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Thursday 31 December 2015

Lakes Entrance, Victoria


Ratings:  CP **  Surroundings ****



The Entrance in the distance is man made connecting the Gippsland Lakes to Bass Strait.  Lakes Entrance is primarily a fishing and tourist driven town.


Picturesque fishing boats in the port off loading their catches.


90 mile beach, one of the longest in the world, stretches as far as the eye can see while a tower used by life guards awaits the arrival of the post Christmas holiday crowds.


A treasure trove discovered in the small settlement of Nowa Nowa which used to be a timber town. This general store serves as a post office, petrol station, supply store and has a wonderful array of craft work, some locally made.


Idyllic Metung............waiting for a friend after fifteen years apart.

Tuesday 15 December 2015

Mallacoota, Victoria


Ratings: CP ***** Surroundings *****



Morning light over Bottom Lake, Mallacoota...the view from our site.


Bottom Lake is home to a bird sanctuary. While flocks of water birds rose into the air and then settled on sandbars in a cacophony of song and beating wings, languid pelicans watched on.


Reflective images and silence in calm waters of the lake on a windless day.


White sands stretch north from Bastion Point to the inlet where the Tasman Sea and Bottom Lake meet.  Over a period of 10 years, a group comprised of  local organisations and individuals attempted to prevent the building of a large breakwater and boat ramp south of Bastion Point. They were concerned about the environmental impacts of the proposed construction but they lost their fight in December 2014.


Layers of colour emerge from the wet sand.. Mudstone, sandstone, silica and shales laid down over millions of years. Apparently most of these Ordovician rocks in Victoria are of deep water sedimentary origin and have been squeezed, exposed, baked, covered and eroded by currents and other environmental factors.

Thursday 3 December 2015

Eden, NSW


Ratings: CP ***** Surroundings *****




Mealtime for an egret as the tide rises in Lake Curalo...the view from our site. Eden has an interesting whaling history: the Thawa people of the Yuin Aboriginal nation were the original inhabitants of this area and had a special relationship with dolphins and whales, killer whales (Orca) in particular which were sacred and which they refused to kill. However the settlers exploited Aboriginal knowledge of whales, employing them in the whaling industry which began in this area around 1828. The Orca whales were used to trap humpbacks which entered Twofold Bay where they were harpooned and the Orcas were rewarded with humpback carcasses. Whaling was banned in Australia in 1979.


An solitary walk along the sweeping Aslings Beach returning from the Lake Curalo inlet.


Colours and reflections of the serene Merimbula River where we enjoyed coffee after a boardwalk.


The Pinnacles of Ben Boyd National Park. Surprisingly different to other pinnacles we've seen, this is a natural cliff formation of multi coloured sands and clays which were apparently deposited around 65 million years ago during the Tertiary geological period. The top of the white sediment marks the level of an ancient water table while the red colour is iron oxide.

Thursday 19 November 2015

Tathra, NSW


Ratings: CP **  Surroundings ****



Seafood at the harbour in beautiful Bermagui on our day visit there....


And a humpback whale breaches playfully as she journeys south with her calf to the plankton rich waters of Antarctica.


Soft rays of evening sun touch Tathra Wharf. It's the only one of its kind remaining on the New South Wales coast. The first wharf was built in the 1860s for the district's farmers who needed a place to export their wares and extended in the 1900s to include yards and watering troughs for stock. The district's soldiers departed from here to serve in the First World War.



Saturday 14 November 2015

Batemans Bay, NSW


Ratings:  CP **  Surroundings ***



Our first year anniversary of being on the road celebrated with a seafood lunch at The Boat Harbour situated across the waters.


Forested labyrinth of eucalypts and shadows with an under-story of Burrawang trees (a type of cycad) and palm ferns in the Murramarang National Park.


Look! Gnarled spotted gums allow for the growth of forest plants in their crevices and scars.


Semaphore and Purple Shore Crabs scurry for their meals at low tide in mangrove swamps.


Cullendulla Creek Nature Reserve where we discovered one of the largest stands of mangroves south of Sydney. Popping sounds permeate the silence at low tide as the mangrove roots breathe in oxygen.

Wednesday 4 November 2015

Ulladulla, NSW


Ratings: CP *** Surroundings ***** (Whipbird in bush near CP)



Ulladulla, Aboriginal word meaning 'safe harbour', where many serene moments were spent watching fishing boats returning with their catch.


 Amber liquid seems to run against darkened rock. During a wet period 3 to 4 million years ago, extreme leaching produced Ferricrete, a hard reddish or brown sedimentary rock with high iron content producing this a colourful landscape.


A solitary pelican and I wait patiently for that fish to bite at Burrill Lake.


"One track for all", a unique spiritual experience walking a track at North Head which tells the story of the people who lived here 40,000 years ago up through the words and carvings of Noel Butler, an Indigenous elder and custodian of the customs and culture of the Budawang people of the Yuin Nation. This carving is just one of the many along the 2 kilometre track around the headland. The  stories are told up until present day and depict the erosion of the traditional way of life of the Aboriginal people in this area and their struggle for survival following the arrival of the settlers.


Each evening I watched a white bellied sea eagle soar over the entry to the harbour and swoop on its prey. On our final evening there, I was privileged to see this couple (female is the larger of the two) quietly observing their territory and perhaps protecting fledglings.

Saturday 24 October 2015

Canberra, ACT


Ratings:  CP *  Surroundings ***** (Parliament and War Memorial)



Parliament House with Lake Burley Griffin in the foreground


Parliament House seen four kilometres away from the steps of the Australian War Memorial


The Australian War Memorial


The Australian War Memorial is by far the best memorial or museum I have seen in Australia


Two of the several fighter planes on display


Yass, NSW


Ratings: CP *** Surroundings ***



Yass is a rural town with a rich colonial history. It is situated on the Yass River and its name is probably derived from 'yharr', an Aboriginal word meaning running water. It is home to the famous Australian born explorer, Hamilton Hume, who first set off from Yass to explore New South Wales and Victoria at the age of 17.
This court house reveals part of Yass' history and stands in the main street along with many other well preserved buildings. The original courthouse was built in 1847 and allegedly had a tree outside where convicts were flogged. The tree was removed when the courthouse was rebuilt in 1880 and the court house remains in use.

Thursday 15 October 2015

Shellharbour, NSW


Ratings:  CP ***  Surroundings ****



Good morning Shellharbour!


Lines and crevasses etched into granite exposed at low tide where shells were discovered wedged in the cracks.


A playful humpback whale on its way back to Antarctic waters

Tuesday 6 October 2015

Oberon & the Blue Mountains, NSW






Misty blue vapours of eucalyptus trees and weathered sandstone cliffs seen from Echo Point, Katoomba.  The Greater Blue Mountains Heritage Area includes country from six different Aboriginal language groups and the traditional culture of the Darug and Gundungurra peoples can be learnt about at the Waradah Aboriginal Centre near Echo Point.


 Tall eucalypts, deep valleys and sandstone cliffs seen from Sublime Point, Leura


Small and insignificant against the ancient and stunning backdrop of valleys and mountains at Sublime Point, Leura.


The Three Sisters, named Meehni, Wimlah and Gunnedoo, seen from Echo Point.

Towering sandstone cliffs eroded by wind, rain and rivers over time.  Apparently, when you look at the Blue Mountains, you're looking at the plateau created by an uplift around 150 million years ago. Since then deep valleys and gorges have been cut into the landscape.


Hours spent wandering through Mayfield Garden, a cool climate garden where the stone and water garden with its carefully selected plants delighted my senses. The 160 acre garden is privately owned and is situated close to the village of Oberon.