidence that it still lives in the wild, however nothing has ever been officially confirmed or proven.