Blue Lake, no colour editing_2
Blue Lake, no colour editing_3
Wildflower
blue wildflower
Christmas Cove cottage_1
Les Kossatz (*1943): “Guardians of the last piece”…
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5
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blau
quer
hoch
rot
Blauer Engel
Hyazinthe
Blausternchen - Scilla sibirica
Traubenhyazinthen (Muscari)
Blausternchen
Blausternchen mit Primel
Out of context
Günsel, ein "Unkraut" in der Wiese
Vergissmeinnicht [Myosotis]
blaues Stiefmütterchen
Günsel
Gamander-Ehrenpreis (Veronica)
Spring
Hook
Traubenhyazinthe
The Blowholes, Cape Bridgewater
Bridgewater Bay
view from above the Grotto_2
view from above the Grotto_1
The Grotto
"London Bridge"
near Loch Ard Gorge
Blowhole near Loch Ard Gorge
Loch Ard Gorge_2
Loch Ard Gorge_1
Otway coast from Mount Defiance, looking east
Otway coast from Mount Defiance, looking west
Great Ocean Road
Point Roadknight
Torre Agbar
LEDs
Ceiling
blue cloth - green moss
Colors
Strelitzia with ant
Blau- Licht
Graffiti wall, Brunswick St. Fitzroy
Captured bubbles
Rod
Bowling
Restaurant
pavillion dome
*Frosty Blue Sky*
Slide
Blaue Blumen
But in fact ...
blueish and pinkish
Location
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Blue Lake, no colour editing_1
"Mount Gambier's Blue Lake , situated in a volcanic crater, exposes crystal clear water that has filtered underground as it passes slowly under the city through the limestone. Each year in November the lake starts its colour change from winter sombre blue to brilliant turquoise blue, before returning to its winter hue in March.
During winters of high rainfall, surplus water seeps down through the limestone recharging the underground water system.
Making its way gradually to the ocean, the underground water has contributed to the dissolution of the limestone forming many caves beneath the City of Mount Gambier and surrounding areas.
The Blue Lake was formed when the volcano erupted through the limestone allowing the underground water to fill the crater, creating the lake that we see today."
www.mountgambiertourism.com.au/geology.htm
During winters of high rainfall, surplus water seeps down through the limestone recharging the underground water system.
Making its way gradually to the ocean, the underground water has contributed to the dissolution of the limestone forming many caves beneath the City of Mount Gambier and surrounding areas.
The Blue Lake was formed when the volcano erupted through the limestone allowing the underground water to fill the crater, creating the lake that we see today."
www.mountgambiertourism.com.au/geology.htm
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