Monday, 26 January 2009

Last Day in Australia!

Thursday January 15th



We decided to try the tour of Fremantle Prison - but then much regretted it. It was grim (there, used that word for the first time on the actual trip) and upsetting, and we really felt we'd wasted one of our precious remaining hours . We left as subdued as the people we'd seen the previous evening, and went straight into Perth and up to Kings Park, which restored our spirits. It's an enormous place, with the Botanic Gardens as part of it, and you look down at a staggering view of glittering buildings and a vast sweep of blue, blue water. By this time it was very hot, so we had a last wander through the Australian native trees and plants and then it was time to head for the airport. There we came across the only real difficulties we had all trip - it was the very first time a flight had been delayed, plus they decided we hadn't been booked onwards from Singapore. That was fine by us, we were happy to stay in Singapore...but they sorted it in the end. Then it was the usual gruelling long-haul flight and landing in the UK at 4.30 am, such joy. Clear of Heathrow by 5 am, all very efficient, train from Marlybone at 6.50 and back in Kidderminster by 10 am, all without a hitch. We were dismayed by what we could see from the train though - bare trees, colourless fields, a grey dawn creeping very slowly towards misty light by 8 o' clock... we longed for a vibrant Southern Hemisphere dawn, full of bright light, colour, noise and life. A lot of adjustments to come...



Trip Summary



How can you summarise such an incredible experience? The transport itself was amazing : 20 airline flights; 13 different types of boat; a light aircraft; a helicopter; a tram; numerous coaches, buses, taxis and cars; a train; a cable car.

We saw 137 identified species of birds, and many more which we couldn't identify;at least 19 mammals and marsupials; 14 types of reptile (only 3 of which could have killed us) and countless insects and water species. Thousands of different plants.

There was a fantastic variety of scenery.
Natural :- Volcanos (active and extinct, vast lava flows), Mountains (Snowy,rocky,forested, isolated or in ranges), Plains,(high and low), Lakes (glacial, volcanic, salt, dry,(even being mown ), Rivers (Dry, Flooding, Torrents, vast gravel beds), Beaches (dunes and sand,(white, yellow, red, black, green) , Rocky), Deserts, Glaciers, Islands, and 4 oceans.

Man-made :- Huge cities (glittering architecture to desperate slums) Lima, Quito, Santiago, Auckland, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth. Villages and towns (pretty,quaint, bleak, Valpariso and Cusco were all of these in the one city), Cathedrals and churches (beautiful and/or grotesquely extravagant), Fantastic markets, Brilliant museums and galleries, and of course the archaeology (Machu Pichu, Ollantaytambo, Sacsaywaman, Aboriginal rock art)

We met innumerable people, too - and only one of them was anything less than pleasant, and that was just the immigration officer at Sydney who couldn't bring himself to smile or speak. Everyone else was wonderful - helpful, cheerful, willing to answer our never-ending stream of questions, show us the way and welcome us. We were constantly fascinated by all the people who were real experts at what they did, whether it was driving a boat, guiding a tour or running a campsite. And we are endlessly grateful to all the people who entertained in various ways, even if we hadn't seen them for a long time or hardly knew them - Mike and Sarah, Paul and Vanessa, Mal and Colleen, and of course all the family. You all helped us to feel that we were more than just tourists, gave us a real insight into your areas.




FAQs (ones I ask myself) :



Q. Did you ever feel threatened or in danger?

A. Only by the driving of South American bus drivers! And perhaps when in the vicinity of crocodiles...



Q. Where was the best place?

A. We've managed a shortlist of 20 places but can't get it any shorter.



Q. What did you find most surprising?

A. Australian summer weather! Not the endless blue skies and searing heat we'd imagined. We didn't get into shorts that often.

And : no toilets at Machu Picchu.



Q. What was most annoying?

A. Speed cameras and clumsy limits in Aus and NZ! And all the road furniture that went with them.



Q. What things were universal wherever you went?

A. McDonalds, KFC, Starbucks. Airport shopping, Glittering CBDs in city centres (except Darwin) with expensive designer shopping areas. Talk of the world economy and how it was affecting people. Most countries have completely lost their textile trades to China. Alcohol-related problems. Worries about education and behaviour in schools. Lovely toilets (except Machu Picchu.) And the astonishing capacity to live in constant peril from such natural hazards as we rarely or never see in the UK - active volcanoes, earthquakes, huge flashfloods, cyclones, bushfires, poisonous and man-eating creatures - without apparently turning a hair.



Q. What books helped you to understand the countries you visited ?

A. Bill Bryson's " Down Under". THe Trout Opera by Matthew Conlon - fantastic book. Old- fashioned but still giving a vivid picture of Aussie life - Back of Sunset by Jon Cleary and Nevil Shute's Aussie books : In the Wet, A Town Like Alice, Beyond the Black Stump, A Far Country. And re-reading Lord of The Rings while travelling through NZ was great (especially when bought very cheaply from op shops), I know it's all about Birmingham and the Lickey Hills really, but tying it in with the film settings, many of which we saw, made it really come alive.



Q. Would you do it all again?

A. Yes. Tomorrow, without even stopping to pack. But with 4 times as long to do it please.

(We would probably leave out Doubtful Sound and Fremantle Prison though.).



Q. What are you going to do now?

A. Look for jobs. And start planning the next trip in the Southern Hemisphere...



P.S. If you try a similar trip, check your cases before you leave Australia. As we were packing in Perth, Geoff found a largish (but harmless) spider stowing away in his. And when I opened mine back at home, I was immediately covered in bites, presumably a last farewell from the sandflies.



THANKS TO ALL WHO'VE FOLLOWED THE BLOG, SORRY IF WE'RE VERY GRUMPY. . FOR A WHILE. There will be more pictures posted in the next few weeks if you want to keep following.

Friday, 23 January 2009

Wednesday 14th January

Wed 14th
Time to leave Wanneroo, but first we had a hankering to see wild Australia for the last time, and so whizzed back up to Gin Gin (said we wanted to go back) for morning tea with Mal. Lucky we did, as we saw an emu - the only wildlife we missed out on on the trip in the end was a wombat. (A live one anyway, as ever there were a few on their backs with their feet in the air by roadsides.)Then it was a final goodbye to Mal and off to the coast to drive down to Fremantle. (Said we wanted to go back there too.) We found a very superior B&B, beautifully restored in Edwardian style, and had a superior meal too, by the harbour with sunset over the Indian ocean in the background. Freeo is a great place to just wander round; we also went back to the Maritime Museum.It was all holiday-busy, but became strangely empty at night. We went up to the prison to check on opening times, as a visit there is one of the big touristy things to do, and found people coming out from a torchlight tour, looking strangely subdued - we were to find ou why next day.

Thursday, 22 January 2009

Tues 13th Jan

Tues

Woke this morning to some very sad news - poor old Mitzi had died. She had been very content, eating and purring and tottering about, then just lay down, went to sleep and never woke up. All thanks to Lindsay and Shan again - not only did they nurse her to the end, but Lindsay then drove from near Bromyard to bury her in our garden, who could ask for better friends?
We set off after that for Rottnest Island,a popular holiday island for Perth. The ferry was worringly packed, as much with bikes as with people - no cars on th island- but they soon all disappeared to various bays and trips when we landed. It's a delightful place with some of the oldest buildings in Australia pretty coves and beaches, but best of all it has quokkas. What is a quokka? Well, it's the hobbit of the kangaroo family - no more than 2 feet high with furry feet. They are the most adorable creatures; as they're ncturnal the best time to see them is the evening when they hop around the buildings and go through people's wastebins, but while we were there they were mostly under the trees - except for one who was making a bid to break into the supermarket. By illicit means which we cannot reveal, we made great friends with one little family, who allowed us to stroke them-one of the best moments of our trip.Then we had a quick swim just to say we'd swum in the Indian Ocean, and strolled back to the ferry - another great day, another place we'd love to go back to.
Our last evening with Mal and Colleen, lovely meal and a quiet chat. They looked after us spendidly, and like so many people on our trip, we can't thank them enough.

Obviously we are catching up on this well after arriving home (Thurs 22nd) and have had a message from Erica today to say that Lake Wendoree in Ballarat has inded been on fire - don't know how badly, but the whole town smells of it.

Tuesday, 20 January 2009

Tuesday 20th Jan

Continuing the catch-up...

Tues 6th Jan
We decided to try the coast again, Great Ocean Road being one of the world's greatest coast roads (not just the Southern Hemisphere's) so took another route down through the Otways and stopped at the Treetop Walk - a steel walkway taking you (gradually, not scarily) to the tops of the gum trees and finally (via an abseil if you like) along a magnificent fern gully. A gorgeous day, the scent of the gums all around - we were really pleased we'd stopped. As we got towards the coast though a nasty mean breezy sea mist came in and covered everything...we anyway went to see the Twelve Apostles, the famous sea stacks, but were dismayed to find that where we'd previously just wandered about on the clifftops and actually onto one of the stacks, there was now a huge visitor centre, restricting where you can go, and hundreds of foreign tourists (we didn't count ourselves, these were tue foreigners.) The Apostles were as magificent as ever, but we moved on quickly, tried a couple more of the famous landmarks and found the same -and now it was raining too- so decided where we REALLY wanted to be was the mountains, so completed the zigzag of the last couple of days by heading back up to Grampians again. Before we left the coast though we did make sure we stopped at the old London Bridge, that used to be a double-arched stack and in 1982 we walked to the end...but in 1990 the arch nearest the cliffs totally collapsed, leaving 2 astonished people standing on the other half, out at sea. (They're not there now though.)
(Deb and Rob - if you're reading all this and worying about your trip there next month - don't be dismayed, by that time all the schools will be back and it'll be like Dawlish in winter, only with bigger scenery and better weather - it's all so spectacular , you'll love it.)
A couple of hours' drive took us back to the Grampians, approaching from Dunkeld in the south this time, and we drove the length of the main ridge in the evening sunshine, and at one point running parallel with a 'roo as it bounded alongthe roadside for about a minute. It was quite breathtaking - these are truly amazing mountains. Our motel in Halls Gap looked up to the peaks on either side, and a mob of kangaroos grazed just acrooss the field from us. (The next evening, we watched a bloke very slowly scooping up all the roo poo from the motel lawn, it tool him a leisurely hour and a half - only to find that there was as much as ever the next morning.) A posh meal that night in the Best western next door - starting with bush tucker nibbles (roo, emu, yabbies and scallops). And a stroll through the little town afterwards as kookaburras squabbled in the trees around.

Wednesday 7th Jan
We headed off to conquer a mountain - Mount Rosea, one of the high peaks, a 12 km walk. The lower slopes were covered in regenerating trees (big fire here a few years ago) and some startlingly beautiful wildflowers, then once we reached the open hillside it was scrambling over huge boulders for over an hour, following a tricky little trail which took us forther up the slopes as all the peaks of the Grampians came into view. Just as we stopped for lunch a few hundred metres from the top, the sunshine disappeared...and so did the peaks...yes! it was exactly like climbing a Scottish mountain, as we stood on the summit the fog swirled in and obscured everything. Oh well. By the time we'd reached the forest again on the descent it was brilliant sun and blue sky again. It was a fabulous walk though, ending in another pretty little fern gully, where violets were blooming, strangely out of season.
We drove to another area of the range to a landmark called the Balconies - 2 great shelves of rock, one above the other, thrusting out over a deep valley. Geoff had fancied walking out to the edge and was dismayed to find they were sealed off - but we got a good SAFE view of them and of sunset over the great bowl fromed by the high peaks. We think it's about the area of Snowdonia - and in all our 6-hour walk earlier we saw no-one until we were within 5 minutes of the end.

Thurs 8th Jan
We were completely captivated by the Grampians, but needed to be in Adelaide, 500k away, by 6pm as I'd told the CWA we would arrive at the accommodation at that time. So sadly we had to leave, driving through to the end of the range and out onto the huge plains towards Adelaide. A hot sunny day but with a ferocious wind blowing which made it feel chilly, very bizarre. We stopped off at Mount Arapiles, known as the Ayers Rock of Victoria - an enormous pebble famous for its rock climbs. The view from the top was perplexing to English eyes - flat as far as we could see; farmland covered in a thin layer of tinder-dry dry grass. It's hard to see how stock can find any food. Below us were dry salt-lakes, it all felt quite alien. Further north we drove across the Little Desert, seeing a goanna and a pair of wedge-tailed eagles just before we got there. It is indeed little, at least the section crossed by the road is only 24k, but fascinating changes of habitat every few k. We stopped for a short walk at a picnic spot...following slithery trails through the sand, though we never found their makers.
From there it was several hours' drive through the flat dry farmland until we began to climb from Tailem Bend into the equally dry hills near Adelaide . Lovely country, we wished we had time to stop at Hahndorf which is a German-originated winegrowing area. But chasing that 6pm deadline we hurtled on through the hills, climbing all the time until we began the descent into the town. When we did this drive 26 years ago it was a terrifying rollercoaster plunge down to the city. The spoilsports have now cut a new road into the hill so that you can no longer see the city panorama - but it's still pretty terrifying. And we rolled gently into our night's accommodation...at exactly 6pm!
The CWA is the equivalent of the WI in the UK and NZ (Country Women's Association) and my mum has been a member for 25 years. They own accommodation in most of the state capitals(not sure about Perth) which are open to everybody - very reasonably priced, and the Adelaide one is almost a stately home, in a superb location looking out onto the city's green centre - highly recommended for B&B.
We weren't there for long before Paul came to pick us up. Paul is an internet friend of Lindsay P., they have never met but nevertheless Paul had offered to look after us while we were in Adelaide, and drove across town from his home near the airport to fetch us for a meal. And he and Vanessa entertained us royally (though we never did see the possums, Lindsay). Good food, good company and good conversation - we learnt so much about the city and the country, especially about Paul's job working with the Aborigines in a vast area of the country. A really good evening.

Friday 9th Jan
Paul had offered to meet us in town and show us some of the sights, so we walked across the parks of the green centre and through the Botanical Gardens to meet him on North Terrace. Botanics in Australia are free parks like any other, and are used by people for jogging, strolling, playing games as well as looking at plants - they are really vibrant places. This one has some very fine displays - especially the lotus blossom pond which took our breath away.
Paul took us into the Art Gallery, where we saw more of the HeidlebergSchool artists - we couldn't have had a better guide as he was trained in the Visual Arts and so helped us to understand their history and techniques. We saw some interesting modern artists as well, and some stunning Aboriginal art, which we're beginning to understand. We moved on to the Museum of South Australia and again were glad Paul was there so that he could interpret the displays in the Aboriginal Galleries.
We carried on to the Adelaide Oval (a very attractive ground, much like Edgbaston used to be 30 years ago) and went to the excellent little Don Bradman museum. Lots about the Worcester ground there - Bradman kept getting double centuries there apparently. We walked back to the CWA, right across the centre of town, in only 45 minutes or so - that's how small Adelaide is, but perfectly formed of course.
After a meal in a restaurant with Paul and Vanessa, they continued to be tour guides, taking us to see the sunset over the town from the hills. Unforgettable, and unmissable if you ever go there. We also toured the different facets of Adelaide - the millionaires' area, the imposing public buildings near the Oval, and the Soho-like area - where we learned that Adelaide isn't always the sedate, refined place we'd always believed. In fact they claim the most murders in Australia (though Perth does too!), and we were advised not to wander the town after 10 pm - just like in Darwin, which we'd considered pretty well frontierland.
We sadly farewelled (yes, it is a verb in Aus) Paul and Vanessa; we'd become good friends in a very short time, and we can't thank them enough for their hospitality and kindness.

Saturday 1th Jan
Off at 9 am to the airport - driving through the middle of town it took 15 minutes! There we had a bit of a shock - the first hitch in our travel arrangements - we weren't booked on the plane. Well, we were, but no-one had paid for the seats. After a bewildering few minutes, it was very quickly sorted; Qantas were excellent, as in fact they had been throughout our time in Aus. We had to pay up front, but our travel company have refunded the money to us. We shot through security in a pretty confused state ...only to see Paul and Vanessa, who had not only come to see us off, but had been into town to pick up a bag of gifts which we'd left behind in a food centre the day before, and given up for lost. see what we mean about kindness?
An interesting 3hour flight to Perth. You cross an awful lot of sea, but also 2 South Australian peninsulas, and then the south of Western Austraia. All look pretty wild and empty. Our arrival in Perth was HOT, the hottest we'd encountered so far, and the drive into the city is on a sweeping scale. Perth appeared to be closed (it was Saturday afternoon), until we went right into the centre to find everyone in the malls, just like Merry Hill! A walk down to the seafront/riverside (the breeze called the Fremantle Doctor very strong though), and then we headed north to Wanneroo, a suburb about 45 min away (though a lot longer in the working week.) Here we'd been invited to stay with Mal Croughton, who emigrated from Kidderminster a couple of years ago after being involved with the Cricket Club. He and Colleen gave us a great welcome, they have a beautiful house with an amazing garden which they have created in a very short time, I was very jealous. Before we ate (juicy barbied T-bone steaks, great cooking Mal) they took us to a cemetery - unusual, yes, but this one is really a piece of native bush (there are great swathes of these right in the urban parts of Perth) where graves are marked by plaques - and where kangaroos come to feed in the evening. They are very used to people and you can stand within a few feet. A very tranquil place, we loved it. We also went to the coast, and paddled in the Indian Ocean for the first time. Then another evening of good conversation, we were feeling very comfortable by then.

Sun 11th Jan
Mal and Colleen gave us a sightseeing tour of the seaside areas. Perth is a mammoth place, and expanding at a great pace, but nowhere is far from the sea, and everyone makes the most of it. Some great beaches and marinas, tens of thousands of boats and beautiful stretches of sand. We worked our way southwards to Fremantle (which was still sending out the Doctor). What a gorgeous little town, it has been renovated in recent years and we really enjoyed looking round it, vowing to go back one day.... We especially liked the Shipwreck Gallery of the Maritime Museum; it's a fearful coast for shipping,and some of the stories of wrecks and how their histories have been pieced together are astonishing.

Mon 12th Jan
We just had to go and see the Pinnacles, in spite of the 250k drive, so we set off north and were out of Perth very quickly, into farmland and bush, with some impressive stud farms, one of which had the charming name of Timely Hostess Mews. Mal had suggested stopping at GinGin, and we were glad we did, it's the prettiest little town imaginable. Must go back, we thought... From there on it was a fascinating drive, changes of landscape and vegetation every few km. To the right there were low hills - Bill Bryson noted that if you head inland over them "with amazing swiftness you will find yourself in a murderous and confusing emptiness." So we didn't. We just looked over at the coast on our left instead.
It's not the real wildflower season, that was a few months ago, but we were bombarded by hundreds of different species, all of them strange, colourful and covetable. After a couple of hours we arrived at the tiny seaside town of Cervantes. We were treated to the sight of the Indian Ocean at its most dramatic, white sands (our feet loved it, craved for more) and the sea a startling pale green close to shore, darkening to deep indigo further out. And the Doctor still blowing - hard! We also saw an enormous moth (in the ladies' toilets in fact), probably 6 inches long - no idea what it was.
Next we followed signs to Lake Thetis - Stromaolites. If you're a Bill Bryson fan you'll know he was completely bowled over by the ones he saw at Sharks Bay. At the time they were only found in 3 locations in the world, that was the only one in Aus, but since then obviously more communities have realised what they've got, and another 5 have been found. They're rather like corals made up of algae-like micro-organisms, and are pretty well indescribable. But they thrive in Lake Thetis, which is a salt lake, and on the beach they form mini-volcano shapes, so it's like a miniature lunar landscape. Somehow you feel very happy just looking at them - as Bill Bryson found. Their geological history is venerable, I'm sure Geoff can explain it to you, but I just...liked looking at them. An unexpected bonus was some incredible birdlife, including a flock of black-winged stilts, looking as though they would topple over any minute.
We spent a long and happy time there, then zoomed off to find the Pinnacles. All this time storm clouds had been gathering, and we were convinced this would be a re-run of our last visit to a desert, in South Australia in 1982 - when we saw a lovely rainbow as the 5-year drought ended. But we didn't care when we got to the Pinnacles, they made us feel happier still. We drove around a winding, dipping sandy track and looked at...well, they can only be described as completely mad columns of rock, all sizes and shapes, thousands upon thousands of them surrounded by golden desert, and all mad. It was exhilarating, we were euphoric for a long time - until the gathering clouds whipped up a mini sandstorm and we drove off, seeing as we left the finishing touch of two kangaroos hopping out from behind a group of Pinnacles. We drove back to Perth feeling completely happy, even the few spots of rain the clouds yielded before rolling away seemed good fun.
I'll now hand over to Geoff to explain the stromatolites and the Pinnacles...at this point I should open up links to learned articles as a great deal has been written about both features but I don't know how to do that, so as a quick summing up: Jen has described stromatolites well but what makes these large stumpy bollards special is that fossil ones date from 2,700,000,000 million years ago and they represent the oldest record of a living organism on earth yet there are still growing examples today; the pinnacles are only a few 10's of thousands of years old and as they appear now only a few thousand. There are several theories as to their formation but essentially they are the remains of a layer of limestone rock. The pinnacles themselves are up to about 3/4 metres high and look like giant mis-shapen teeth. they are the harder, cemented, bits of the layer, the rock in-between (not being cemented) was much "crumblier" and was eroded away. The whole area is constantly changing as the wind shifts the desert sand. It is burying the pinnacles in the south, but but blowing away the crumbly rock to create more pinnacles in the north.

Monday, 19 January 2009

Monday 19th January

No blogs for the last fortnight - either no internet or no time to write. So we're now very reluctantly back in the UK. You may have noticed that we haven't so far used the words "grim, bleak, dreary..." well that's all changed now. But we'll do a quick whizz through the last couple of weeks if only to remind ourselves that somewhere in the world the sun's shining and it's -generally warm. We certainly had a great finish to the trip.

Sunday 4th January
A beautiful, hot day in Ballarat, and we didn't do a great deal. A very pleasant morning tea session in a Ballarat cafe with Erica and Andy - the importance of the morning tea institution in Australia and NZ cannot be underestimated, you won't catch teachers there setting up their Smart boards or giving out books during their morning break. And the middle of Ballarat must be one of the pleasantist places to keep up the ritual. We also had a couple of walks around some of the many little parks and lakes in the city. There is a long-term drought there, so one of them focused on water-saving methods, wished I had Eco-Schools with me! (Really.) A very good, very relaxed evening having dinner in the local pub by the big lake in the centre of town. We noted that they'd mown the lake... it was the venue for the rowing events in the Melbourne Olympics, 6.5 k to walk round - but only a tiny puddle remains after 2 years of drought. They have to mow it or the lake catches fire. It sounds funny , but is really worrying for a huge area of Victoria, and we were to see many such dry lakes over the next few days - some of them really enormous. We finished off with a drive round the millionaires' palaces surrounding the lake presumably all of them waiting for the ater to return so they've got that lakeside view again.

Monday 5th Jan
A difficult morning saying goodbye both to the family and to Ballarat. Erica and Andy were off to Moruya, but we lingered in the town reluctant to leave - another couple of hours in the Art Gallery, where an elderly man saw us closely examining the paintings of Athur Streeton and other 19th century Aussie artists and gave us some interesting info on the Heidleberg school, as they're called. There are certainly some stunning works in the gallery. After lunch by the lake - in the Boathouse, next to the stranded paddlsteamer which hasn't been afloat since the lake began to dry up- we tore ourselves away and headed down to Lorne on great Ocean Road. A decision we began to regret, as after a couple of hours driving through almost empty countryside, we found ourselves in what felt like an English resort in high season, a real shock. We did find a very pleasant little reserve a bit further along the road, Sheoak Reserve, where we walked up to a waterfall, miraculously still running, and an amazing sandstone cave called Swallow Cave, and inhabited by..what sort of birds? Well, martins of course. But best of all we also saw another koala, great walk. We then drove along the Road, which was as stunning as we remembere it from our last visit in 1982 - but very crowded everywhere. It gradually dawned on us that our plan of finding somewhere to stay in Apollo Bay was looking a little naive, as was proved when we got there and found not a room free in the town. The quiet, quaint little village we remembered from the winter of '82 has been transformed into Blackpool, a real shock when we had such clear memories of a tranquil evening on the beach looking at the stupendous hills of the Otway Range. In the end we had to drive 60 k back to the main road to find a motel in Colac - but it was a gorgeous drive through the sunset in the beautifil Otway Forest (surely one of the most beautiful in the world?) so we didn't feel too hard done by.We remember being devastated when we heard the forest had been pretty well burnt out a few months after our last visit - but this is Australia, where of course bushfire is necessary to clear and regenerate the forest, so it has completely grown back and the new vegetation makes it more beautiful than ever.

Saturday, 3 January 2009

Saturday 3rd January

Happy New Year to everybody, and hope you all had a great Christmas. We have been hearing gloomy stories about the weather, winter bugs etc, but hope you managed to disperse the gloom with family celebrations.
The weather in Victoria hasn't been quite what we expected at times (down to 3 degrees here in Ballarat last night!!) but there have been plenty of sunny warm days in between the chilly blowy ones. We had 10 days with Mum and Dad near Sale, which we really enjoyed. The area is much like Norfolk, lots of wetlands and large lake areas which are popular resorts, and the coast is 20 k away - the nearest beach is 90 Mile Beach. Mum & dad's house is lovely (first time we've seen it of course) and they have a big patch of land. A couple of paddocks, one of them occupied by 2 alpacas, a dam where ibis and spoonbills stop by, and splendid gardens. Also a very devoted group of birds who spend a lot of the day waiting to be fed : galahs, cockatoos, magpies, rosellas and lorikeets all sit in the tree on the lawn, and the native miners come to the kitchen windowsill and tap when they want feeding which is fairly constantly; some of them take food from Mum's hand. Also a very annoying mudlark who doesn't come to be fed, but taps on the bedroom window from about 6.30 am for an hour or so, on and off - can any bird behaviourist explain this?
Anyway, we were all together as a family on Xmas day, Erica and Andy came with Heather, Sally and Owen,as did Louise, and after the traditional turkey dinner we went for an equally traditional stroll on the beach. It was warm but not warm enough to swim!! It was great to have a family Christmas again after all these years, though sad that Kate and Phil couldn't be there as well. But they had a nice day with Lindsay P. and Shan (and a lot of animals), and Geoff's mum thoroughly enjoyed her day as well, so we didn't worry about any of them.
After Christmas we visted a few local places. In only an hour and a half you can be right up in the mountains, magnificent high plains, so we went up there to Dargo one day. (Saw a red-bellied black snake, which in retrospect was beautiful.) Also visited some of the lakes and had a trip on the Snowy River on a paddleboat. Mum's 81st birthday we spent driving through nearby hills back to the places they'd lived when we'd been over before - that was great for all of us. And we had some meals in ethnic places!
Louise also gave us some meals and looked after us, her house is an old one - she has the deeds from 1877, which show she has the mining rights (but not for gold.) A pretty little house, again with a lovely garden and a paddock, in a great position near the wetlands, about 5 k from the parents.
It was hard to leave there, but we did so on New Year's Day, and drove through familiar countryside to the Mornington Peninsula to catch the ferry to Geelong. The towns were very crowded for the Bank holiday - which was much like August Bank Holiday in Wales, 15 degrees and everyone huddled together for warmth! (Last year it was 38 dgrees on the same day.) We then drove up here to Erica and Andy's new house in Ballarat, yet again a lovely place, 1920s art deco. Ballarat is a really beautiful old town, lots of gracious buildings from the gold rush days in the late 19th century. The countryside around is very dry, there has been a drought here for several years - unlike Eastern Victoria which is apparently unnervingly green for the time of year. We've looked round some of the town, loved the Botanic Gardens and the Art Gallery, and visited the university where they work. Today we went to the Grampians, a dramatic range of sandstone hills, and walked up to the Pinnacle for some stupendous views. And forgot to say that yesterday at Mount Buniyong (where it feels as though you can see most of Victoria) we AT LAST saw a koala, thought it was never going to happen.
We'll be leaving here on Monday to head towards Adelaide, but must say a huge thanks to all the family for looking after us, taking us around, and just generally spending time with us - it's been a very important part of the trip for us, seeing at last where you all live, and we're going to miss you a lot.
Good luck to Kate and Phil over the next few days. Phil has a couple of interviews. At the same time he's working hard to keep up with his uni workload. (Hope this is true Phil. I'm sure it is.) And Kate starts her course at Bangor on Monday -best of luck, Kate. Sorry we can't be there for you, but we must give huge thanks to Lindsay and Shan, because having them for Xmas Day has only been a tiny fraction of what they've done for Kate and Phil and us the last few weeks. Lindsay went with Kate to look at accommodation in Bangor, and helped her find what sounds like a really nice shared flat there, also helped her find a new car (this included a trip to Derby) and is going with her on Sunday to help her move in. And Shan has insisted on having our 16-year old Mitzi, who is very frail and needs daily medication, to nurse her until we get back, a huge load off all our minds. Thanks a million times, both of you, we couldn't be more grateful to you.