Ever since boofheaded Donald Trump imposed the trade war , causing Wall Street to become wall-eyed , cycads have turned unhealthy- like the one below in Australia.
Would you believe this is not fake news? |
Ever since boofheaded Donald Trump imposed the trade war , causing Wall Street to become wall-eyed , cycads have turned unhealthy- like the one below in Australia.
Would you believe this is not fake news? |
Due to the flooding rain in Queensland , magpie geese are having to raise the level of their nests in swamps, pools and billabongs.
The rising water level in a lake caused a pair to quickly raise the height of the nest by adding more sticks and pieces off nearby plants. The home alone bird below on its nest seems somewhat nonplussed about the situation.
(Estate , Floods. Queensland. )
Because of a so-called rain shadow over Townsville it became known as Brownsville in the dry season. According to the Bureau of Meteorology , Townsville misses out on much rain because most onshore winds from the south- east , which bring showers , bypass the area due to the terrain , unlike Cairns that has mountains .
However, so far this year, Townsville has experienced record rainful of about 2400 millimetres , flooding in some areas , the closure of a large shopping centre due to underground flooding, landslides which closed Castle Hill and the Ross River has been cascading across the weirs.
The usual lotus filled pool in the gardens has also expanded , attracting much more birdlife than usual , including magpie geese, whistling ducks, curlews , peaceful doves, pee wees and finches.
With so many surface pools about it gives rise to arty photographs of the reflections of sky , clouds and surrounds, like the one following , taken by drenched Vallis.
Found in a number of war books in the garrison city of Townsville , in the one above, was the loosely inserted photograph of a crouched soldier posing with a rifle and what looks like a cullender , a kitchen utensil used to drain fluids from food , on his head .
The author , Gary McKay, served in South Viet Nam in 1971, where he was badly wounded and awarded the Military Cross for gallantry.
According to the blurb, he interviewed more than 100 veterans and their families to build up a picture of their war.
He spoke to nurses and doctors, Qantas cabin crew and pilots, men who had served with the Army, Navy and Air Force, in helicopters, armoured units , maintenance divisions , destroyers , on the gun line , units attached to American forces and ships carrying troops.
This resulted in a most interesting book , published by Allen and Unwin.
McKay also wrote In Good Company and Delta Four and Sleeping With Your Ears Open : On Patrol with the Australian SAS .
Bullets, Beans and Bandages was first published in l992 as Vietnam Fragments.
There was another inclusion , a Queensland Health Public Patients' Charter pamphlet , in The Accidental Guerrilla, fighting small wars in the midst of a big one , published by Scribe, Melbourne.
Written by David Kilcullen, a former Australian Army officer and one of the world's most influential experts on guerrilla warfare, the wide ranging volume includes extensive coverage of the INTERFET force which went into East Timor.
(VIetnam . Guerrillas. Books .)
In our exclusive series- Rewind The Press!- we recalled the Northern Territory's colourful media past. In this case , it is a rerun about an unusual publication and the dynamic duo who produced it after Cyclone Tracy destroyed Darwin in l974.
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Damaged Chinese Temple sign in shatttered city. |
Victorian Pete Steedman , a seasoned and scarred ALP warrior, known as the Black Knight , had been in the eye of countless political storms. It was an epic tempest, Australia’s worst natural disaster, Cyclone Tracy, which saw him called in to utilise his skills as a forceful journalist / editor, publisher and communicator in the production of the Darwin Newsletter .
Ball had lived in Hong Kong and there were articles, illustrated with a picture of ships swept ashore in tidal surges , about how the British colony coped with regular hurricanes and information about its building code, The byline on one article billed John Ball as "our cyclone-proof obsessed reporter".