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Wednesday 20 May 2020

Richmond

Pugh's Lagoon

As home isolation restrictions have now been lifted, Ken and I decided to drive down to Pugh's Lagoon yesterday to enjoy a walk in the Autumn sunshine around this beautiful Reserve, which is also a sanctuary for the local waterbirds.  It was also an ideal opportunity to try out my new camera.  I have bought the latest Sony digital compact cyber-shot 30x up to 60x optical zoom with wi fi connect to my smartphone.  It replaces my old Sony camera, with similar features, which I wore out after 5 years of constant use.  It simply wasn't worth trying to get it fixed as I figured technology would have superseded my old camera. 

Smith Park, opposite the Lagoon.  It seems a rather plain name for such a beautiful place.  However, I guess it was named after somebody historically important to the area.  Pugh's Lagoon is named after Edward Pugh, a convict transported to NSW in 1787 and later granted 100 acres west of Richmond, including this Lagoon.
Three Geese stepping out and getting ready to cross the road in the car park.  There are lots of Geese and Ducks wandering around, also Purple Swamphens and Eurasian Coots. 

It was not a good day to try out my new camera as the sun was very bright and I couldn't see the image on my digital screen. 
More Ducks waddling along on the banks of the Lagoon.  There are grassy banks and mature trees creating a peaceful recreational space.  There are also many picnic sheds and a concrete path around the lower section of the Park.
I love the reflection of the trees in the beautiful blue water of the Lagoon Pugh's Lagoon is considered an ecological wetland and is home to many plant and bird species. There are normally many black swans on the water, but we did not see any yesterday.
These trees, in full Autumn splendour, made a lovely reflection in the water.

Many of the mature trees in the Park are not native species, but more suited to English parklands and were probably planted at a time when the early settlers wanted to create a landscape more familiar to them.
Up on a hill overlooking the Lagoon I spied this interesting looking house.  I love the twin chimneys and the high pitched roof, reminiscent of a house in the English countryside.

Pugh's Lagoon is part of the Hawkesbury Artists trail and has been depicted in art by many artists in the Hawkesbury region.  The Lagoon has been painted by Charles Conder, impressionist artist, during his time in Richmond.  The oil on cardboard painting "A Shady Hollow by a Dusty Road" depicts the area in 1887.

We enjoyed our visit to the Lagoon as it is one of our favourite places.  We drove back along Springwood Road and up the bends to Hawkesbury Road, pausing to look at the view from Hawkesbury Heights Lookout.  There were lots of visitors to the Lookout, everybody eager to get out for a while.




Tuesday 5 May 2020

Winmalee Ridge

Winmalee Ridge

On Monday 4th May, for our exercise, whilst practising self isolation during the Covid 19 pandemic, we took a bushwalk to Winmalee Ridge.  This is a short walk from our house into a track through the bush out to the ridgeline bordering Winmalee.   We took advantage of the pleasant weather to venture a little further than the residential streets and do an actual bushwalk.   However, in getting to the place where the bushwalk begins, we need to walk down a very steep residential street called Shakespeare Drive, so we decided to drive the car to the beginning of the bushwalk as we did not want to face the steep climb back up Shakespeare Drive before getting back to our house on Hawkesbury Road.


We left the car parked along the roadside and proceeded on the walk through the bush.  It was a beautiful sunny Autumn day and very pleasant walking through the bush.  The track was quite well defined in the early stages, but seemed to branch out into different directions after a while.  There is a wire fence running along one boundary and we could not venture into this area, which belongs to the Winmalee Sewerage Works.

There were many tall trees and lots of Angophoras in the process of shedding their bark revealing lovely smooth pinkish trunks. These trees are commonly known as the the smooth-barked apple.
Surprisingly we found there were a number of wildflowers blooming.  Here is a Lambertia formosa,  commonly known as the Mountain Devil and there were a number of these in flower.  Also some early Wattle, especially Acacia ulicifolia commonly known as Prickly Moses.  This little Wattle is found all through the Blue Mountains on sandy soils and heathland.  There were also lots of different varieties of Banksias.
The Banksia flowers were dotted around everywhere and I love their upright stiff bristle like appearance.  Some were small and others thinner and taller.  There were some Banksia serrata trees out on the rock platforms, with their grey knobbly bark and big black banksia seed pods dotted along the branches and it is these pods that helped to inspire May Gibbs write about her big bad banksia men in the adventures of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie in her books for children.
Here is a tree, hollowed out by a bushfire.  These hollow trees provide resource or habitat for all  kinds of animal life and are an important part of the ecosystem.

We did not notice or hear any birds in the bush which was disappointing as I am a great lover of birds and like to photograph them in the wild.  Maybe it was just as well as I did not have my camera with me and was only relying on my phone camera, which would not have been good enough to zoom in on the birds.
I couldn't identify this little wildflower with its dainty white flowers.

About 8 years' ago I did a Native Plant Recognition course at the Wentworth Falls TAFE and did several field trips into the bush to identify various plant species.  I loved this course and would have gone on to do more, but unfortunately the Government pulled the funding of TAFE courses at the time and the opportunity was not there to go any further.  However, I still have my text books and will try later to identify this plant.  (Edit: Could be Epacris pulchella)
Banksia spinulosa, a hairpin Banksia in the Proteaceae family.  It grows from a lignotuber with multiple stems.  The leaves are linear, narrow and a couple of millimetres wide.  There were lots of these bushes with their stiff golden yellow spikes lighting up the bush like candles.

The bush seemed to be in very good condition with no sign of any weed infestation.  There were however, several sticks and branches which would have blown down in the recent very windy weather, but nothing that was not too difficult to step over!

We made it to the highest point on the Ridge which was a large flat rock perched on the edge of the ridge overlooking
Frasers Creek and in the distance the Nepean River, which we could not see.  At this point we were 299 metres above sea level.

We continued a little bit further along the track, but then it seemed to peter out, so rather than risk getting lost and not being able to find our way back, we turned around and walked back to our car after a very enjoyable little exercise break.