The Coolibah Collection
The Cooibah tree or Eucalyptus Vitrix, inspired painters like Albert Namatjira in his legendary water colours and Slim Dusty to wax lyrically about a particular swagman camping by a billabong is now the subject of a gallery of photographs.
These majestic trees, shot mostly around the Pilbara and Kimberley are yours for eternal enjoyment
Whilst not all the trees photographed are Coolibah Gum trees, they are all majestic specimens
The Flora Collection
Australia is a vast land with everything from desert to tropical wetlands and who doesn't like to see flowers that bloom.
Sometimes in adversity others in simly their yearly cycle but all captured for your enjoyment.
Whether it be a small pennon, clinging to a rock in the desert or the massive splashes of colour of horticulture, as we travel, we point and shoot at some of the most amazing vistas mother nature can provide.
The Panorama Gallery
All it can take is a good phone and a scene, but photography is more than that.
Those with an eye for the full beauty of what this wide brown (and sometimes very green and at others white) land will know the panoramic shot sometimes goes a lot further than the simple 6 x 9.
Marvel in the places we have been and the shots we have taken.
You can download them by dropping them into the cart and checking out and we will send to your email, high quality photographic files for you to download.
The Road Ahead
One thing about a vast land is the travel. Its inevitable, if you are playing the nomadic lifestyle you will be looking down the road for long periods.
This collection born out of the travels of the “Silver Schoolies” is more than just pictures of the highway. It contains many differing tracks in a reference to the roads we all travel in our lives.
Some where the heat breaks up the quality of the scene ahead and others where a track or path is very clear.
Much like life really
Sorry I don’t do cold and there are no snow covered roads - yet
The Sunset Collection
Its a misnomer really, that the sun sets. Its actually the earth rolling towards the east losing the sight of the great light in the sky.
As the rolling occurs, the light from the sun travels greater distances through the atmosphere elongating the rays and producing sprectural events we call sunsets.
For us they are an opportunity to capture Mother Nature at work painting the sky and we get to bring the ones presented to us. We are so lucky - and so are you














