Bolt Hole, Dunsborough-Yallingup, Western Australia

Bolt Hole, Dunsborough-Yallingup, Western Australia A Photo Essay About a Paradise Found, Enhanced and Forsaken (1996-2005) - "Beautiful House in the Trees with a Green Roof" - with View of Two Oceans

OUR BEAUTIFUL AND MYSTERIOUS PLANET Pink Lake Hillier, Western Australia This 600m-long (2,000-ft) lake off of Western A...
19/12/2017

OUR BEAUTIFUL AND MYSTERIOUS PLANET

Pink Lake Hillier, Western Australia

This 600m-long (2,000-ft) lake off of Western Australia’s Southern Coast stands out with its bubble-gum pink water. No one can explain the source for its unique, bold color. However, it is safe to swim in this non-toxic, highly saline lake.

AUSTRALIAN AUTO INDUSTRY DIES AT 69Australia’s car industry officially ended on Friday as Holden, a unit of US carmaker ...
20/10/2017

AUSTRALIAN AUTO INDUSTRY DIES AT 69

Australia’s car industry officially ended on Friday as Holden, a unit of US carmaker General Motors, closed its plant in South Australia. The closure comes a year after the exodus of Toyota and Ford.

“The end of Holden making cars in Australia is a very sad day for the workers and for every Australian. It is the end of an era,” Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said on Friday.“Everyone has a Holden story,” he added.

According to various estimates, 30,000 to 50,000 people have lost jobs as a result of the closures. While the number of direct layoffs is about 5,000, the real number is closer to 50,000, if people indirectly involved in Holden’s production are included, according to the Australian newspaper The Advertiser.

Australia plans to increase military spending by about $23.5 billion by 2022, to produce a fleet of frigates, armored personnel carriers and submarines to be concentrated in South Australia.

However, the people who lost jobs will “need to be retrained to be able to work in defense, mining, aerospace, because we are going to be building ships,” John Camillo, ‎state secretary at the Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union in South Australia told reporters.

The first Australian-designed mass production car was manufactured by Holden in 1948. Following WWII, the company was backed by the Australian government, which wanted to boost domestic car manufacturing and give the nation some global status.

Through the 1960s and '70s, Holden was the most popular car brand in Australia, competing only with Ford. However, a 2013 report showed that Holden could no longer afford to manufacture cars in Australia.

After production ends, the brand will continue as an importer of vehicles.

For more, see... Rest in peace: Australian auto industry dies at 69 - https://on.rt.com/8qa1

ALTZAR: It is a sad day for this writer, too. When I lived in Australia (see https://www.facebook.com/BoltHoleWA/), I used to own a Holden station wagon (see the 2001 photo). It was a good a reliable work horse. R.I.P. :-(

02/10/2017

18 years ago...

A ROO DINNER

Happy Australia Day​ to my Aussie friends​! (celebrated on Jan 26, which is already now in Australia)The day marks the a...
25/01/2017

Happy Australia Day​ to my Aussie friends​!

(celebrated on Jan 26, which is already now in Australia)

The day marks the anniversary of the 1788 arrival of the First Fleet of British Ships at Port Jackson, New South Wales.

​PHOTO: Yours truly at the Bolt Hole, Western Australia, on this day 17 years ago. (https://www.facebook.com/BoltHoleWA)

01/10/2016

ON THIS DAY 17 YEARS AGO...

ROO BREAKFAST

At the Bolt Hole, my former property in Western Australia (1999 photo) - https://www.facebook.com/BoltHoleWA — in Dunsborough, Western Australia.

ONCE IN A BLUE MOON A friend from Canada sent me this fascinating time-lapse video. On July 31st 2015 , this beautiful r...
29/03/2016

ONCE IN A BLUE MOON

A friend from Canada sent me this fascinating time-lapse video.

On July 31st 2015 , this beautiful rise of the Full Blue Moon was captured 2½ miles away from Cape Byron Lighthouse, on Belongil Beach, Byron Bay, New South Wales, Australia. The piece of land and lighthouse at Byron Bay is the most easterly point of the Australian Mainland, and therefore is the first place in Australia to watch the full moon rise.

This video is made up of 1038 frames and slowed down to as close to real time as possible. The photographer (Luke Taylor) had been working on perfecting this type of time lapse for over a year after seeing the work of his favorite photographer Mark Gee.

It is a majestic time-lapse; everything about it is just perfect, and it's a photography clinic for anyone interested in taking time-lapse. Watch for the bat to fly across the moon.

https://player.vimeo.com/video/137218768

ALTZAR: I replied to my Canadian friend that it was interesting that Luke Taylor, the author of this video, chose the title "Once in a Blue Moon" - which was also the headlined of my story about the Blue Moon on Jan 31, 1999 over Meelup Beach in Western Australia - on the opposite side of the Australian continent.

http://www.truthinmedia.org/Vignettes/Meelup.html

Once in a Blue Moon:: Contact: [email protected] Music was created by the talented, Award Winning Pianist - JESSICA ROEMISCHER. You can listen to…

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY... JAN 26ALTZAR: Happy Australia Day to my many friends Down Under! (see The Bolt Hole - https://...
26/01/2016

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY... JAN 26

ALTZAR: Happy Australia Day to my many friends Down Under! (see The Bolt Hole - https://www.facebook.com/BoltHoleWA/)

TOP IMAGE: Sydney's famous Circular Quay - then and now.

1788

Australia Day

On January 26, 1788, Captain Arthur Phillip guides a fleet of 11 British ships carrying convicts to the colony of New South Wales, effectively founding Australia. After overcoming a period of hardship, the fledgling colony began to celebrate the anniversary of this date with great fanfare.

Australia, once known as New South Wales, was originally planned as a penal colony. In October 1786, the British government appointed Arthur Phillip captain of the HMS Sirius, and commissioned him to establish an agricultural work camp there for British convicts. With little idea of what he could expect from the mysterious and distant land, Phillip had great difficulty assembling the fleet that was to make the journey. His requests for more experienced farmers to assist the penal colony were repeatedly denied, and he was both poorly funded and outfitted. Nonetheless, accompanied by a small contingent of Marines and other officers, Phillip led his 1,000-strong party, of whom more than 700 were convicts, around Africa to the eastern side of Australia. In all, the voyage lasted eight months, claiming the deaths of some 30 men.

The first years of settlement were nearly disastrous. Cursed with poor soil, an unfamiliar climate and workers who were ignorant of farming, Phillip had great difficulty keeping the men alive. The colony was on the verge of outright starvation for several years, and the marines sent to keep order were not up to the task.

Phillip, who proved to be a tough but fair-minded leader, persevered by appointing convicts to positions of responsibility and oversight. Floggings and hangings were commonplace, but so was egalitarianism. As Phillip said before leaving England: “In a new country there will be no slavery and hence no slaves.”

Though Phillip returned to England in 1792, the colony became prosperous by the turn of the 19th century. Feeling a new sense of patriotism, the men began to rally around January 26 as their founding day. Historian Manning Clarke noted that in 1808 the men observed the “anniversary of the foundation of the colony” with “drinking and merriment.”

Finally, in 1818, January 26 became an official holiday, marking the 30th anniversary of British settlement in Australia. And, as Australia became a sovereign nation, it became the national holiday known as Australia Day. Today, Australia Day serves both as a day of celebration for the founding of the white British settlement, and as a day of mourning for the Aborigines who were slowly dispossessed of their land as white colonization spread across the continent.

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/australia-day

AN AUSSIE TIGER TALE: WHEN YOU CATCH A TIGER BY THE TAIL...JUNE 16, 2015 by ALTZARhttp://wp.me/p3R16m-25EWHEN YOU CATCH ...
16/06/2015

AN AUSSIE TIGER TALE: WHEN YOU CATCH A TIGER BY THE TAIL...

JUNE 16, 2015 by ALTZAR

http://wp.me/p3R16m-25E

WHEN YOU CATCH A TIGER BY THE TAIL

A smiling young lady from Niger,
Once went for a ride on a tiger,
They returned from the ride,
With a smile on the face of the tiger,
and the young lady inside.”

(One of the few poems I recall from my childhood)

AUSTRALIA 2015 BROUGHT BACK MEMORIES OF A LONG-AGO ENCOUNTER WITH WESTERN TIGER SNAKE

A few months ago, Elizabeth and I came back to Maui from an amazing trip to Australia. For me, it was a return to Paradise that I once called my home. For Elizabeth, it was her first trip to the land Down Under. And what a memorable experience it was! (see AUSTRALIA 2015 – http://wp.me/p3R16m-1yE).

One day, as we were driving down Commonage Rd near Dunsborough, Western Australia, I had a flashback.

“See that driveway over there,” I said to Elizabeth. “That’s where an old friend of mine used to live. At the end of that driveway, he once encountered a tiger.”

“A tiger?” Elizabeth repeated sounding incredulous.

“Well, an Aussie tiger,” I grinned. “A 10-ft tiger snake.”

“Yikes!”

During the rest of our drive to Dunsborough, I recounted for Elizabeth the tale that Peter, my former neighbor, shared with me almost two decades ago.

READ MORE...

http://wp.me/p3R16m-25E

WHEN YOU CATCH A TIGER BY THE TAIL A smiling young lady from Niger, Once went for a ride on a tiger, They returned from the ride, With a smile on the face of the tiger, and the young lady inside.” ...

AUSTRALIA 2015: TABLE OF CONTENTSAnd now, for those of you who may have missed some of the travelogues, here's a Table o...
17/03/2015

AUSTRALIA 2015: TABLE OF CONTENTS

And now, for those of you who may have missed some of the travelogues, here's a Table of Contents page for the entire trip:

http://wp.me/p3R16m-1yE

FROM OUR AUSTRALIAN TRAVELOGUES (cont'd)AUSTRALIA 2015: EPILOGUEMARCH 16, 2015 by ALTZAR	Was this trip to Australia all ...
17/03/2015

FROM OUR AUSTRALIAN TRAVELOGUES (cont'd)

AUSTRALIA 2015: EPILOGUE

MARCH 16, 2015 by ALTZAR

Was this trip to Australia all I had hoped for?

It was more, much more than that.

I never could have imagined a journey with such a variety of experiences… from the roo breakfasts and dinners in the Yangarra bush above Dunsborough, to the ethereal “Madam Butterfly” Sydney Opera House. With a myriad of other amazing experiences in between.

Only Divine travel agents could have arranged such an itinerary. All I had to do it follow my instincts. They handled the rest; all the logistics. Including the appropriate weather for each day.

Another responsibility I had was to share it all with all you all afterward in the form of these travelogues. Such special experiences are never meant for just those taking the trip. That would be very selfish. And our Spirit guides would not like that.

As a result of the travelogues, some of the readers have even expressed interest of moving to Australia, not just visiting this beautiful country. Others just wanted to know what it would be like to live there. And even my Australians friends seem to appreciate the stories.

“I’ve been re-reading your travelogues,” my longtime friend and a former Bolt Hole neighbor wrote to me the other day. “There’s no doubt you know how to travel – it’s hard to find a minute that was not dedicated wholeheartedly to depositing more experiences in the bank of life. I’m in awe of your energy and enthusiasm.”

I replied in part:

“We have been also reliving them with each story. The additional narrative and pictures sort of help cement the ‘experiences in the bank of life,’ as you so eloquently put it. We approach everything with a motto – ‘if it is worth doing, it is worth doing well.’ And that includes ‘vegging out.’ You never know what you may end up harvesting while vegging out.” :-)

NEVER AGAIN? PROBABLY NOT…

As Elizabeth and I reminisced and recapped our Australian experiences at that Circular Quay Starbucks, both of us also realized that this is probably it. This was the trip to end all trips. We are probably not going to return to Australia in this lifetime.

I never say never, but I just don’t think it is in the cards anymore.

That’s because this entire trip felt like an Epilogue, a Grand Finale, of my life in Australia. And for Elizabeth, who had never been Down Under before, it was both the baptism and farewell all in one.

Oddly enough, I felt no sadness when I realized that. Maybe that was the whole point of this trip. To say goodbye with joy and gratitude for the experiences this amazing continent has blessed me with without expectations of encores.

That evening, on our flight back home to Hawaii, I thanked the Spirit for the privilege of being able to experience all that, and to end the Australian chapter of my life with my life partner in many lifetimes at my side. So now she knows what Australia is about, too. Firsthand.

TOP THREE EXPERIENCES

At the end of all our major trips, Elizabeth and I discuss what our respective top three experiences or memories of the trip were. In this case, we did that on our last day in Sydney, Feb 26, while sipping our drinks at the Starbucks near Circular Quay.

Click here to find out what they were...

http://wp.me/p3R16m-1PT

EPILOGUE Was this trip to Australia all I had hoped for? It was more, much more than that. I never could have imagined a journey with such a variety of experiences... from the roo breakfasts and di...

FROM OUR AUSTRALIAN TRAVELOGUES (cont'd)ELEPHANT DANCE, “MENAGE A TROIS” IN LIONS DEN, AND MUCH MOREMARCH 15, 2015 by AL...
16/03/2015

FROM OUR AUSTRALIAN TRAVELOGUES (cont'd)

ELEPHANT DANCE, “MENAGE A TROIS” IN LIONS DEN, AND MUCH MORE

MARCH 15, 2015 by ALTZAR

Feb 26 – SYDNEY ZOO: OUR “WARM DOWN” AFTER “MADAM BUTTERFLY” AT SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE

How do you come down emotionally after completing a marathon?

I should ask my Aussie friend Andrew that question. He is an accomplished world-class marathoner.

I don’t know what he does after a big race. But I would guess that he does not spend the next day in bed. Probably goes out for a little run.

I am no marathoner. But in swimming, we used call that a “warm down.” That’s what you do an exhausting race. You do a few laps just to loosen up come down emotionally before you shower and dress.

Sydney Zoo: Our “Warm Down” after the Opera

That’s how Elizabeth and I felt the morning after that high we experienced on Feb 25 during the “Madam Butterfly” performance at the Sydney Opera House.

So what did we do? We went to the zoo.

On our last day in Sydney, we walked down to the Circular Quay from our Darling Harbour hotel, and took a ferry to the Taronga Zoo. We thought it would be a marvelous way to come down emotionally from the high the “Madam Butterfly ” experience represented the night before.

But first, we had a surprise.

READ MORE...


http://wp.me/p3R16m-1OM

Feb 26 - SYDNEY ZOO: OUR "WARM DOWN" AFTER "MADAM BUTTERFLY" AT SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE How do you come down emotionally after completing a marathon? I should ask my Aussie friend Andrew that question. ...

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Quedjinup Rd & Bina Place
Dunsborough, WA

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