- 旅行を表示する
- 死ぬまでにやっておきたいことリストに追加死ぬまでにやっておきたいことリストから削除
- 共有
- 日11
- 2024年4月22日月曜日 9:18
- ☁️ 12 °C
- 海抜: 19 m
オーストラリアStrahan42°9’0” S 145°19’6” E
Strahan TAS

Today was an interesting travel day between Hobart and Strahan on the west coast.
Leaving Hobart we travelled through some beautiful countryside, home to the happiest cows in the world (or so they claim), before happening upon the Surveyor’s Monument marking the geographical centre of Tasmania. We posed for the obligatory photo before moving on.
At Derwent Bridge (a town aptly named for its bridge over the Derwent River) we stopped to check out The Wall in the Wilderness, one man’s artistic interpretation of Tasmania’s history beautifully hand-carved out of Huon Pine. The carvings included tales from as far back as when the indigenous people inhabited the area, through to the pioneers and modern-day workers of the Hydro-Electric Scheme and forestry industry. They also depicted the environmental plight of the wedge-tail eagle and extinction of the Thylacine (Tasmanian Tiger). It was pretty impressive. Unfortunately, the policy was no photos so you will have to imagine the 3m high, 100m long wall of carvings - or Google it!
From Derwent Bridge we headed for the west coast and the port town of Strahan, stopping along the way to complete a couple more of Tassie’s great short walks, including a swing bridge across the Franklin River and the picturesque Nelson Falls.
After negotiating what is described as 99 bends (but felt like 999 bends) we descended into Queenstown, possibly one of the bleakest towns we've encountered anywhere in Australia and a sad reminder of our capacity as a species to pollute and destroy the planet. The weird denuded landscape was both confronting and disturbing, especially in contrast to the beautiful and densely timbered wilderness we travelled through to get here. It is understood to be the result of a combination of a severe bushfire in 1896 and the pyritic smelting process at the old Mt Lyell Copper Mine, followed by destructive logging and erosion from the heavy west coast rains leaving the hills bare for decades. Thankfully nature has an endless capacity for renewal and current reports are that the trees are finally growing back and the moonscape will be returned to Tasmanian wilderness within our lifetime 🤞🏼
After finally arriving at our next accommodation at the BIG4 Strahan, we set sail for ‘The Ship that Never Was’, a live and interactive performance by the Round Earth Theatre Company, guest starring yours truly as a parrot! It was a hilariously entertaining true story of the great escape from the notorious Sarah Island by ten convict shipwrights aboard The Frederick, the last ship built at the penal settlement. Amazingly, the production is Australia's longest running play, having just celebrated 30 years of continuous performances in January this year!
We ended the day with some competitive fun in the communal games room followed by a lazy dinner at the house.もっと詳しく