Tuesday 27 March 2012

27 March 2012 Last days in Tasmania

We leave Tasmania (the south island of Australia, as we have found out) in 2 days after 6 weeks here.
Figure of Ram  - Egypt 100 BCE
Last week  in Hobart we spent a full day at the Museum of Old and New Art (MONA). It has become Tasmania's leading attraction having opened only a year ago. It is the brain child of a David Walsh who built it for approx $75M, and collected all the pieces. Visitors walk around with an "O" device (ipod in disguise) to discover the details of the pieces. No labels on the wall! The "museum" is almost completely underground, carved out of the rock, and definitely not your typical museum or art gallery.
CLOACA - Wim Delvoye



Wim Delvoye - Tattooed pigskin (Osama)
The current special exhibition is works by Wim Delvoye which consist of bronze rotating Crucifixes, tattooed pigskins and the CLOACA , a digesting machine which creats excement, and smells like it! It is fed twice a day.



Enough of culture.... We then headed back out into the majestic mountains of Tasmania to Mt. Field National Park, where we did a hike at Mt Dobson in the snow. We are now sure we will not return to live in Canada!
We than proceed on to the Gordon River Hydro electric dam, where we were able to walk across the top of the dam, and watch in amazement as several women abseiling 140 meters down the inside face of the dam. Bobbie didn't think it looked that difficult, but unfortunately it was late in the day, and they were packing up.


We are now in Cradle Mountain and spent the day hiking around this world heritage area. It attracts close to 200,000 visitors a year, so the accessible trails are well maintained, with boardwalks across many of the sensitive areas. We managed to make it to Marion's Lookout, with views over the nearby ranges and lakes. See right. Tomorrow, we we do more of the same, and then Wednesday head for our 6 pm ferry back to mainland Australia, arriving at 6 am in Melbourne. Cheers for now Bill&Bobbie

Tuesday 13 March 2012

13 March 2012 Topiary In Triabunna

13 March 2012


Went out for a short bike ride around Triabunna Tasmania today.  Found a local who wanted to make their yard stand out.  I thought they were quite cute, and it must be a lot of work.
13 March 2012

Hello again.  Some updates on our recent activities.  Last week we were in Freycinet National Park in Tasmania.  It is the oldest National Park in Tasmania and famous for beautiful white sand beaches and walking tracks.  We did a bit of both, staying at Coles Bay and swimming at Muir's Beach, and doing a couple of hikes in the park.  We also did one of the best know hikes in the park, over the range to Wineglass Bay, and return to the start via the Hazards, a range of hills on the coast of Coles Bay.

Wineglass Bay from beach level, where you can't see the wineglass shape of the bay 
  We also had a swim at Wineglass Bay, despite the rather nasty shore dump.  

Freycinet is a beautiful park, but very heavily used as it is so famous.  It is serviced by the town of Coles Bay, where everything is twice the price of anywhere else as they have a captive market -- like diesel at $1.75 a litre.  Luckily we had filled up before we got there.  And a bakery that had no baker and only white sliced bread at $5.00 a loaf, although they somehow managed to have a huge selection of gooey cakes to go with the coffee they sold in the cafe part.  We did have an excellent dinner at Tombolo that specialized in pizza and fish and chips.  Also some very nice local cab/sav.

We next travelled to Triabunna, site of the contentious and now mothballed Gunn's Woodchip Mill.  Triabunna is also the jumping off point for ferries to Maria Island, an offshore National Park.  At one time a prison island, it is now a wildlife sanctuary with particular significance for the Cape Barren Goose.  There are no cars;  the only way to get around is on foot or bicycle.  It is a lovely island and with no motorized vehicles moves at a slower pace.

Cape Barren Geese
We spent a lovely day on Maria Island, cycling around and hiking.  Some of the attractions of the  island include the Fossil Cliffs, where they used to mine a large fossil bed for the lime in the shells.  It is now protected and it is awesome to see metres deep layers of shells and silt from millions of years ago.

Fossil Maria Island

There are also the "Painted Cliffs", an area of striking marked amber and gold striped stone which is very soft and eroded by wind and sea.  Rock pools at the foot are filled with tiny starfish, anenomes and  sea plants.  The whole area smell rather unpleasant, however, as the colours in the rock are created by sulphur deposits which the waves expose.

Painted Cliffs, Maria Island
We spent the greater part of our day climbing one of the peaks on the island, called Bishop and Clerk as the early settlers thought the two stone pillars looked like a bishop being followed by his clerk.  The climb went through woodlands and got progressively steeper as it went over rock scree, boulder fields and ended up in a scramble to the top of a piller.  Fantastic view from the top and not too much wind, which was great, but the day was rather overcast so photos tended to be misty.  The trail was also great as you could ride a mountain bike (well, perhaps push it part of the way) to about the half way point of the trail.  The ride back was all downhill so that was the best part of the trail.

Top of Bishop and Clerk, Maria Island

Echidna seen on the trail to Bishop and Clerk
We are  heading out tomorrow, probably to the South Coast for some remote camping and then back to Hobart to see MONA (Museum of Old and New Art) and some more civilized sightseeing.

Thursday 1 March 2012

1 March 2012
Scamander Tasmania


Hello Everyone,


Sorry it has been so long since we contacted anyone, but it seems to have taken us quite some time to get organized to do anything.  I wanted to send out emails but Bill insisted on us doing a blog, but it has taken him about 2 months to set it up, so this is a bit of a catch-up on what we have been doing.  Bill has posted our "Christmas Newsletter" for 2011, which should take you up to about the end of 2011.
Our Camp at Yagon, Seal Rocks
Sugar Loaf Point Beach, Seal Rocks
Sugar Loaf Point Lighthouse, Seal Rocks
After spending Christmas at Yagon Campground near Seal Rocks NSW, we headed further north for a bit.  We spent a few days in Port Macquarie with Peter Thompson (formerly of Mona Vale and the Dawnbusters swimmers) who very kindly lent us his "spare" unit near Flynn's Beach.  This was true luxury after camping for a month.  You cannot imagine how good a built in bathroom and shower looked to us.


Monster Tent Camping Australian Style-2
Port Macquarie was fine and hot while we were there.  We visited my second cousin Darlene, her husband Nigel and newish baby Estella, as well as exploring the town and all of the beaches.
Monster Tent Camping Australian Style-1
We later made our way further north to Yuragir National Park and camped at Pebbly Beach, a 4WD camping area accessible only by crossing a tidal river at low tide.  This was fun and a  test of our nerve and driving skills.  You don't want to get stuck in a tidal river as if you can't get out you'll soon be underwater.  Pebbly Beach had some good examples of typical Australian bush campers -- take as big a tent as you can, centre it on your site, and cover it with a massive tarpaulin.  We did a long hike up the coast towards Wooli, but after about two and a half hours the trail got very faint and rough, so we contented ourselves with watching the sea turtles swimming off the rocks.
We had to return to Sydney by Australia Day as Bill had to slip and anti-foul his sail boat. (He hadn't managed to get this done before we left).  
Top of Cathedral Rock
We left Pebbly Beach and travelled up to Dorrigo in the inland via Nana Glen (home of the (in)famous Russell Crowe).  This is a spectacular drive, much of it steep, twisting gravel road, through  forest area that ends up at the Waterfall Way.  
Trail up Cathedral Rock
After seeing our fill of waterfalls, we camped at Cathedral Rock  National Park, and climbed the Rock which is one of the highest points in NSW.  The last bit is accessible only via a scramble assisted by a chain on the rocks.  The view from the top is beautiful, but was disappointing as the day was quite overcast and there is another peak nearby called Round Hill.  After you struggle up Cathedral Rock, you look across at Round Hill and see what looks like a little suburban house at almost the same level you are!!  Apparently it is a top secret radar station of some sort. We continued on to the inland city of Armidale, which was experiencing unusually cold weather (like people wearing polar fleece jackets in January). The city is very beautiful, nicely laid out with gentle, hills and many early colonial buildings.  We took the free city bus tour, which was a fascinating introduction to the history, buildings and trains of Armidale.




We returned to Sydney via a brief stop in the Hunter Valley to check out a couple of wineries, and an overnight camp at Watagan State Forest, another great dirt road drive to a campsite amoung the pines.  


In Sydney we stayed with friends Jon and Julianne, who came up and camped a few days with us at Yagon at New Year.  They very kindly put up with another truck in the driveway and two "guests" who were busy tying up loose ends from the house sale, making repairs and alterations to camping equipment, and Bill painting his boat.  All this during a week of miserable pouring rain.  We also helped out with the Mona Vale Surf Club's "Don Jenkin Memorial Swim" while  there.  To those in Sydney we missed while we were there, our apologies as we were very busy that week.


Friends cleaning Bill's boat
We left Sydney and headed south.  We stayed with friends Ray and Gayle at Windellama, near Goulbourne.  The took us to Race Day at the Goulbourne Race Track.  As they were members (they breed race horses) we got to watch the races from the  members lounge.  It wasn't quite the same as a track in Sydney, but it was great fun and we got to meet Ray and Gayle's next big prospect, Northern Star.


We drifted south along the coast of NSW, staying at Murramurang and Mimosa Rocks National Parks on the coast.  Good swimming and hiking at both. We had a few experiences with wildlife, with a rat getting into our annex one night and dragging off an empty milk bottle (what for, I don't know) and waking up one night to find a mouse in the kitchen area of the tent, and having chased him out and blocked up the hole he came in through, having to listen to him trying to get back in all night.


Waratah Bay Victoria near old lime kilns
Further along the coast in Victoria we camped at two or three lovely parks, including Cape Conran and free camping at Paradise and Golden Beaches.  We met up with another former Mona Vale Dawnbuster, John Leach and his wife Helen at Waratah Bay near Wilsons Promontory.  Did some exploring and hiking with them to the old lime kilns and swam in the very flat and shallow beach at the Caravan Park.
We went inland for a couple of days and visited a turn of the century mine and mining town at Walhalla.  Very pretty little federation town that lives on tourism.  Tour of the mine was great.  The conditions that the turn of the century miners worked under were scary.  Most men started in mines about age 15-16, and if they reached 30 they were considered old men and given an easier job on the surface!!
We camped a few days at Wilsons Promontory.  The campsite is very crowded, as they only allow car camping in one large site.   The hiking and walks were beautiful, however, and swimming at Norman Beach was great.  One of the few places I've managed to get in long swims, rather than just body surfing in the waves as the seas have been big most places we've been.
50 Metre Free Swimming Pool, Cascade Gorge, Launceston  Tasmania

Tamar Valley Launceston
Since then we have been touring Tasmania.  We stayed in Launceston for a week, meeting up with friends Neal and Carol from Sydney who were also visiting Tassie.  We spent a beautiful day exploring the Tamar Valley and checking out the wineries.  I swam every day in Cascade Gorge, where they have a 50M free swimming pool, open 24 hours as far as I can tell.  We spent a day at the Penny Farthing National Racing Championships in Evandale.  A fun event in a little rural community with everyone taking part.  And some of the best fast food I've ever eaten from a mobile food van "The Garden of Vegan". (Some wag had placed them next to the Spit Roast food stall.) 


Penny Farthing Races Evandale Tasmania
Penny Farthing Races Evandale Tasmania
We also did a 4WD track to the Central Highlands, and camped overnight near Leeawenee, the coldest spot in Tasmania.  It was.  It was also spectacularly beautiful, a sort of "blasted heath" and we were the only people camped there.  At night, apart from the road in, there was no sign of anything man made.  The night was clear and the the stars and milky way bright. No other lights, no noise but the wind. Awesome.  The next morning we met some hikers starting a 3 day hike into "The Walls of Jerusalem" Mountains.  One of them was from Mona Vale and trained in the ocean pool.  


We are now near St. Helens on the east coast.  Went for a pleasant walk through a conservation area/bird refuge this morning, and are spending the afternoon on chores as it has turned windy and rain.  I hope to make more frequent updates to this so you get some better idea of each place we go, rather than trying to cover what happened in the last 3 months.