TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Evan Quartermain from Humane Society International rescues a koala from an area burned in recent bushfires on #Australia’s Kangaroo Island. It’s hard to explain to citizens of more populous countries how vast and empty and inhospitable is the bush, as Australians universally refer to the national parks and scrubby wilderness that make up most of their country, writes Belinda Luscombe (@sal_gaddo). Locals will defend to the death its beauty, but in the same way people defend a difficult uncle. They love him; they don’t actually want to hang with him. For Australia’s first known human inhabitants, the bush was just as difficult and omnipresent, but it was—and still is—sacred. Hills, rocks, waterfalls, plants, even #animals, are believed to hold the spirits of ancestral beings. The land is holy ground; humans are only there to preserve it. For non-indigenous Australians, 40% of whom shelter in its two biggest cities, the bush is just there; it fades into the background. Fire is the only event that offers any change to the bush at all. Read more, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by @adamfergusonstudio for TIME」1月29日 1時41分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 1月29日 01時41分


Evan Quartermain from Humane Society International rescues a koala from an area burned in recent bushfires on #Australia’s Kangaroo Island. It’s hard to explain to citizens of more populous countries how vast and empty and inhospitable is the bush, as Australians universally refer to the national parks and scrubby wilderness that make up most of their country, writes Belinda Luscombe (@sal_gaddo). Locals will defend to the death its beauty, but in the same way people defend a difficult uncle. They love him; they don’t actually want to hang with him. For Australia’s first known human inhabitants, the bush was just as difficult and omnipresent, but it was—and still is—sacred. Hills, rocks, waterfalls, plants, even #animals, are believed to hold the spirits of ancestral beings. The land is holy ground; humans are only there to preserve it. For non-indigenous Australians, 40% of whom shelter in its two biggest cities, the bush is just there; it fades into the background. Fire is the only event that offers any change to the bush at all. Read more, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by @adamfergusonstudio for TIME


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