A pink flower on someone's front yard down the street from Yolanda's Mum's house. |
Australia is literally covered with bushes and trees of the eucalyptus persuasion. People usually think this means one particular species, but there are over 700 different variations in every size and shape that are grouped as, "some type of eucalyptus" by the locals. |
A purple flower on a local's roadside bush. |
Many of the plants here are succulents, with the enlarged, bulbous leaves and stems typical of desert and other arrid-area plants. This creeping plant used by many as edging in their gardens has these adorable little red flowers. |
The ubiquitous salt bush, properly known as Atriplex, a short, shrubby plant that nearly covers the landscape in undeveloped areas around here. Salt bush is called such because it can grow very well in salty soil and water and actually retains that salt in its leaves, making it have a very salt flavor, if you can brave the tough branches and tiny leaves to try any. This is the defining plant of the "bush" regions of Australia (semi-desert regions) and no doubt responsible for that name. |
An unknown bush that I call 'snake bush' as it looks like it, but I really don't know the name and nobody else seems to, either. This isn't as common as salt bush but grows pretty often and in large sizes, some spanning upwards of 8 to 10 feet wide. One has to wonder if one of the 10 species of poisonous snakes is living underneath. <shudder> |
A few of the tops of the trees in the "ship park" (the park where the ship H.M.S. Whyalla is permanently drydocked). |
A white flower on a tree bordering someone's yard, unknown species. |
A yellow canna in Mum's garden. |
A view of the city park up the road from Mum's house. That's my brother-in-law Sam and 'Pup' (his new dog). While this is a park, it is really just a section of the outback captured within the city limits, as this is pretty typical of what you would see were you to walk outside the city borders and into the bush itself. |
Another picture of the trees and bushes of the park. |
The park, again, from a different angle. There are some jungle gym pieces in here for kids to play on, although they don't dare do it after dark, due to the large numbers of mozzies (mosquitoes) and questionable sorts wandering around. |
Me, in the city park, doing one of those touristy-type photos. The smirk on my face is probably from ants crawling up my ass, I suspect. |
I had to take a picture of their electrical poles. Unlike the poles we have in American (wooden, creosote), these are steel beams in a triangular shape with concrete in between. The lines also carry 220 volt, 50Hz electricity vs. our 120v, 60Hz and are uncovered, aluminum lines (vs. our copper, covered lines) |
A few down Sampson Street, the street on which Yolanda's Mum lives. You can see Rocky Hill in the distance at the end. |
Looking across Norrie Avenue towards Rocky Hill |
Rocky Hill is a block up the street from Yolanda's Mum's house and is a pretty large hill that houses the water tower and water tank for the town, with very large supply and distribution pipes coming out of the bottom. The tank is supposedly topless, although I've been unable to look inside as you can't get up high enough. |
A beautiful sky from the top of Rocky Hill, with the town water tank on the right. This huge tank acts as a storage buffer for the town's water supply that is piped in from the Murray River, hundreds of miles away. (local aquifers are brackish due to seawater, and undrinkable) |
A stormy sky over Whyalla, with another water tank on the horizon. That night it poured down rain after dark, but only for about an hour; rainstorms here only last a few minutes at most, usually, in an area that only gets 10 inches a year total. |
A view of Whyalla from the top of Rocky Hill. You can see houses in the foreground and the OneSteel plant in the background. OneSteel is a division of BHP Billiton, the largest mining company in the world, and Whyalla's steelworks is one of the primary steelmaking facilities in the country. During WWII, it was also one of the largest shipyards in the country, responsible for most of the destroyers built, but that has ceased operations since the 1970s. OneSteel is the primary employer of this city of 32,000 people (or so) and it is really booming right now, but as my brother-in-law says, it's both the thing keeping the city alive and killing it, as the dust and chemicals thrown off by the plant are suspected to be causing one of the highest cancer rates in all of Australia for the town's residents. |
Me with Whyalla in the background, standing on top of Rocky Hill after climbing it with my brother-in-law, Sam. |
Another shot of Whyalla from the top of Rocky Hill, with the ocean on the left. |
A sunset over Whyalla, from the top of Rocky Hill. |
This is a sunset over the ocean and Whyalla, taken from another hill in town, Hummock Hill. The ocean (hard to see) is on the left past the city lights. This hill has a drive to the top where locals go and look over the town (and teenagers attempt to generate romance) |