PHOTO: Tulips, Victoria, Australia
Each year, in the Spring, the small town Silvan in the state of Victoria in Australia hosts a tulip festival. There are rows of tulips in bloom in a range of colours. Caught in the morning sunlight, the cups radiate soft yet vibrant colours ranging through red, burgundy, orange, yellow, violet, purple, and a range of variegated colours bursting through a white base. It's a worthwhile sight.
In the photo above, the viewer can see that colour range across the "sea" of tulip cups as they roll off into the distance, where the Dandenong ranges sit in the background behind some gum trees.
While the town of Silvan has a very young history (since 1868 CE), the Dandenong ranges have a much more significant history with the indigenous Wurundjeri people of Australia. The ranges, which rise to a maximum height of about 2,070 feet, are believed to be the remains of an extinct volcano estimated to have last been active over 300 million years ago. The volcanic origins of the ranges might explain why Victorians in the last 5 years have been feeling earthquakes (measuring 3 - 4 on the Richter Scale) - let's hope nothing serious is about to happen!
Perhaps we can find peace by gazing upon the sunlight caught in the tulip cups while we give thanks to the ONE for the awesome wonder of the planet we live on.
Image: Tulips in Spring, Silvan, Victoria, Australia. Copyright - Michael Beaton

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