Thirlstane Golf Club, Tasmania
Golfbros at Thirlstane Golf Club, Tasmania. Enjoying the summer weather!
Tasmania golf amateurs fun
Golf
Unbottle Tasmania Sizzle
Presented by Ed Halmagyi, Unbottle Tasmania is a journey of discovery into the Tasmanian wine industry. Tasmania produces less than one percent of Australia's total wine yield yet its product is highly regarded both nationally and internationally.
Mountain Bike and Rock Climbing Tasmania by Grasshopper Travel
We are a guiding company that utilises the world class Rock Climbing areas of Tasmania to offer experiences in the vertical for a huge range of clients. From School Groups and those new to the sport on introductory day trips in Launceston’s Cataract Gorge and the Freycinet Sea Cliffs through to personalised multi-day adventures for experienced climbers on some of the more remote cliffs in the state. Let us show you some of the highlights of Tasmanian Climbing whether you are looking to climb outdoors for the first time after getting a start indoor through to custom tours for more experienced climbers. We can also put together corporate team building programs to get your team out of their comfort zone while working together in an encouraging environment with the spectacular Tasmanian scenery in the background.
2018-19 KSCA 1st Grade Grand Final | Highlights
Kookaburra Southern Cricket Association
1st Grade Grand Final: St Annes CC v Wellington CC
HIGHLIGHTS: 19 minute clip including presentation
From Cadbury Oval No 1, Claremont, Tasmania
Commentators: Aaron Roberts & Brett Manning
Thanks to SCA's sponsors Bendigo Bank, Greg Chappell Cricket Centre, Good Sports and Kookaburra.
Bass Highway - Part 4 (1953)
This episode travels from Burnie through to Cooee, Somerset, Wynyard and Stanley.
Produced for the Dept of Education
Direction: Malcolm Otton
Photography: Douglas Wallace
Supervision: Jack Reid
Please be advised that this footage may contain words and descriptions that may be culturally sensitive, which reflect the attitude of the period in which the film was produced, and which may be considered inappropriate today.
Tasmanian Archive and Heritage Office: Film: Bass Highway - Part 4 (1953) - (sound, colour) 9 minutes 58 seconds (Reference: AC671/13)
North-West Tassie Flooding
Red Water Creek runs behind our house. This is a video of the flood standing on the back veranda at out house in Railton Tasmania
Tornadoes in Hobart
Hobart residents were hit with with crazy weather this morning. Wind, rain, hail - and tornadoes.
Golf Vlog Part 1
7 hole matchplay at Launceston Golf Club PART 1
Jamming in Cornwall
The Beggars' Belief band camping out at The Countryman nr Launceston. The 2nd year of our mini tour. Chatting, chillin' and playing a little music in the moonlight.
AIR 2012 - Kelly Drummond Cawthon and Julie Waddington at Kingston High School, Tasmania
This short film features students from Kingston High School, Kingston, Tasmania working with performing artists Kelly Drummond Cawthon and Julie Waddington.
AIR is an artist in residence program developed by arts@work in partnership with the Australia Council for the Arts.
In May 2008, the Australian Government announced that $5.2 million over four years would be made available for artists to work in partnership with teachers in bringing the benefits of creative practice to Australian students in schools and universities.
The AIR program objectives are to provide pathways for artists to connect their practice to young people and for artists to inspire, re-connect or introduce teachers to new ideas and approaches. It offers students, staff and the school community, exposure to professional artists and their work and the chance to learn specialised skills through both watching and working with the artists.
Successful artists undertake a program of professional development that supports their residency, including a schools induction, supervision and support from appointed school staff, access to other artists working in similar settings and an artistic mentorship to support their development in tandem with their residency program.
For more information, visit:
Produced by bluehat.
Snake_Tasmanie
Hiking in Mount Wellington (South of Hobart, Tasmania), we saw this snake pass right in front of us. We didn't ask it its name, but it may have been a brown snale or a tiger snake, both highly venomous, lethal even, little bastards...
En pleine ballade dans les forêts du Mont Wellington (sud de Hobart, Tasmanie), on a croisé ce serpent. On a pas eu le temps de discuter, mais c'était sans doute soit un brown snake ou un tiger snake, le genre de petite saloperie très venimeuse voire mortelle.
History of Tasmania
History Project of my friend... or the best thing ever!
Top 08 Extreme crazy fight in Animals with Tiger and Snake
iger snakes are a type of venomous snake found in southern regions of Australia, including its coastal islands and Tasmania. These snakes are highly variable in their colour, often banded like those on a tiger, and forms in their regional occurrences. All populations are in the genus Notechis, and their diverse characters have been described in further subdivisions of this group; they are sometimes described as distinct species and/or subspecies.
Notechis is a genus of large venomous snake in the family Elapidae restricted to subtropical and temperate regions of Australia. Tiger snakes are a large group of distinct populations, which may be isolated or overlapping, with extreme variance in size and colour. Individuals also show seasonal variation in colour. The total length typically about 1.2 metres[3] The patterning is darker bands, strongly contrasting or indistinct, which are pale to very dark in colour. Colouration is composed of olive, yellow, orange-brown, or jet-black, and the underside of the snake is light yellow or orange. The tiger snake uses venom to dispatch its prey, and may bite an aggressor; they are potentially fatal to humans. Tolerant of low temperatures, the snake may be active on warmer nights.[4] When threatened, they flatten their bodies and raise their heads above the ground in a classic prestrike stance.
Morphs[edit]
The widely dispersed populations (sometimes referred as polymorphs) show some conformity in their descriptions, but these characters may be shared by separate or adjacent groups. Tiger snakes are also identified by the region or island in which the forms occur, which is prefixed to a common name.
The common tiger snake has a flat, blunt head, slightly distinct from a robust body. Its body is capable of being flattened along its entire length when the snake is agitated or basking. Its average length is 0.9 m,with a maximum length of 1.2 m, but has been recorded at 2.0 m (or ~6.6 ft). Highly variable in colour, its base colours are brown, grey olive, or green with lighter crossbands usually of creamy yellow. Occasionally, unbanded specimens are found.[5] Scales appear like overlapping shields, especially around the neck. Ventral scales number 140 to 190, subcaudals 35 to 65, mid-body in 17 or 19 rows and the anal scale is single.
The western tiger snake head is distinct from its robust body, and grows to 2.0 m in length. Dorsally, it is steel-blue to black in color with bright yellow bands; unbanded specimens occur. The ventral surface is yellow, tending black towards the tail. Midbody scales are in 17 or 19 rows, ventrals number 140 to 165, subcaudals 36 to 51 (single) and the anal scale is single (rarely divided).
Chappell Island tiger snake, shows fangs
The Chappell Island tiger snake has a blunt head distinct from a robust body. The giant of the tiger snakes species, it averages 1.9 m (over 6 ft) in length. Dorsally, its colour is olive-brown to almost black, sometimes with lighter crossbands. The ventral surface is usually lighter in colour. Juveniles are banded. Mid-body scales are in 17 rows; ventrals number 160 to 171, subcaudals 47 to 52 (single), and the anal scale is single. These snakes are quite docile.
The King Island and Tasmanian tiger snakes each have a blunt head distinct from a robust body. Younger snakes may be slimmer and similar to other tiger snakes, eventually growing up to 1.5 m in length. Dorsally, they may be jet black, jet black with lighter crossbands, grey with black flecks forming faint bands, or an unbanded grey or brown. The ventral surface is usually a lighter colour. Midbody scales are in 19, 17 or sometimes 15 rows, ventrals number 161 to 174, subcaudals 48 to 52 (single) and the anal scale is single. Tasmanian tiger snakes tend to be quiet snakes, probably due to the lower temperature ranges they inhabit.
The Peninsula tiger snake has a blunt head distinct from a robust body; it averages 1.1 m (3.5 ft) in length. Roxby Island specimens are much smaller, averaging 0.86 m in length. Dorsally, it is generally jet black, sometimes with white or cream markings around the lips and chin. On Kangaroo Island, specimens are highly variable in colour, often exhibiting banding and uniform brown colours. The ventral surface is dark grey to black, with some specimens on Kangaroo Island even possessing red bellies. The ventral surface becomes much lighter prior to shedding. Juveniles nearly always have banding. Midbody scales are in 17, 18, 19 and rarely 21 rows, ventrals number 160 to 184, subcaudals 45 to 54 (single) and the anal scale is single.
The subspecies Notechis ater ater, found away from mainland Australia, is typically uniformly black.
As with most snakes, the colours vary widely between individuals and are an unreliable means of identifying subspecies. Accurate identification is best performed with a venom test kit or scale count.
Football Madness Queenstown
Thanks to the Kiwi Kickers for letting me make a amazing video with you. Check there channel out bellow.
Check out the Kiwi Kickers channel at