Philip Island is not small. It is 30 kilometers long from east to west and 10 kilometers wide from north to south. The sun here is very industrious, and it doesn't set slowly until about nine o'clock, so the sunshine at six o'clock in the evening is still brilliant, the sea is blue, the beach is golden, and the red-billed seagull flies up and down beside the tourists, stirring up the happy atmosphere on the island. Philip Island is also famous for a small Genie living on the island: penguins. Philip Island is also called Penguin Island by the Chinese. Melbourne itself has designated an ecological reserve for penguin habitats on the island, separate from human activities. The reserve has a small penguin Museum and a staircase-shaped Penguin viewing area, which only receives 500,000 visitors a year. After entering the reserve, people's activities are strictly restricted, they can only walk in designated areas, and they are not allowed to take photographs, so as not to frighten the elves and hurt their eyes by strong flashes. The viewing area is like a simple stand facing the vast South Pacific Ocean. Penguins go out every day before dawn, plunge into the sea before sunrise to hunt, and come ashore to their homes after nightfall. This is God's timetable. Adult penguins foraging in the sea not only need to feed themselves, but also bring enough food to feed their children. For this reason, they have to swim 100 kilometers in the sea every day, not to play, but to work.