Filters
Show Metadata
Keywords (89)
Anas castanea Anas superciliosa Ardea alba Australasian swamphen Austruca perplexa birds Bitou Black Swan Broad-leaved Paperbark butterfly Cartilage Lichen Chestnut Teal Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae cicada Common Brown Common Glider Corvus orru Crimson Rosella Crinum pedunculatum crustaceans Cygnus atratus Dorrigo National Park dragonfly Dusky Moorhen Ebor Falls Egretta novaehollandiae fauna flora Gallinula tenebrosa Geranium solanderi Great Egret Grey Fantail Gymnorhina tibicen Hercules Club Mud Whelk Heteronympha merope Hhermit crabs Hirundo neoxena inaturalist insects Jerseyville Kooloonbung Creek Large-billed Scrubwren Lewin's honeyeater Light-blue Soldier Crab Little Red Flying-fox Magpie Malurus cyaneus mammals Mangrove Lily marsupials Melaleuca quinquenervia Meliphaga lewinii Mictyris longicarpus Neochmia temporalis New South Wales Noisy Friarbird Osteospermum moniliferum Pacific black duck Perplexing Fiddler Crab Philemon corniculatus Platalea flavipes Platalea regia Platycercus elegans Porphyrio melanotus Port Macquarie Pteropus scapulatus Ramalina celastri Red-browed finch Red-necked Pademelon Rhipidura albiscapa Royal Spoonbill Sericornis magnirostra Sherwood Silver Gull Solander's Geranium Spice Bush Superb Fairy-wren Thylogale thetis Torresian Crow Tramea loewii trees Triunia youngiana Urunga Welcome Swallow white flowers White-faced Heron Yellow-billed Spoonbill Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo Zanda funerea
We spent the next few days leaving the inland tablelands of NSW, crossing the Great Dividing Range, heading towards the NSW coast via Armadale, ie going west to east. We explored the Waterfall Way and Dorrigo NP. From here it's a narrow twisty road descending some 700 metres to the coast, near Coffs Harbour. Scenery is a complete contrast to inland NSW. We spent our final 4 days driving 500kms to Sydney, stopping at Urunga (coastal boardwalk and wetlands) Jerseyville wetlands (near South West Rocks) and the wetlands at Port Macquarie.

We have labelled most of the plants, birds animals and the scenery if you wish to find out more information about these photos. Some have also been uploaded to iNaturalist, a worldwide internet site for global biodiversity Information research.