John from Brisbane has added a photo to the pool:
Unusually, South East Queensland seems to have been like this on and off for several weeks. Winter is usually our dry season and great for photographic adventures with the sun at the top of the northern skies. Although the total rainfall has not been that great, at times it's just been bleak.
This image was shot from the Woody Point jetty looking south towards Brisbane proper. The whole area has now been fully fenced off, the Moreton Bay City Council is attempting to create some form of new beach here, looks a long winded, expensive and almost unnecessary project to me. Futile?
The Redcliffe Peninsula is already replete with lovely beaches so why create more when nature doesn't quite see the point. Besides, without removing all that Redcliffe rock, digging into the imported sand might result in smashed fingers for the little kids!
On the flip side, when the sun is shining but a sunset, the view to the south across Bramble Bay (a bay within Moreton Bay) to the distant mountains is said to be an outstanding sunset image location.
You don’t win World Cups by running riot for 10 minutes in mid-June but this felt like the start of something new
Walking away from Dallas Stadium, feet throbbing in the heat of the late-evening Texas tarmac, it was tempting to picture the scene inside England’s dressing room three hours earlier, the score 2-2 at half-time against a perky Croatia, with Thomas Tuchel’s side in danger of slipping into a familiar tournament pattern of entropy and angst.
What exorcism was performed here? Did England’s players burn a ceremonial John Lewis merino wool slim-fit quarter zip? Did Tuchel deliver his calm, tactically focused half-time speech while simultaneously sawing the head off the lifesize Gareth Southgate effigy the team still carries around with it, before inviting his players to whack it like a piñata, open letters tumbling from the waistcoat pockets, leadership mottoes and worries about penalties scattered across the floor as its bearded and frowning head steadily deflates, a moment of pure era-shedding catharsis?
Continue reading...Labour’s Greater Manchester mayor hopes a win over Reform UK will help force the prime minister to step aside
Polls close in Makerfield byelection as Andy Burnham eyes No 10
Burnham brings in top economists before possible leadership run
The Makerfield byelection has regularly been described as potentially the most consequential byelection in British history. People have written that on the assumption that Andy Burnham will win, and that he will replace Keir Starmer as PM. While those both seem to be reasonable assumptions, in a country with a history of parliamentary government as long as Britain’s a description of any event that involves saying it is the most consequential ever is probably not strictly accurate.
Here are just a handful examples of other byelections that have been similar to this one in some respects, or highly influential.
Continue reading...⚽️ Kick-off time: 3pm local/6pm EDT/11pm BST/8am AEST
⚽️ Player guide | Bracketology | Golden Boot
Switzerland have several toes in the knockout stage after overwhelming Bosnia and Herzegovina in the last 20 minutes in LA. Freiburg’s Johan Manzambi, aged 20, came off the bench to score twice.
Canada’s head coach Jesse Marsch makes two changes. Cyle Larin, who came off the bench to equalise against Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Ali Ahmed come in for Liam Millar and Tani Oluwaseyi. Alphonso Davies is among the substitutes.
Continue reading...The Side That Won the Civil War is Now Banning Books About Why the Civil War Was Fought. “It is a well-known feature of civil society that nervous middle managers often act far more radically than top executives out of a sense of self-preservation.”
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