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PAINTINGS
SOLD OUT
John Dyer has been in Australia painting with Banrock
Station - the famous wine makers and conservationists.
STILL
AVAILABLE SIGNED PRINTS
of the Banrock Collection
CLICK
ON PAINTINGS TO ZOOM IN
Painting 1

Bouncing
by the Gum Tree
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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The
Wine and Wetland Centre sits on a ridge overlooking the
River Murray Valley. It is the hub where visitors can
taste our wines and be launched into the amazing story
of state of the art vineyards and restored wetlands along
walking trails through the property. Typically blue skies
with wispy clouds, rare regent parrots, kangaroos and
coloured fruits of the ruby saltbush frame the vineyards
and wetlands.
Painting 2

Pelican
Roost
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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In
the 1920's the River Murray changed from an ephemeral
stream to a vast lake when the construction of lock 3
and its weir impounded the water. The raised level drowned
many beautiful red gums on the floodplain which today
provide fallen branches as roosting platforms for pelicans.
The new level also filled the Banrock wetland permanently.
Fish eating pelicans dine on the introduced carp that
thrive in the new lake-like environment. At night the
stars illuminate the ghostly gums.
Painting 3

Martha-Lilly
Hill
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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Rain
is precious in the desert. After slow soaking rains the
rain lily quickly springs to life on the sandy terraces
of the river valley for a short burst of flowering. The
red floating fern Azolla forms carpets in Banrock Creek
that are undone by pelicans landing. Thirsty red gum trees
hug the water's edge.
Painting 4

Cool
Cockatoos under the Hot Sun
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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The
vineyards flourish on the well drained sandy loam soils
above the valley. The hot summer sun demands that the
vines are irrigated to keep them alive. Careful irrigation
is dripped to the vine and shady vine canopies produce
premium bunches of grapes for our wines. The gregarious
sulphur-crested cockatoos gather and screech in the gums
and in the cool vineyard.
Painting 5

Hot
Sunset over the ancient Mallee Tree
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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Mallee
trees are multi-stemmed eucalypts that take several hundred
years to from hollows. This oldest mallee tree on Banrock
Station is probably 500 years old and is full of hollows
that provide homes for insects, lizards, bats and parrots
like the mallee ringneck. Occasionally the biggest lizards,
the goanna, will enter the hollows to dine. Blue bush
flourishes after rain in the mallee and the massive tree
roots store water for survival during drought.
Painting 6

Wine
and Wetlands
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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This
is the signature of Banrock Station created by careful
water management. The vineyard is watered by drippers
to reduce evaporation. Soil moisture is monitored by probes
to ensure the vines are given the right amount of water
at the right time. The wetlands are dried out every two
years to copy the natural flood/drought cycle of the river.
The wetland plants and animals love the cycle of droughts
and floods. Kangaroos graze on the fresh wetland sedges
and grasses after spring floods and purple swamphens,
yellow-billed spoonbills and many species of waders forage
in the plant zone. Every visitor to Banrock Station has
the opportunity to see this story.
Painting 7

Wandering
through the Wetlands
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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The
restoration of the wetland and the re-emergence of red
gum forests, reeds and bullrushes provide food and shelter
for more than 166 species of birds. This led to the development
of the boardwalks along eight kilometres of trails that
bring 20,000 people into the wetland - quietly and well
informed. One of our rarest birds, the regent parrot,
nests in red gum hollows and then flies to nearby mallee
woodlands to forage - they are frequently seen darting
through the wetland en-route.
Painting 8

Wetland
Wildlife
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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The
wine and wetland centre is beautifully blended into the
mallee landscape overlooking the vineyards and wetlands.
The arrival of bilbies, a small marsupial not seen here
for more than 100 years, marks the commitment of Banrock
Station to completely restoring the landscape. A ten kilometre
predator proof fence has been built to exclude foxes,
feral cats and rabbits and thus allow bilbies to live
here again. White winged choughs work as a team to build
mud cup nests from the surrounding soils, the same colour
as the rammed-earth walls at the visitor centre. The choughs
build their nests on the strongest mallee branches indicating
the importance of old trees.
Painting 9

Bathing
Baby Red Gums
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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Ephemeral
rain lilies in yellow ochre sand dunes say thank you for
rain and baby red gums and their living ancestors say
thank you for precious water pumped from the river to
keep them alive until the next river floodwaters arrive.
The limestone cliffs mark the edge of the river valley
and tell of millions of years of sea bed buildup that
was carved down by the river just 700,000 years ago.
Painting 10

Blue
Skies and Blazing Stars, Banrock
24 x 24 inches acrylic on canvas. £1500 |
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The
Banrock Station Wine and Wetland Centre is a wonderful
place to relax and marvel at the vastness of the mallee
woodlands, vineyards and wetlands and the wildlife that
is returning here all set against blue skies and blazing
stars, cheers!
INTERPRETATION
OF JOHN DYER BANROCK STATION COLLECTION
By Tony Sharley, Manager, Banrock Station
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