Greenough Pioneer Museum Western Australia as seen on Whats Up Downunder April 2011
Tania Kernaghan visits the Greenough Pioneer Museum Western Australia as seen on Whats Up Downunder April 2011.
Greenough Pictorial - Western Australia
Greenough Is a whole historic town that's been restored back to its time in the past. You can also see the famous bent tree there as well. This whole area is known for the trees growing that way.
Photography 2013 by John Boom.
Australian Pictorials - australianpictorials.com
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WA Weekender EP29 - Greenough
Visiting Geraldton, Australia
Visiting Geraldton, Australia
Find & compare Hotels in Geraldton -
Car Rental -
Foreshore
Western Australian Museum – Geraldton
HMAS Sydney II Memorial
Ellendale Pool
Cathedral of St Francis Xavier Church
Central Greenough Historic Settlement
Greenough Museum Gardens
Leaning Trees
Geraldton Regional Art Gallery
Point Moore Lighthouse
Road Trip Geraldton - July 2014 - Greenough Pioneer Museum
Now this is Pioneer Museum with a difference. Here you're actually allowed to touch stuff ... which lowers the stakes for our hands on approach to tourism and makes it more fun.
Travel Video VI // SEQUENCE 1 - WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Exploring Australia for the first time was a dream since i was a child.
This is, WESTERN AUSTRALIA. This video was taken during my outstation work for 39 days, and we went to three states of Australia, and this is one of them.
Fascinated by their environment and such winter weather (We've been the craziest ones, too), Western Australia gives an impression of a state with peaceful people, amazing landscapes and big sea to chill by the side to me.
LOCATION VISITED:
- PERTH
- UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA [UWA]
- LANCELIN SAND DUNES
- LOBSTER SHACK
- RAC CERVENTUS HOLIDAY PARK
- GREENOUGH PIONEER MUSEUM & GARDENS
- THE LEANING TREE
- SPENCER LAKE a.k.a PINK LAKE
- KALBARRI WAGOE BEACH & QUAD BIKE
- DRUMMOND COVE [SCENERY ONLY]
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Produced, Edited & Presented By:
SIMPLICITY PRODUCTION
Shot with:
SONY ALPHA 7 MARK II
HTC 10 (Camera Test only)
Music Credits:
UNITED WE STAND
(Music from Audio Networks.com)
Post-Production:
Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2018
DaVinci Resolve 14 Lite
© 2018 Simplicity Production, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Disclaimers: This video is a NON-PROFIT & NON-COMMERCIAL and we DO NOT owned the music, but credits to the creators who produced great music production. This video is for educational training and portfolio purposes only. Any related to the same production DOES NOT belong to the original author.
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The Aviation Heritage Museum of WA, Bull Creek, Perth, WA
Located at the Air Force Memorial Estate, Bull Creek Drive, Bull Creek, Western Australia. museum@raafawa.org.au
WACA Museum
The Western Australian Cricket Association is the home of cricket in Western Australia and through the WACA Museum displays the history of cricket and other sports played at this famous ground.
Western Australia 2016
29/11/16 - 10/12/16
Western Australia. A great place to unwind. Enjoyed exploring by myself, going on some really great tours and hanging with some awesome people I met. Had a hella good time in WA. Being my first ever solo trip, this one will always be remembered. The sights, the experiences, the travellers and the tour guides.
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Day 1: Rottnest Island
Day 2: Perth, Kings Park and Botanic Garden, Art Gallery of WA, Nostalgia Box, Elizabeth Quay
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Aussie Wanderer 7 Day Perth to Exmouth Return
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Day 3: Pinnacles Desert, Pot Alley
Day 4: Z-Bend, Murchison Gorge, Natures Window, Stromatolites
Day 5: Monkey Mia, Shell Beach
Day 6: Coral Bay
Day 7: Turquoise Bay, Vlamingh Head Lighthouse
Day 8/9: Pink Lake, Greenough Wildlife Park, Lancelin Sand Dunes
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Day 10: Fremantle Markets, Little Creatures Brewery, Round House, Scarborough Beach
Day 11: Fremantle Prison Tunnels Tour, Fremantle Arts Centre, E Shed Markets, Western Australian Maritime Museum, WA Shipwrecks Museum, South Beach Sunset Markets
Dusky Gregory, Stegastes nigricans
Dusky Gregorys (Stegastes nigricans), in shallow water (less than 2 m deep), Rarotonga, Cook Islands. Dr J.E. Randall stated that the fish are males in courtship color patten. Nick stated that my camera started to take on water, hence the lines across the movie. Footage © Nicholas Sault.
WA Weekender EP29 - Geraldton luxury accommodation tip
What's Up Downunder S05 S06 - AQWA
Frankie J & Michelle see some of Western Australia's marine life at the Aquarium of Western Australia in Perth, WA.
Ron Tutt - Burswood Cinema
Television and Cinema historian Richard Ashton presents this short video on Perth's summertime outdoor movie venue, the Burswood Cinema. This popular outdoor attraction was designed and built under the directions of the late Ron Tutt, who was a well known and respected Perth cinema identity.
Not only was Ron Tutt responsible for the Burswood, which each summer features prime movie releases, but he also organised and designed a number of outdoor cinemas around Western Australia. This included the Poon Saan Cinema for the Christmas Island Cinema Club.
Throughout his life Ron Tutt was a significant contributor to Western Australia's screen industry and especially the Film and Television Institute (FTI), for which Ron was instrumental in the renovation of the FTI Cinema and the creation of the Bohemia Outdoor Cinema, which is the place to see short films and showcase events including Tropfest; Doco Club, films Made at FTI and nominations for the WA Screen Awards. There's also the Bohemia Outdoor Film Festival.
Ron was a long time supporter of FTI and was made an Honorary Life Member in 2007.
SETTLEMENT OF MERREDIN WA PAST AND PRESENT
CARAVAN TRIP 2008 DON PUGH WA WESTERN AUSTRALIA Merredin (including Burracoppin) 'The Garden Town in the Heart of the Wheat-belt'. Located on the Great Eastern Highway 259 km east of Perth and 314 m above sea level, Merredin is the most substantial settlement of the Central Wheat Belt. It is strategically located and, as the town promotion says, it likes to think of itself as 'The Garden Town in the Heart of the Wheat-belt'. Merredin Railway Water Tower The railway water tower, which still advertises the now defunct Kalgoorlie Bitter (one can only imagine what a beer made in a goldmining town must have been like), was built in 1893 and still stands as a sentinel for people arriving at Merredin. Merredin Railway Museum It stands beside the Merredin Railway Museum which must be one of the finest railway museums in Australia. The railway line arrived in Merredin in 1893 and the station was built in 1895. It consisted of one shed on a ramp. The foundations of the original shed are still under the railway ramp today. By 1904 Merredin was the locomotive depot for the line and there were a number of small branch lines reaching out into the wheat-belt to service the surrounding farmers. In 1968, when a new station was built, the Merredin Historical Society took over the old station. It now is a near-perfect re-creation of the old station with just about every piece of railway memorabilia possible. It has a working windmill, a beautifully preserved 1897 G117 steam engine, and the station still has the old scales and cream cans. Historic Buildings The township of Merredin has a number of interesting and unusual buildings. The Post Office (1913), on the corner of Bates and Barrack Streets, is a handsome building at the entrance to the main part of the town and the Town Hall (1925) in Mitchell Street has a clock tower (made by the same company who built 'Big Ben' in London) which is a memorial for the local soldiers who died during World War I. But the most interesting building by far is the Cummins Theatre in Bates Street which was built in 1928 from remnants of some demolished Coolgardie pubs and the old Coolgardie Tivoli Theatre. Local legend has it that the bricks still have small deposits of gold in them.. DON PUGH CARAVAN TRIP 2008
Moving a Rhino
Moving a giant, 573kg bronze rhino for an exhibition at the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) in London
PERTH, WA, PART ONE 4-11-09
My first day in Perth, Western Australia. In the company of my good mate Roy T Lilley and his lady Bette. It was a pleasure to be with them and I must say thanks to them for making me feel so welcome.
Moore River Guilderton Western Australia
Moore River is a river in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia.
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Western Australia - Part 1 (N°2)
Tides & Islands 2012 -- Day 15 -- Art Of Deceit
In this video, Dr Glenn Moore explains the survival strategies of the fish that live in the Kimberley reefs.
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The animals seen in these videos are being handled by experts who know how to avoid potential bites and stings. To avoid accidents it is recommended that all marine animals should be watched and not touched. Please enjoy the videos and remember to leave wildlife alone, both for their protection and yours.
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These video diaries document the October 2012 field trip into remote areas of the Kimberley. This field trip was part of the Marine Life of Kimberley project to study and understand the marine biodiversity of the area.
Transcript
Dr Glenn Moore: One of the things that fascinates me about fish is the multitude of strategies they use to survive. So far many fish that live on these Kimberley reefs camouflage is the key. And of course on the most common camouflage methods is to be drab, to be mottled to merge and camouflage yourself with the background things like the triple-tailed wrasse use this to great effect, and can hide in the shadows underneath some of these ledgers and they just basically can't be seen for most of the time.
Alternative to being inconspicuous, is to be as conspicuous as possible, and some fish like juvenile sweetlips get bawdy colours and they show off and they wriggle around and they look as weird as possible, so this in some cases might mimic a toxic flatworm or a nudibranch for example or perhaps a poisonous scorpion fish, or lion fish.
And if you can't camouflage, if you have bright colours, then one of the best strategies is to stay close to the reef. Tight coral heads lots of little gaps, you can dart in there in a flash if something appears and of course, if you're a big predator, you've got no chance of getting one of these little tiny fish out and this is a great strategy that's used by many of the smaller fish on the reef, things like damselfish for example.
Otherwise, safety in numbers if you live in a big school as many as possible, then the probability that you get eaten is going to be greatly reduced. And others, like these juvenile stripped catfish use the same strategy as zebras so there's lots of little stripes, fast moving fish, dense school, and as a predator comes it doesn't know which one to pick on.
So these same strategies are also important if you're a predator so things like the lionfish can camouflage themselves and look like a featherstar or some piece of coral, and as they wave around in the bottom of the reef there, little fish swim quite close and they can just grab them. And another strategy if you're a predator of sorts is to hide in a little tube or to hide in a piece of coral and like the saber-tooth lenny, an unsuspecting fish swims past, you can dart out of your tube, grab a piece of the fish and dart back into the safety of the tube and you've got your meal for the day.
So these are just some of the strategies that the fish of the Kimberley are using to survive, but ultimately it's all about staying safe as long as you can and surviving to reproduce.
NJN News Story on Washington Letter featuring Rep. Pascrell
New Jersey Network News story about a letter written by George Washington in 1780 at the Great Falls being presented at the Paterson Museum on Feb. 22, 2010. Rep. Pascrell, Leonard Zax of the Hamilton Partnership and Seth Kaller, the owner of the letter, spoke at the event the event.