![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1I3nyet7EzEcAiXvvXsw_T2gUxUiXXc5JPlNBCwIKUV95xCKB4dZ1yP7yJi0qHIZfHWMV6v-Tot6iV72VCXjLwhP0CAHINXKbRofXsLu0lCM4HirwdhMcGpYNPZjpmWmjgn8r1KF2bP5W/s400/dinkflowers.bmp)
Now that there's just over a month before we move from winter into spring, the colours are slowly coming alive. Yes, the ski slopes are getting fresh, deep snow. Yes, there's been a bit of rain. Yes, we're still getting frosty mornings. Yes, the wind still bites through you even when the sun is shining brightly.
But the wattle has been blooming for a couple of weeks now - always the first sign that warmer weather is promised in the next few weeks.
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I shot these images last weekend, but I should have known better. It's very hard to shoot close-ups of wattle, even in the slightest breeze.
Because each wattle blossom is so minute - they are literally about a centimetre across, they dance and bob around wildly, even in a gentle breeze. The day I took these shots, the breeze would have put some laundromats out of business, it was so brisk.
Because these are only low-resolution images, a lot of the sharpness drops out. But if I continually posted high-res images here, the blog would take much longer to load. However, I will post one of these shots on my RedBubble site, so you can view it there.
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One of the really interesting things about shooting wattle is the graceful shape and colour of the miniature leaves that surround the blossoms. This image (above) was actually shot while I crouched down below a branch - just to give you a slightly different perspective of a beautiful tree and its colours.
Visit Luiz Santilli Jr for the home of Today's Flowers.
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