Not having an off-road 4×4 vehicle to smash through BF Goodrich shaped mud-holes television advertisement style, meant I had to begin the Allambee Beek Falls circuit walk on the corner of Curtis Track and Benwerrin-Mt Sabine Rd. I worked my way through the mud-holes along the Curtis Track until I found the pink ribbons marking the entry point into the dank Otway undergrowth with a false forest floor of fallen mountain ash bark, clammy head-high spider webs that are easily torn with a outwardly held forearm and abrasive fern fronds that have the potential to rip skin from elbow joints. On this circuit I stumbled upon two tiger snakes; one was coiled on the centre of the trail (easy to spot but as soon as I took my eyes off it, it silently disappeared), the other was suspended in the grass across the trail (not so easy to spot with the banding of its skin).
I first reached Staircase Falls which had a large tree extending back up over the waterfall from a log jam at its base adding an altered sense of scale to the scene. After a couple of slippery creek crossings I then reached Allambee Beek Falls, taking a photograph away from the plunge pool at its base for context. On the banal return ascent along Curtis Track I was rewarded with some Jesus Beams. Amen to that…





Reblogged this on Conceptual Art.
The last one is my favorite!
Very nice images Cain – I bet the transparencies look insane !
Yeah, I’m really pleased with this roll. I was apprehensive over developing it because I knew I had some good shots and had previously screwed up a 35mm roll I took in Turkey on my Contax G1. I thought the chemicals might have expired but it turns out not reading the manual for the G1 was the root cause! Both the exposure compensation and AE lock switch were set incorrectly. I’ve since given the manual a good read…
hello, bolt,
wonderful series! i love the last pic and like the first one, too. excellent that you did them in black and white… regards, :)
great shots Cain. Love the 2nd image in particular! just wow! it’s got a real prehistoric feel to it. very strong images all round :-)