Argyle Springs and Jackson’s Lookout see Lady Luna (the dog I care for while here in Hepburn Springs) and I hike for a tad over 7kms from home and across a section of the Goldfields Track and back… the view from a tri-layered scaffolding lookout is somewhat obscured in the above video, however, it does offer a vantage point to appreciate the vastness of the Australian bush.
I would later learn that the vastness of the landscape, as far as the eyes can see and beyond, is home to no less than 400 volcanoes - some dormant, the majority classed as extinct. Again, my curiosity is peaked - pun intended - as I await more of my dreaming to materialise into knowing form.
Lady Luna scours the countryside with her sniffing abilities highly attuned to anything that moves. I feel for the land and how dry it is… Argyle Creek and the Spring at the end, bereft of any water.

On our walk we see no one… the solitude and quietness of the bush is an opportunity to be at one with our own nature - Luna’s as well as mine.
In my next newsletter I join a group of avid walkers and hikers around a lake and merge with the falling autumn leaves to stay curious about where I may be led to land.
Recalibrating, reaffirming and re-envisaging anew. Thank you for being here, I appreciate You! Until next week… may we walk lightly on the earth in appreciation of all we receive on a daily basis.
Love’s Harmonies,
Leanda Michelle ✍🏼📚
EarthAum’s Previous Post:
Welcome to Kangaroo Country
Moving on from Judy’s Biodiversity garden in Bittern, I landed in Hepburn Springs to care for one Lagoto and her home. If you’ve not heard of the Lagoto breed of dog, they were originally bred as waterfowl retrievers, working the marshlands of Ravenna. When the hunting stopped in the 1800s their acute sniffing ability entrusted them to a new role of sni…
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