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Broome: Your Travel Guide | Australia's North West

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Bunda Cliffs

https://en.australia51.com/place/1861158E-F05C-4897-0396-11F7E181C349/

Bunda Cliffs - No worries Australia

Sent this to friends overseas to let them know where Australia is!  LOL

Blog

 

Does anyone know if this freeway shown above has a breakdown lane?

They usually do, I sent this to a cousin in the UK and he said I would not like to drive there just incase I broke down!  LOL

I hate to think what he would say if he saw all the outback roads with no phone to ring up!

I have traveled that road/ or bridge --many times and it is wonderful -- and very safe,  I am sure it would have room to pull over --it is a great trip

Not sure Celia but apparently Sea Cliff Bridge is only 665 metres long according to

https://www.visitnsw.com/destinations/south-coast/wollongong-and-surrounds/stanwell-park/attractions/sea-cliff-bridge

By comparison the Sydney Harbour Bridge is 1,149 metres long including approach spans and London Bridge is 269 metres.

Some good pics on link above.

That makes it pretty short compared to the list of longest bridges at

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_longest_bridges

Thanks ladies, apparently I have been on that road so hubby says going to Bateman Bay.

Nice photos RnR!

 

 17 Stunning Medicinal Flowers to Grow in Your Garden - Garden and Happy

 

 

Echinacea (Echinacea spp.) (P)

 

medicinal flowers, medicinal plants, plant medicine, echinacea, echinacea angustifolia, echinacea purpurea 

 

Photo credit: Pixabay

Echinacea grows in fields or ditches out by where live, but I always keep a nice patch growing somewhere in my yard as well. Its beautiful pale purple petals will attract many beneficial pollinator friends into your garden. Medicinally, the root is usually what people use, but I have heard of many people using the leaves and flowers as well. It is well known for boosting the immune system, as well as being great for flus and colds. (My own experience has proven that it is much more effective if taken BEFORE you get sick!)

 

 

Sorry it doesn't say where it is!

I came to some beautiful flower covered hills with trees in the distance.  It is sights like these that make's me ta… | Beautiful nature, Nature  pictures, Landscape

Flower covered hills | Purple garden, Nature, Beautiful nature

Hills valleys California antelope yellow flowers poppies wallpaper |  1920x1080 | 252821 | WallpaperUP

I guess it is California.

HD wallpaper: Hills with flowers, Sunset | Wallpaper Flare

Chino Hills, State Park, Cal.

Where to See Wildflowers in Chino Hills State Park - California Through My  Lens

Beautiful photos Celia. Isn't Mother Nature wonderful??

Love all you flower photos Celia ... as Hola says "beautiful".

Top 10 Australian bridges - Australian Geographic

Wow ... The oldest surviving stone arch bridge on the Australian mainland.

The Lennox Bridge, Glenbrook is a heritage-listed road bridge that carries the Mitchell's Pass across Brookside Creek also known as Lapstone Creek, located at Glenbrook in the Blue Mountains. The bridge was designed by David Lennox and built from 1832 to 1833 by James Randall and other convicts.

Thanks RnR I couldn't follow on my software for Word is not updating!

A Guide to Sydney Harbour Bridge

Sydney Harbour Bridge | National Museum of Australia

 

The Sydney Harbour Bridge has a nearly exact clone that nobody talks about - and it's longer MOLLY MULSHINEJUN 11, 2015, 8:00 AM 

The Sydney Harbour Bridge in Sydney, Australia, is one of the most famous structures of its kind. Tourists flock to it like selfie-taking moths to a flame, and suit up to climb over it day in and day out.

But did you know it has a twin in Bayonne, NJ, that most people don’t even think twice about?

Bayonne is located at the end of the peninsula where you will find Hoboken and Jersey City, NJ. It’s just south of both of those. The Bayonne Bridge links the city of its name with Staten Island, NY. It’s almost identical to the Sydney Harbour Bridge, except that the Sydney bridge has concrete pylons on either side and the Bayonne Bridge doesn’t.

Sydney harbour bridgeGetty ImagesThe Sydney Harbour Bridge during a fireworks show. Don’t hold your breath for a similar showing in Bayonne.

It turns out the Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Bayonne Bridge are considered “sister bridges,” and officials from Sydney and Bayonne attended each other’s ribbon-cutting ceremonies for the identical bridges back in the 1930s.

Well, they’re considered sister bridges by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and Staten Island news site SILive, at least. For some reason, no Sydney-centric websites appear to be playing up the similarities.

 

SydneyHarbourBridge.info doesn’t seem to know about Bayonne, for example. And the Sydney Harbour Bridge Look-alikes page on the Sydney for Everyone website fails to mention the aesthetic similarities between the two bridges.

The Bayonne bridge opened to traffic first, on Nov. 15 1931, but construction on the Sydney Harbour Bridge began first, according to Wikipedia. The Bayonne Bridge carries four lanes of Route 440 from Bayonne, NJ, to Staten Island, NY.

It’s a Steel Arch bridge whose total length is 5,780 feet, Wikipedia says. Its width is 85 feet. It’s longer than the Sydney bridge, but shorter at 325 feet from the arch to the water.

The Sydney Harbour Bridge is actually shorter in length at 3,770 feet, according to Wikipedia, but wider at 161 feet across. It’s 440 feet tall, so although it’s shorter than the Bayonne Bridge, it reaches about 115 feet higher.

The Bayonne Bridge crosses a body of water known as the Kill Van Kull. The Sydney Harbour Bridge crosses a body of water called Port Jackson.

The Sydney Harbour Bridge was designed by an English firm called Dorman Long and Co of Middlesbrough, according to an Australia government website. Construction began in 1924 and took 1,400 men eight years to build, using 53,000 tons of steel. The bridge carries eight traffic lanes and two rail lines. It was open to the public on March 19, 1932.

Construction started later on the Bayonne Bridge, commencing in September 1928, according to the Port Authority’s website, but it was completed and open to the public first, in November 1931. The Bayonne Bridge was the product of a collaboration between designer Othmar H. Ammann and architect Cass Gilbert.

The Bayonne Bridge held the record as the world’s longest steel-arch bridge until 1977, when the New River Gorge Bridge in West Virginia topped it at 1,700 feet long. But according to one Australian news source, many Australian children are taught that the Sydney Harbour Bridge is the longest of its kind in the world.

Sydney harbour bridgeGetty ImagesThe Sydney Harbour Bridge is located near the iconic opera house.

The Sydney Harbour Bridge was opened on March 19, 1932, according to Wikipedia. Officials from Sydney and Bayonne attended each other’s bridge opening ceremonies.

The Bayonne bridge-opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony went forward without incident, but Australia’s ribbon cutting didn’t go as well. The ceremony and show of cultural friendship was upstaged in Australia by a monarchist.

North South Wales Premier Jack Lang was interrupted from cutting the ribbon by Captain Francis de Groot, a pro-monarchist who was offended that the bridge wasn’t being opened by a member of the British Royal Family, according to Australian Geographic. He slashed the ribbon open with his sword.

The ribbon was tied back together and De Groot was arrested and fined five pounds, according to AG, and Lang was then able to cut it himself. It might be because of De Groot’s flamboyant show of loyalism that the presence of the Jersey contingent at that bridge’s opening has been all but lost in Australia’s version of events.

That wasn’t the last time the Bayonne Bridge would be upstaged. An analysis of the Bayonne Bridge published by University of Bath undergrad RJ Pelly in 2009 notes that the bridge never received the same level of fame as the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Pelly posits that this was because it was “generally overshadowed by the completion of another of Ammann’s creations; the longer and taller George Washington Bridge, which opened less than a month later.”

George washington bridgeGetty ImagesThe better-known George Washington Bridge connects Fort Lee, New Jersey, with Manhattan’s Washington Heights.

The Bayonne Bridge was still admired by those in the know, though.

“Although it may have failed to stand out in the public eye against the surrounding New York monuments,” Pelly continues, “the bridge was immediately recognised among academic circles as a work of structural art, and awarded the ‘most beautiful steel bridge’ prize by the American Institute of Steel Construction in the year of its completion.”

The Bayonne Bridge also offers something that most other bridges of its size do not: footpaths for pedestrians. It’s the only major bridge in Staten Island that allows use of its walkway, according to SILive.com, although Wikipedia says the walkway will be closed until about 2017 while the bridge is lifted.

What Bayonne doesn’t have, though, are the stairways going over the bridge, found on its twin in Sydney and in many a vacation photo.

Sydney harbour bridgeGetty ImagesAustralian Football League coaches pose for a photo opp while crossing the bridge.

The Sydney Harbour Bridge also has concrete pylons on either side of the arch, which were included, according to Wikipedia, only to “allay public concern about the structural integrity of the bridge.” They now house CCTV cameras, venting chimneys, and truck and vehicle storage.

Although these bridges appear to be so similar, only one looms large in the culture identity of its home city. Blogger Dominic Ambrose puts it this way:

“The Sydney Harbour Bridge is centrally located, a major artery and a major conduit for the economy of that city. It is a symbol of the city and valued enough to be well maintained and kept in the public spotlight. The Bayonne Bridge, on the other hand, is almost unknown to most New Yorkers and New Jerseyans. Connecting two perennially depressed areas, it has never really reached its potential (a second roadway, though planned, was never deemed necessary) and it has slipped into the shadows, rusting away at the periphery of New York Harbour.”

 Bayonne Bridge Raising Opens NJ Ports to World's Largest Ships | WSP

 

I'd read about the very similar bridges. What a drama the official opening was with rebel Francis de Groot cutting the ribbon first.

19 March 1932 – The Sydney Harbour Bridge is opened to traffic.

The bridge was formally opened on Saturday, 19 March 1932. Amongst those who attended and gave speeches were the Governor of New South Wales, Sir Philip Game, and the Minister for Public Works, Lawrence Ennis. The Premier of New South Wales, Jack Lang, was to open the bridge by cutting a ribbon at its southern end.

Francis de Groot declares the bridge open.

However, just as Lang was about to cut the ribbon, a man in military uniform rode up on a horse, slashing the ribbon with his sword and opening the Sydney Harbour Bridge in the name of the people of New South Wales before the official ceremony began. He was promptly arrested and found to be Francis de Groot.

The ribbon was hurriedly retied and Lang performed the official opening ceremony and Game thereafter inaugurated the name of the bridge as 'Sydney Harbour Bridge' and the associated roadway as the 'Bradfield Highway'. After they did so, there was a 21-gun salute and an RAAF flypast.

Aerial view of Sydney and Circular Quay on the day of the official opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, 19 March 1932.

Despite the bridge opening in the midst of the Great Depression, opening celebrations included an array of decorated floats, a procession of passenger ships sailing below the bridge, and a Venetian Carnival.

After the official ceremonies, the public was allowed to walk across the bridge on the deck, something that would not be repeated until the 50th anniversary celebrations.

Estimates suggest that between 300,000 and one million people took part in the opening festivities, a phenomenal number given that the entire population of Sydney at the time was estimated to be 1,256,000.

Videos: 1. Sydney Bridge Opened. 2. Sydney's Harbour Bridge … construction. Screen Australia.

:) Love the video of the opening.

ZOO THAILAND

Cockatoos and Car Accidents | The Rebecca Project

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