jcholle, to Tasmania
@jcholle@aus.social avatar
Fury, to random
@Fury@mastodon.au avatar

Catching bus. 3 hour trip home to Launceston. Cheaper than paying for petrol and driving 🙌 Bye Hobes, see you next time!#PublicTransport #MaskOn

Fury,
@Fury@mastodon.au avatar

On my way home. This is the petrol station at Ross

mightyspaceman, to Tasmania
@mightyspaceman@aus.social avatar

Hmmm yes, tasmania

chestas, to Tasmania

I was very tired this weekend. I think the cold mornings have worn me down over the past week.
So it was a very short drive to Low Head to see if any Little Penguins were hanging around under the dense Box Thorn Bushes (there weren't, or at least none that I could see).
Then a trip to Green's Beach which is very close to where I live. It's a great place to sit on rocks and let the ocean's mood rub off on you. (Calmness was the prevailing mood)

Rocks covered in orange algae. Some natural dark grey rocks are also visible and the sea is light blue in the background.
A rich dark blue sea stretches to the horizon which portrays a white band. Sunbeams descend from the top left hand corner. Deep green foliage covers the landscape in the foreground. It is rocky, bushy, and slopes up to the right

Fury, to Tasmania
@Fury@mastodon.au avatar
chestas, to pareidolia
GabrielaHofmann, to Tasmania German
@GabrielaHofmann@mastodon.social avatar

'Aus der Art geschlagen' #FotoVorschlag

Nicht wirklich, aber im Norden prägen weisse Schäne das gewohnte Bild. Hier schwarze Exemplare im synchronen Watschelgang. Gesehen auf Tasmanien.

Not really, but in the north white swans characterize the usual picture. Here black ones in a synchronized waddling walk. Seen on Tasmania.

#Tasmania #australia #birds #swans

golgaloth, to boardgames
@golgaloth@writing.exchange avatar

Board Games Day! Off to Meeple Escape for a day of gaming!

https://www.coastalboardgamers.org.au/events/meepleescape2024/

chestas, to chess

I've just entered the Tasmanian Open Chess Championship which will be held in Somerset in 2 weeks.

I would have liked to enter the Asian Senior Chess Championship which will be held in Mongolia as I've never been there. But, alas, that will not be happening.

#chess #tasmania #lutruwita #Mongolia

jcholle, to Tasmania
@jcholle@aus.social avatar

i can’t even pronounce sclerophyll let alone spell it, but as a forest descriptor implying hard and/or tough, it suits the feel of the eucalypts, bracken ferns, raspworts and other similar plants in this dry, bushfire prone, patch of i call home. So it is always a pleasure seeing a perfect little flower thriving amongst the chaos of plant debris, and to get a pic without getting bitten, an added bonus.

sharona, to Paranormal

Suspicious photos of alleged thylacine revealed by pop wildlife biologist

New photos claim to show a thylacine in Tasmania. Distributed by a popular television personality who popularizes mysterious animal sightings, the photos and the backstory appear bogus. In today’s tech landscape, where digital images can be easily manipulated or manufactured, cryptid images without additional evidence should, by default, not be considered useful.

On May 14, 2024, TV wildlife biologist Forrest Galante posted a YouTube video showing a Zoom discussion with a guy from Minneapolis who claims he and his Dad came upon what they thought was a dog on the side of the road at night in Tasmania. They stopped to help and took photos when they realized it wasn’t a dog. The photos he provided appear to show a thylacine, which has been extinct for decades. Galante interviewed the witness “Zach” and revealed the photos said to have been taken in mid-April at an undisclosed location (near Upper Stowport).

The video interview is long and somewhat annoying to watch because the witness isn’t very helpful and also keeps his face hidden. Galante doesn’t know what to think because he sees some problems in the story and the photos. While mentioning the inconsistencies, he still desperately wants to believe and also benefits from the hype this could generate. Many people want to believe the thylacine is still existing out there.

Thylacines (or Tasmanian tigers) were marsupials native to Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea that filled the role of top predator. The last known thylacine died in 1936 and none were captured in the wild after 1933. Data strongly suggests that the their population was in decline and efforts to eliminate thylacines from farmed areas worked too well. After decades of no verified accounts of its existence, it was declared officially extinct by the Tasmanian government in the 1980s. Some people insist it still is out there and see their possibility everywhere, however, the evidence is very poor – just stories and terrible visuals.

https://i0.wp.com/sharonahill.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/collage.png?resize=715%2C713&ssl=1

The photos given to Galante looked to be edited or created from existing photos and models. They are strangely blurry, the background and shadows look wrong and the features inconsistent. There is no indication, besides the witness’ word, that they were taken in Tasmania. He did not give the exact location. The details are nonexistent or conflicting. Galante noticed the photos were not originals; he asked for the original unedited photos but there is no word that he got them. By the end of the interview, Galante assured Zach that he would contact authorities regarding this sighting.

https://i2.wp.com/sharonahill.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/mouth1.png?ssl=1

https://i1.wp.com/sharonahill.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/mouth-2.png?ssl=1

More analysis here by Miles and Trey:

Plastic Plesiosaur Podcast May 15, 2024

And Reddit: At Least Some of the Thylacine “photos” appear to be manipulated images of Archesuchus’ Thylacine doll

Galante and the photos are getting significant attention. Thanks to social media, more people than ever see these images and volunteer their opinion based on their hopes, not their zoological or technological experience. From the responses on Reddit and YouTube, there is a significant percentage of those who think these are genuine pics of a live thylacine, some people think the photos are clearly hoaxed, and a third portion think these photos are fakes but the thylacine is really still around. The proponents of a living thylacine have opinions based on little more than wishful thinking.

I marvel at the many instances where, when presented with the same visual evidence (for example, the Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot film), some people will insist that the images of a cryptid are obviously fake and others insist with similar enthusiasm they are totally legitimate and proof-positive documentation. It can’t be both. One party’s opinion is entirely wrong.

What’s the best bet?

For those making an extraordinary claim – that something declared extinct and not seen for decades is still around – you must do better than grainy, awful visuals or “I saw it” stories. Regardless of the alleged sighting reports of creatures, whether it be a thylacine or a Bigfoot, there remains key pieces missing in the interpretation that would make the animals’ reality plausible. We have no body parts, no DNA, no reliable sighting patterns – no item to test or solid path to follow. If there is one animal, there must be many, yet we don’t see corresponding evidence of that. People were able to track and kill thylacines to the point where so few remained that they could not survive. Why do we not see them now? How did so few remain for so long without discovery? Because they are truly gone and people aren’t seeing or photographing thylacines.

https://sharonahill.com/?p=8561

va2lam, to hiking
@va2lam@mastodon.nz avatar
golgaloth, to Tasmania
@golgaloth@writing.exchange avatar

Autumn colours in the rain. Launceston.

#Tasmania #Autumn #Australia

bcshort, to Tasmania
@bcshort@aus.social avatar

An Absolutely stunning, one in a lifetime solar event has occurred over the weekend. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I would be taking a photo of an Aurora lighting up the whole sky near where I lived.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/vk7ben/53715090021

chestas, to Tasmania

Been too tired to chase auroras the past few nights but really happy for those of you that saw it, and thankful for the amazing pictures you've plastered over Mastodon.

I did get out today in the autumn foliage and was lucky to see my first Mycena Interrupta, or cute little blue mushy, since moving to Tasmania.

mightyspaceman, to Tasmania
@mightyspaceman@aus.social avatar

And if you look out your window, you will see what appears to be the earth jumping into hyperspace...

shtrom, to Tasmania
@shtrom@piaille.fr avatar

#auroraAustralis from southern #tasmania

Barely visible to the naked eye, but the camera doth see.

image/jpeg
image/jpeg

dr_annam, to Tasmania
@dr_annam@ecoevo.social avatar
ibk, to Tasmania
@ibk@aus.social avatar

Everyone else is doing it, so why don’t I.

Ooze, to Tasmania
@Ooze@aus.social avatar

Home

The aurora filling the Tasmanian sky

Fury, to Tasmania
@Fury@mastodon.au avatar

Aurora alert for this weekend. We are getting some great negative numbers :)

DenisCOVIDinfoguy, to Tasmania
@DenisCOVIDinfoguy@aus.social avatar
mightyspaceman, to photography
@mightyspaceman@aus.social avatar

The Nuyina departs for Macquarie Island

chestas, to Tasmania

We were doing a bit of gardening out the front of our house when we heard and saw some Yellow Tailed Black Cockatoos in trees across the road. My wife went to check them out and took this photo of one flying away, with our house behind.

DenisCOVIDinfoguy, to Tasmania
@DenisCOVIDinfoguy@aus.social avatar
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