A day at Horseshoe Bay

One of my favourite places to go when we want to get out of town for the day, is Horseshoe Bay, on Magnetic Island. There are some great walking tracks here (some are easy, some are challenging); and there’s a “Butterfly Forest”, located next to the site of the old Horseshoe Bay School. It is a wetlands rehabilitation site, so if you go there after it’s recently rained, you can expect the track and other parts of the area to be pretty boggy, so wear appropriate footwear, and don’t forget your insect repellent!

paperbark trees
Butterfly Forest walk, Horseshoe Bay. Trisha Fielding 2022.

What butterflies you’ll see here does depend on what time of year you visit. On a recent trip, we saw a number of species here (and in the immediate vicinity) including Purple Crow [Euploea tulliolus], Blue Tiger [Tirumala hamata], Cruiser [Vindula arsinoe], Shining Oak-blue [Arhopala micale], Chequered Swallowtail [Papilio demoleus], and a Jezebel (possibly a Red-banded Jezebel) – [Delias mysis].

a close-up of a Blue Tiger butterfly with wings open
Blue Tiger, near Horseshoe Bay Lagoon. Trisha Fielding 2022.

The Horseshoe Bay Lagoon Conservation Park walk is another lovely walk – accessible off Horseshoe Bay Road, about 150-200 metres back from the beach. It’s an easy walk, on flat, sandy ground, with some really stunning trees – particularly the melaleucas and eucalypts. The track leads to a timber boardwalk across part of the lagoon itself, which allows you to fully appreciate this beautiful wetland landscape.

I wasn’t particularly on the lookout for birds on this walk, but we were lucky enough to spot a Pied Currawong, high up in a tree, about 20 metres away (thank goodness for zoom lenses!) and later, a Pheasant Coucal, hiding amongst an Acacia tree (Townsville Wattle).

Townsville Wattle tree
Acacia leptostachya (common name: Townsville Wattle), Horseshoe Bay.
Trisha Fielding 2022.

*Magnetic Island is just a 25-minute ferry ride from Townsville. You can catch a bus from the Nelly Bay ferry terminal over to Horseshoe Bay to explore these (and other) walks.

Beauty for its own sake

a sublime scene - a sunrise at Julia Creek, Queensland
Sunrise, Julia Creek, Queensland. Trisha Fielding, 2021.

For the past 25-ish years I’ve been writing about historical subjects, but lately I find I have veered off this familiar, comfortable path and strayed into new territory. A rekindled interest in photography has inadvertently sparked a new obsession for me – photographing and learning about the natural world. Through the lens of my camera, I am seeing such astonishing beauty around me – in the plants, landscapes, birds, bees and butterflies – that I’ve decided to just run with it… and start writing about all the beautiful things I’m photographing.

Butterflies are at the top of my list of obsessions – as anyone who follows my Instagram profile will already know – so there’ll be lots of photos and info about these remarkable little creatures. But I’ll also post about beautiful landscapes and architecture and trees and books, and basically whatever makes me feel inspired!

Dwell on the beauty of life. Watch the stars, and see yourself running with them.

Marcus Aurelius

You might find my writing style a bit different to what you’re used to from me as an historian (that’s if you’ve ever read anything I’ve written, before now). These new blog posts will be more observational, sometimes reflective, but I hope you’ll enjoy them. There’ll be loads of tie-ins to books/authors who’ve written about the natural world, and some posts will still have historical elements. I’ll continue to add new content to my other Blogs when inspiration strikes, and you can link to these Blogs from the top navigation menu.

So let’s see where this takes us…