Posts Tagged ‘dolphins’
Lovina, here is the inn of dolphins that migrate from the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Marine mammals that live in groups like this, always wanted to play with fishing boats, looking for small fish to be shared together. No wonder the dolphins are often referred to as a fisherman friend. Interwoven their mutual friendship, is associated with a common interest groups looking for small fish in the sea.
Now, even though the fishing boat in waters off Lovina has shifted into a collection of boats containing the audience of dolphin attraction, his promise to play together in the morning, still they keep. On Thursday morning it was, they jumped to welcome the tourists. Their hospitality remains unchanged. The attraction is what makes Lovina beach tourism developed rapidly to set up a monument of dolphins in 1996.
25 minutes from the beach, the attraction begins. Dancing dolphins greet the morning, giving the impression for the tourists. They loved to play hide and seek. For a moment, jumped in front of the ship, then hiding and reappear on different sides as if to invite romp in the ocean. The movement of dolphins are fast, making the audience of its attractions must be smart to look left and right front of the back to find out their whereabouts. Read the rest of this entry »
Brisbane was awarded the sun shining throughout the year. Sunshine State, Queensland’s capital that was called, a nickname which was also posted pride in every plate of their citizens. “Even in winter, the sun still shines,” said Ian White, who guided us.
I came in the spring. Flowers purple jacaranda trees broke perfectly at the curb. We drove to Moreton, sand island 170 square kilometers covering 95 percent of the area of national park status. We passed a coal storage area, installation guarding former World War II, as well as a busy port of Brisbane with a row of giant container. Moreton originally inhabited by Aboriginal tribes, but then the Europeans invaded in 1848. The island also had a defense base during World War II. Read the rest of this entry »