soulFLY
Senior Member
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Love the choice of cropping and composition...
The lighthouse are superb and if you waited a liltle while longer for the blue hour, it would be perfect...

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Zichar said:And so we drove, meeting only two other vehicles coming from the other direction, wherever that may be
My mum bristled at our toilet stop in the middle of nowhere
Myself, focusing on the importance of standing downwind
Hurtling forward in rain of pebbles, I craned my neck, whipping it almost backwards
Did the sign say to turn left? No one else saw anything. the driver looked at me questioningly
Yet it slowly gnawed at me, back of the mind nagging
20minutes in, my brother asked me again what's wrong
And I made my first faux pas
We turned back.
Conjuring up our guiding principle for the rest of the drive - head in X minutes, if it's not right we'd take the other fork
Stopping the car by the sign I strained my eyes to see, illogically, futilely, what lay on the other path
Crudely painted on roughly hewn wood nailed on a stick, it hung loosely, infuriatingly pointing to somewhere in between both roads
I made a mental coin toss and decided to take our initial route
And it slowly went downhill after... as the subsequent signs said nothing of Cobra Station nor the place we want to go
The sparse directions mentiond nothing of forks or turns and I made gamble after gamble
Imagining myself a modern day woodsman, scout or a tracker, Kit Carson
With moistened finger to the sky, looking intently at the dirt tracks, fresh?, to see from whence vehicle traveled recently
Without cellular coverage nor the calmness afforded by GPS
Our fears slowly congealed as the sun began to set, and the petrol gauge slowly inched its way down
In distinct deja vu, the inner compartment of the car felt akin the other times when we were stuck:
Mutterings of prayer, bobbing Adam's apples, cold sweat forming as the air-conditioning was again switched off to conserve fuel
Optimism at the beginning had us pointing to yonder solitary mountains, that's Mount Augustus over there
But now that seemed flat, bitter superstition of tempting fate;
everytime we turned away from another rocky behemoth in the horizon, my stomach clenched tighter
Then dusk crept up on us, the last rays of sunlight glinting off the rearview mirror, driving eastwards into more darkness
Of all the cloudless days we've had thus far, they ironically decided to display possibly the most beautiful sunset I've ever witnessed in my life
A pallete of angry red blushing pink and brilliant orange glowed beneath the curling carpet of clouds, piped cream on a cake
Blue from a painter's soft brush brush washed over the rest
Stopping would be the death of me I thought to myself, willing my mind to imprint the scene onto my memory banks
The sun then gave up on us, and we trundled along into the twilight; blue hour never seemed so terrifying
At the next fork we spied a water tower, sign that said a station was nearby
Yet we were not meant to make anymore turns. I pointed ahead, let's go up this way for 10mins
Pig headed stubborness made me whisper another 5 minutes, and then another 5
Until it didn't feel right no more, one eye on the meter, we turned back
And made our way to the farmstead, another that's dark and desolate
With a light plane in the hangar, an antenna tower sprung up from its compound
Something, anything, borrow his phone, call Jim Millar, Cobra Station
No surprises this time, radio in the machine/tool shed again
A veteran now with lonely cottages, I simply made my way to the main house
Cupping my hands, I peered in; the lights were on but nobody was home
Moving from room to room, I then saw a middle-aged man, balding, bespectacled
Watching the telly with his back towards me
I shouted, knuckles rapping the glass window panes on the door rat-a-tat-tat
Admittedly I felt afraid when he wasn't moved at all, my thoughts drifting towards the paranormal
Curling my fingers to form a fist, I hammered at the door and rattled, jiggled the doorknob
And he turned around! Came out over the back and told us how to get to our destination
We were in fact on the right track, if only we had kept at it for another ten minutes!
The bounce was back in our steps, my brother skipped back to the driver's seat, I punched the air
It was pitch black by then, kangaroos skipped around off the road, the headlights barely useful, fighting against the night
The signage to the inn was such a sweet sight; we pulled in at the front, Spider barking madly at the intruders
My recollection's hazy at this point but I wouldn't be surprised if I had wiped a tear off my cheek
Relief and rejoice
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/zichar/5543081218/
Flickr
I nodded to the large mounds of sand looming in the distance
The chorus of skeptic glances were muted in my eyes
A trail of dust lay in our wake as we sped, straight as arrow to our intended target
Only for the car to suddenly stop; I peered out half-expecting the air outside to have turned into a cube of gelatin
Opening the car door, sand threatened to flow in, lapping hungrily at the frame
The wheels free spinning wildly, spitting grains that fall smoothly back
The engine, groaning in pain, a high pitch whirr in protest
I thumbed my nose at my brother and told him to move aside
And I slid in smoothly into the driver's seat, I pulled back down to a lower gear
Hit the pedal to the metal, and floored the accelerator
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This is so surreal. I'm totally and utterly lost in your dream world. It's like my consciousness is flickering back and forth from reality and your narrative. :sweat:
...thank you. :,)
This is quite lovely shot! Enjoyed ur little writings and ramblings on ur journey as well.
Stretches of sands with their wavy patterns can do pretty well on B&W too i imagine.
Ryan