Making memories one road trip at a time. Meer informatie
  • 25Footprints
  • 1landen
  • 18dagen
  • 428foto’s
  • 6video’s
  • 3,4kkilometer
  • Dag 19

    Number Crunching

    30 april, Australië ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Total distance travelled:
    >3,500 km by car
    830 km via sea ferry (Spirit of Tasmania)
    599 km by ferry/cruise boat
    22 km by bus (Cradle Mountain shuttle)
    >35 km by foot (officially recorded) Actual count = much more!

    Time away:
    18 days

    States travelled through:
    3 (NSW, VIC, TAS)

    Favourite place:
    North Coast Region & Bay of Fires

    Ultimate highlights:
    ### - Anthony
    MONA; Macquarie Harbour & Gordon River boat cruise - Fiona
    ### - Josh
    Bruny Island boat cruise; Devils - Ryan
    Bruny Island boat cruise; Wombat - Lachlan

    Best accommodation:
    Lazy Waves Beach House, Binnalong Bay & Cradle Mountain Highlander Cottages

    Best Bakery:
    Jackman & McRoss Bakery, Battery Point Hobart

    Best lunch:
    Lobster Shack, Bicheno (TAS seafood platter)

    Best dinner:
    Drunken Admiral, Hobart (Hot & cold TAS seafood platter)
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  • Dag 18

    Home Sweet Home

    29 april, Australië ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    We left Wangaratta early this morning for the long and gloriously straight drive home to Sydney. As beautiful at Tassie is, the one thing we definitely won’t miss are the narrow winding roads. We have a new appreciation for full width lanes and formed shoulders.

    It was an uneventful trip home, a bit of all weather and plenty of roadworks along the Hume Freeway, but grateful to all be home safely having enjoyed a wonderful time away.

    Only 242 days until our next adventure begins… Stay tuned 😊
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  • Dag 17

    Wangaratta VIC

    28 april, Australië ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    Five very tired but equally contented McDermotts disembarked the Spirit of Tasmania around 10:00 this morning after another relatively calm overnight sail. The SOT is a great way to access the Apple Isle - we’d definitely recommend night sailing in a sleeper cabin.

    After a lazy brunch in Geelong, we made it as far as Wangaratta before turning in for the night at the Wangaratta Motor Inn.

    On approach to Wangaratta we detoured via the King Valley gourmet region stopping for tastings at Brown Brothers and Sam Miranda Wineries and the Milawa Cheese Factory. Who even knew this region existed? I feel another trip coming on…

    For dinner we walked from our motel down the main street of Wangaratta for a lovely meal at the Masala Corner Indian Restaurant. We knew we were on to a good thing when the local winery where we had a tasting session earlier in the day not only recommended the place but supplied their wine list!

    It was a fitting end to another fabulous road trip with our partners in travel crime - the Giffney family. We wouldn’t do it any other way xx
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  • Dag 16

    Devonport TAS

    27 april, Australië ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    This morning we awoke to a picture perfect day at Cradle Mountain. We couldn’t not take the opportunity to jump on the shuttle bus back to Dove Lake for the iconic postcard photo.

    Dan got the perfect shot before the wind picked up and rippled the pond, while we trekked back to the boat shed for another quick pic to prove we were there - even if it now looks like I hiked Cradle Mountain with my handbag 🤣

    We feel very fortunate to have experienced Cradle Mountain in all its glory.

    Leaving the mountain we followed the Northern Tasting Trail as we slowly made our way back towards Devonport. First stop, Sheffield Bakehouse for brunch, followed by a tasting paddle at the Spreyton Cider Co. where the boys also enjoyed a tasting paddle of local juices. Next stops, Ghost Rock Wines and Anvers Chocolate Factory.

    We eventually made it Devonport where we explored the picturesque Mersey Bluff Lighthouse and completed some essential research at the Southern Wilds Distillery, locally known as Devonport’s departure lounge, as we bided time waiting for the Spirit of Tasmania to arrive in port - Sloe Gin for the win!

    We ended our eventful lap of Tassie with dinner at the local Irish establishment before boarding the SOT for our return voyage to the mainland.
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  • Dag 15

    Cradle Mountain TAS

    26 april, Australië ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    The most anticipated destination of our trip, the quintessential Tasmanian experience, another bucket list travel adventure finally a reality. We came, we saw (we shivered) and we conquered Cradle Mountain, sort of…

    We started early in a clockwise direction on the Dove Lake Circuit, a lovely scenic loop encompassing some diverse terrain and microclimates. The Ballroom Forest was especially enchanting, while the native Fagus trees were in full Autumn glow, edging the path in shades of gold.

    Sadly, cloud obscured the top of the mountain all day and a light drizzle prevented us reaching Marion Peak. However, we were rewarded with a magnificent rainbow over the lake as a consolation prize.

    After completing the Dove Lake Circuit and posing for the obligatory group photo at the iconic boat shed, we headed back to Rony Creek where it took us all of a few hundred metres to find a friendly wombat happily grazing right next to the boardwalk!

    Although we’d come to experience the grandeur of the mountain itself, the lower peaks and ridges around the lake created an equally impressive panorama, proving its beauty from all angles and in all conditions.

    We ended our fabulous bucket list day with dinner at the Peppers Cradle Mountain Tavern Bistro.

    Fun fact: Cradle Mountain was named in 1827 by the explorer Joseph Fossey who thought it bore a remarkable similarity to a gold prospector's cradle.
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  • Dag 14

    Devils TAS

    25 april, Australië ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    Tonight we braved the cold to witness feeding time at Devils @ Cradle Mountain. It was fantastic even if I did lose feeling in my toes 🥶

    Upon arrival we wandered around the sanctuary admiring the mysterious Devils before joining the after dark feeding experience, showcasing Tasmania’s three largest carnivorous marsupials - including Eastern and Spotted-tail Quolls, all now threatened in one way or another in the wild.

    Throughout the evening, we learned some fascinating insights into the daily operation of the working conservation facility and gained an understanding of the life cycles of the Devils and current threats that confront them, such as Devil Facial Tumour Disease 🙁
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  • Dag 14

    Penguin TAS

    25 april, Australië ⋅ 🌬 15 °C

    We enjoyed a slower start this morning before exploring along the beautiful northwest coast towards Penguin, arriving just in time for the ANZAC Day celebrations by the waterfront, including the town mascot Penguin himself dressed in Fatigues for the occasion 🐧

    After bumping into Ken & Pat we took their recommendation for coffee and pies at the Penguin Bakery, before Anth and Dan sampled the local brews at the Penguin Beer Co.

    Moving on, we eventually made our way through some more very pretty (and hilly) countryside to our next accommodation at the super cute Cradle Mountain Highlander Cottages, just opposite the Visitor Centre.

    We’re going to need all our warm clothes for our Devil feeding experience tonight. Already at 4 pm it’s a chilly 3 degrees with a ‘feels like’ temp of -5 degrees! 🥶
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  • Dag 13

    Edge of the World TAS

    24 april, Australië ⋅ 🌬 14 °C

    On the extreme west coast of an island state of an island continent with nothing but Antarctica further south, we've officially found the Edge of the World!

    It’s a dramatic and evocative, albeit fitting, name for this rugged section of Tasmania's coastline where currents sweep unimpeded more than halfway around the planet via the longest uninterrupted expanse of ocean on the globe until they hit this point.

    It was fascinating seeing the huge piles of driftwood that littered the beach, including massive bleached tree trunks demonstrating how powerful the storms in this part of the world must be.

    The experience was breathtaking, almost literally, as we opened our car door to the blustering gusts of the infamous Roaring Forties. However once acclimatised with beanies and hoods snuggly in place, we could appreciate the sights, sounds and unsung beauty of this truly wild place. It was definitely a multi-sensory experience.
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  • Dag 13

    Stanley TAS

    24 april, Australië ⋅ 🌬 11 °C

    Today we left the wild west and headed for the civilised northwest and the charming little seaside town of Stanley.

    Unfortunately, The Nutt chairlift wasn’t operating due to high winds. Instead we enjoyed a lovely local produce lunch at the Stanley Hotel before making our way out to Arthur River at the western most point of Tasmania - crowned the 'Edge of the World'. It’s so remote that if you were to set sail and head west, you wouldn’t make landfall until you reached the coast of Argentina some 20,000 km away!

    Our accommodation tonight is the Stanley View Beach House at Cowrie Point. A beautifully scenic cottage right on the water’s edge, complete with a lovely warm outdoor fire place on the deck looking back over The Nutt. Who needs to climb the mountain when you can enjoy happy hour looking at it 😁🍷
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  • Dag 12

    Macquarie Harbour & Gordon River TAS

    23 april, Australië ⋅ 🌬 15 °C

    Living it up in the Wild West!

    We were extremely fortunate to score another magnificent blue sky day to cruise the waters of Macquarie Harbour from Hells Gates to the notorious ex-convict settlement on Sarah Island and the magnificent world heritage listed Gordon River, all aboard ‘Spirit of the Wild’ operated by Gordon River Cruises. It was a fabulous experience on a sensational purpose-built boat, complete with hybrid electric engines for ‘silent’ cruising down the river.

    In spite of the calm and sunny day, it was easy to see why the deep black waters of Hells Gates and Sarah Island were feared by convicts and free settlers alike. The Gordon River on the other hand was peaceful and serine, thanks to one of the great victories of the environmental movement.

    A highlight of the day was stepping off the boat for a close-up experience of the older-than-time rainforest on an elevated boardwalk through the Franklin-Gordon Rivers Wild National Park. The guided short walk showcased some of Tassie's endemic flora including the ancient slow growing Huon Pines - once heavily exploited as the best boat building timber in the world, they were nearly wiped out entirely by the 'green gold' logging industry in the early-mid 1900s. Thankfully these magnificent trees are now protected after a consensus that it was neither sustainable nor prudent to cut down trees that were 1000 years old!

    We also disembarked for a guided tour of Sarah Island where we learned of its reputation as a place of unspeakable horrors and a living hell and heard tales about some it's more colourful characters - such as Alexander Pearce, the Cannibal Convict.

    Back in town, Dan, Helen, Anthony and I celebrated our unique time on the west coast with dinner at View 42º Restaurant (sans kids) with a seafood buffet as expansive as the view! The kids had chicken rolls and chaos back at the accommodation - fun all round 😁

    Fun facts: Sarah Island was established as a penal settlement in 1822 as a place of 'secondary' punishment in an attempt to control the uncontrollable. Located in the middle of nowhere with no regular water supply and horrendous work conditions, the settlement verged on bureaucratic insanity - so much so that by 1834 the place was abandoned with the convicts moved to the new settlement at Port Arthur.

    In the late 1970s there was an official belief that hydro-electricity would be the economic saviour of the State and with this in mind the Government of the time proposed to dam the Franklin River with a huge dam on the Gordon River 40km upriver from Macquarie Harbour. This prompted some of the most divisive protests in Tasmanian history with more than 1,200 protesters arrested in the summer of 1982/83, before the dam proposal was ultimately overturned by a decision from the High Court in Canberra in 1983. The saga ultimately led to the area being listed on the UNESCO World Heritage Area register, saving the pristine wilderness for generations to come 🙏
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