Gillian Everett's photos with the keyword: Tin Can Bay
#10 afternoon shadows
01 Jun 2019 |
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Tin Can Bay, Queensland
Saturday challenge - shadows
#10 TSC Scavenger Hunt... shadows
Vanishing point
21 Apr 2019 |
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Tin Can Bay Foreshore, Queensland.
The foreshore walk follows the bay right around. A great place to walk, and cycle. Always great breezes :-)
Sunday challenge... Vanishing point B&W
Vanishing point
Tin Can Bay Foreshore
Tin Can Bay
09 Mar 2019 |
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at Norman Point, the home of Barnacles Dolphin Centre, Tin Can Bay Houseboats, the Coast Guard.
Tin Can Bay
09 Mar 2019 |
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at Norman Point, the home of Barnacles Dolphin Centre, Tin Can Bay Houseboats, the Coast Guard. Taken with my new 100mm lens.
Saturday challenge... Frame within frame B&W
Kate Kelly Walkway
03 Nov 2018 |
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Out for a walk with our dogs...
This walkway, about 4kms, is along the foreshore between Crab Creek and the Norman Point area in Tin Can Bay, Queensland, part of the walk circuit around the coastal fishing and boating village.
Councillor Ned Kelly and his wife, Kate, were very active in the Tin Can Bay community.
In 1978 Kate Kelly wrote and produced the "History of the Tin Can Bay Country Club (1966 - 1978)" , a booklet dedicated to the Club, its members and Tin Can Bay.
N. Kelly is listed as a Past President 1977-1978 and 1985-1987. In 1977 recorded as President Cr N Kelly with Secretary Mrs K Kelly.
In 1978, President Men's Bowls Club N Kelly, and President Ladies' Bowls Club, Mrs K Kelly.
tcbcc.com.au
Sunday challenge... November
the bay
Tin Can Bay
31 May 2014 |
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There is a walk of 10,000 steps around the town so this photo and some of the marina were taken in the early morning on part of this walk. The light was really beautiful.
Tin Can Bay, the town, is on a peninsula with a park lined foreshore on one side and the Marina on the other.
These shaded picnic benches are dotted along the foreshore.
Archive Airings AA46 Sit and Ponder
Meeting a Dolphin
18 Nov 2013 |
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At Dolphin Cove in Tin Can Bay, Queensland.
This child had dropped the tiny fish in the water and his father was explaining that he should have held it just under the water. The dolphins take the fish very gently.
The locals have named these two visiting Dolphins Mystique (male) and Patch (female), members of a pod of frequent Dolphin visitors.
It is a delightful experience to see these wild river/estuarine dolphins willingly coming close to the shore to meet their old friends who host the meeting with these lovely creatures. Every morning around 7-8.30am they can be seen in varying numbers.
The Indo-Pacific Humpback Dolphins have been interacting with residents and visitors of Tin Can Bay for 30 years. It all started with “Scarry” nicknamed due to the numerous rough edges along her dorsal and tail fins. “Scarry” appeared with a young male dolphin, Mystique, believed to be her youngest surviving offspring.
“Scarry” has not been seen since early 2003 but her son Mystique and girlfriend “Patch” still come in to the boat ramp to observe humans and be hand fed.
barnaclesdolphincentre.com.au/dolphin_feeding.htm
Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins are referred to as an 'inshore' species as they occur in shallow nearshore waters, often near river mouths, and are rarely sighted more than 1 km offshore. In Moreton Bay they can be found up to 6 km offshore and have also been recorded up to 55 km offshore in the northern Great Barrier Reef where waters are shallow. Their distribution is tropical and subtropical. Key localities in Queensland are Moreton Bay and its adjacent offshore waters, and the Tin Can Inlet of the Great Sandy Strait.
www.ehp.qld.gov.au/wildlife/animals-az/indopacific_humpba...
Archive Airings AA53 Candid street scenes
2017 Alphabet Site M
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