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I took these photos at Tamarama (above) and North Bondi rock
platform (below) on the 20th June 2004. The pictures were
taken fairly early in the morning, around 10am, with the sun
behind my left shoulder, only a little way above the horizon.
The wind was fairly brisk and came from the west. The rainbow
effect is caused when spray from the breaking whitewater is
blown in a fine mist back behind the wave, but the sun needs
to be at the right angle.
I moved around the cliffs near Tama, looking for the best
position. I took the above picture near Macenzies, a popular
surfing spot near Bondi.... I can't call it a surfing beach...
as all the sand washed away a few years back, making it an
adventure getting back to shore on a heavy day!
After Tama I walked along the coastal path all the way around
to North Bondi, a couple of kilometres away. Last year around
this time I had taken a great photo of a rainbow wave out
on the rock platform a little way around the headland... so
I was confident I could take another as the conditions were
similar.
It was tough getting out to platform. The tide was high and
the heavy swell sometimes swept up over the rocky ledge, cutting
access. I tried to stay up high, climbing from boulder to
boulder as best I could, but I ended up getting wet feet anyhow,
ironically when a wave washed behind the raised rock I was
standing on, hit a larger ledge someway back, then flowed
like a river back over my rock!
The edge of a rock platform is not like a soft sandy beach
where a wave has plenty of time to first form then curl over
and break as the water shallows. A ledge like the one in the
picture below drops rapidly into deep water. The waves, with
little time to lose any of their energy gained on the long
trip across the Pacific, collide into the rock wall with an
explosive boom, shooting spray and white foam into the air.
The sun, once again low behind my left shoulder, causes a
rainbow to appear in the fine mist.
This ledge is around the corner from North Bondi... the end
of the sandy beach you can see in the top left hand corner
is the end of South Bond. The 2nd cliff along from there,
around the top middle of the picture is close to where the
first picture was taken.
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