Australia
A J White Park

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    • Day 84

      A Day in Hobart 🏙️

      November 23, 2022 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

      🇩🇪 Heute haben wir die Stadt Hobart erkundigt. Gestartet sind wir im botanischen Garten🌹🌻🌳, der sich mit tollem Wetter von seiner besten Seite präsentierte☀️. Besonders gefallen hat uns der Abschnitt mit den Rosen gefallen: Es gab ein Meer aus Rosen samt eines "Rosentunnels". Das Auge und die Nase kamen auf ihre Kosten!🥰 Im Anschluss ging es ins Stadtzentrum, wo wir unter anderem das "Tasmanian Museum & Art Gallery" besucht haben. Bei der Ausstellung ging es unter anderem um die auf der Welt verteilten Schätze und Artefakte der Aborigines, welche in den letzten Jahrhunderten aus dem Land "geschafft" wurden und nun wieder ihren Weg nach Australien/Tasmanien finden sollen. Den Abend haben wir in der Hafenregion verbracht, wo wir zusammen mit Eugsters ein feines Fish & Chips dinner genossen haben. Für Dennis gab es zum allerersten Mal Austern, welche hier in Tasmanien eine Spezialität sind🦪. Geschmeckt hat's ihm😋.

      🇮🇹 Oggi abbiamo esplorato la città di Hobart. Abbiamo iniziato dal giardino botanico🌹🌻🌳, che si è presentato dal suo lato migliore con un tempo splendido☀️. Ci è piaciuto soprattutto la sezione con le rose: c'era un mare di rose, compreso un vero e proprio "tunnel" di fiori. In seguito, ci siamo recati nel centro città, dove abbiamo visitato il Tasmanian Museum & Art Gallery. Tra le altre cose, la mostra riguardava i tesori e i manufatti degli aborigeni sparsi per il mondo, che sono stati esportati dal paese negli ultimi secoli e che ora il governo vuole far tornare in Australia/Tasmania. La serata l'abbiamo trascorsa nella zona del porto, dove ci siamo gustati un'ottima cena a base di fish & chips insieme alla famiglia Eugster. Dennis ha assaggiato per la prima volta le ostriche, una specialità della Tasmania. Gli sono piaciute😋.
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    • Day 2

      Its easy to get lost in Tassie.....

      March 6 in Australia ⋅ 🌙 18 °C

      We had a great day today! A beautiful day dawned and after breakfast and showers etc we hit the road, but first coffee at the Grocer near here. And the coffee wasn't bad either.
      Our plan was to head inland to the two historical towns of Richmond and Oatlands.
      There are so many roads - many main arterials and lots of link roads known as junctions. We made the early mistake of getting onto Highway 1 heading in the opposite direction to where we should be heading - on a busy highway in a new car with traffic travelling at over 110 it was a bit confronting.
      But we managed to find a special U Turn spot (just for us??) and got going and with the help of Google got to Richmond.
      This was a very busy town with lots of tourists - the cafes were buzzing and tour groups everywhere. The town had lots of restored houses from the mid 1800's - mostly stone. And a manificent stone bridge that was built by convicts. We walked the main street and visited the bridge and walked along the river.
      We decided we would lunch at Oatlands so headed in, what we thought was the right direction, but soon realised our mistake, so turned back and found the correct turnoff.
      The route to Oatlands was some 60 or 70 kms of rural farmland with very few animals. We have realised that Tassie is suffering from a severe drought. Everywhere is dry yellowy grass.
      Oatlands was not what I expected - it was a quiet town, no tourists and few cafes. But the buildings were magificent - probably 100's of Georgian style buildings from 1800's. We had lunch at a simple looking cafe, that was quite busy - I had a crepe - with bacon and mushrooms, salad, tomatoes, coleslaw - the crepe was swimming in a sauce. The whole thing was large, but very tasty. Gran had a hamburger which was quite large with the same salad and coleslaw as me. It was 26/28 degrees in town with no wind. We walked the main street and visited a magnificent windmill used to grind grain - I took some photos and then we decided to see if we could navigate our way home - and we did with the help of Google going cross country as we got near to the outskirts of "our area". We thought we'd get a coffee and check out some of the other beaches.
      We went to a cool beach - Clifton Beach, a surfing beach and there were swimmers and a surf school for young people that was getting set up - we watched them all run to the far end of the beach and back. The squad had to be 25 or 30 teens and boy did they get some exercise. We watched them paddle a long board out to a buoy about 500 to 600 metres out and back then up the beach around a marker then swim the same distance and back then repeat the about sequence again.
      The evening was just lovely - calm and warm. Then we drove out to Opposum Bay. This too was a lovely bay but it was lined with beach houses right to the shoreline. We walk from one end to the other were the beach ran out to rocks and then turned back. Back to our house as the sun was just setting.
      Yeah I think we had a great day - tomorrow we plan the first of two days at Port Arthur.
      I will post the beach photos on a separate post.
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    • Day 3

      Port Arthur

      March 7 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

      Today we drove the 80km to Port Arthur - we are not staying there, but a pass gets you 2 days visit.
      When we awoke and checked on the weather forcast it was for highs of 17 or 18 so we dressed for a cooler day. But it was quite warm at Port Arthur and the sun was full on - so really it was a nice day weather wise.
      The drive was threw typical aussie outback, lots of gums everywhere - the road was pretty good - great surface, and quite winding in places.
      Got to Port Arthur at around 11:30 and there was quite a crowd then.
      We started in the tour centre and learned about the site, British prisoners in Oz and the wider world. We all got a card that represented an actual prisoner and learned about his/her life at Port Arthur, why they were there and their life at PA.
      Standing at looking at the world map and all the convict sites around the globe (every continent and island groups everywhere) - established by the British I realised that these prisons were not just about punishment - but really a way to provide labour and manpower to assist the Brits colonise their way around the world. So many of the crimes were petty - "off you go and build roads, bridges, dig mines in Australia".
      And there was a prison for children there too on a smaller island - mostly teenage, but as low as 9. And of course they were all there to "better themselves" and this included religion. The church (which was burned down a century ago - but the stone and brick walls were faithfully restored) held church for 1,100 people.
      The prison was only functioning for just over 40 years, and as the convict shipments slowed and eventually stopped it closed.
      And so it all fell into rack and ruin. Now a lot of the area has been restored to what we see now - not completely restored but you get the idea what it was like.
      The main penitentiary building was orginally a mill and probably a grain store - it was converted to the main prison. We walked through it and it is mostly a shell - we could see the small cells, one prisoner per cell - they were probably 1.5 metres by 1 metre - so it was solitued. Kitchen, ablutions etc
      We had a quick bite for lunch - cost $20 for 2 sandwiches. Then we did the harbour tour - last about 45 minutes - we saw where the childrens prison was and also an island known as the "Island of the Dead" where apparently 1,100 prisoners and prison staff were buried - a tiny island - the prison staff got headstones.
      Back on land we then explored areas were staff and families lived - the hospital, asylum, Post Office, and a range of normal town facilities.
      By then our legs were telling us that they'd had enough and it was time to head home.
      Bought some groceries for tonights dinner and that's the day.
      A normal evening here - saw Gavin in the garden, the rabbits we see most nights and morning, the assortment of birds and a few wallabies.
      Tomorrow we will probably head in the same direction - there is quite a lot to explore off the beaten track.
      I just remembered that some of you would be old enough to remeber the massacre of 1996 when 35 people were killed by a madman. Such a sad event and we saw the memorial garden.
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    • Day 5

      A new day

      March 9 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 33 °C

      We decided today to get out and do some stuff, even if it was just some quiet activity.
      We bought a takeaway coffee and drove to Seven Mile Beach to sit and enjoy. There was a large crowd on the beach and the sun was fierce, with an aftermoon promise of 35, the early birds trying to beat the heat.
      Then we drove over the Hobart bridge and went into the Botanical Gardens - it was lovely to just stroll and sit in the shade. We had lunch there and had a visit from a mother duck and 4 little ducklings.
      Then we came home and went to Roches Beach which is just down the road from our house - it was quite busy too, but extremely hot and decided that was enough exercise for the day.
      Tomorrow we get the campervan!
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    • Day 54

      UnderDownUnder Tour: Tag 1

      January 26, 2020 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

      Ich bin in Tasmanien!!!!
      Tasmanien klang für mich immer nach geheimnisvoller, unberührter Natur und nach Abenteuern!

      Da ich noch nicht so ganz wusste was genau ich hier machen soll oder besser gesagt wie ich hier von A nach B komme, buchte ich über UnderDownUnder die Famous 5 Tour.
      Diese wurde mir in Adelaide von einer Mitbewohnerin empfohlen.

      Und so starteten wir heute um 7.20 Uhr von Hobart aus.
      Wir, das sind 22 Teilnehmer aus aller Welt von jung bis alt.
      Wir haben Leute aus der Schweiz, Deutschland, Holland, Österreich und Polen dabei. Aber auch aus London, Kanada, Australien, China und Japan.

      So fuhren wir von Hobart durch das Derwent Valley - von Osten nach Westen über die Insel. Unser erstes Ziel war ein kleiner Ort, indem wir uns ersteinmal mit Kaffe und Lunch für den bevor stehenden Tag versorgen konnten.

      Dann ging es auf zu den wunderschönen Russell Falls, wo wir zwischen den hohen Bäumen des Mt Field National Park spazieren waren.

      Nachdem wir am späten Nachmittag unser Camp bezogen hatten, machten wir noch einen kleinen Abstecher zum nahe gelegenen Strand.

      Es war ein sehr schöner Tag!

      Abends schlossen sich kleine Gruppen zusammen um gemeinsam zu kochen.

      Ich schloss mich den beiden Schweizern und dem Österreicher an.
      Erstens kochen die Männer, anders als die Frauengruppe, mit Fleisch 😁 und zweitens tut es auch Mal gut wieder auf deutsch reden zu können 😉
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    • Day 50

      Tasmanien - Tag 6 - Maria Island

      October 28, 2017 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      ...or on the brink...today I was on Maria Island, a national park...it was amazing... what else...

      Nachdem ich über 10 Stunden in meinem Busch Domizil genächtigt habe und es so friedlich war, ging es mir heute etwas besser...also konnte ich nach Maria Island fahren und dort zwei kurze Walks machen. Und beide waren jeweils ganz nah am Abgrund... Einmal zu den Painted Riffs und einmal zu den Fossil Cliffs. Es war mal wieder atemberaubend schön und es kam sogar noch die Sonne raus und ich wurde natürlich wieder von wombats, wallabies und kängurus begleitet. Leider habe ich keinen tasmanischen Teufel gesehen, die dort weit verbreitet sind, aber ich war auch nicht zur Dämmerung dort. Danach bin ich wieder mit der Fähre zurück und weiter nach Hobart gefahren, wo das ganze Abenteuer angefangen hat...und noch nicht ganz zu Ende ist...Read more

    • Day 2

      Clifton Beach and Opposum Bay

      March 6 in Australia ⋅ 🌙 16 °C

      I took a lot of photos at Clifton Beach (as mentioned in the other post) - it was just so pleasant at the beach and with so much happening.

    • Day 1

      Tight Transit Times

      October 20, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      Today was a travel day. I originally booked Perth to Hobart direct but Qantas changed the itinerary to Perth - Melbourne - Hobart with 45 minutes transit time in Melbourne. When asked the Qantas customer service representative told me I only needed 40 minutes to transit in Melbourne. No worries then!
      I booked business class using points and it was lovely. It’s the first time I’ve travelled business domestically and I could get used to it.
      Had a few panicky minutes when it came time to board. My ticket was flagged “unable to board”. After confirming I wasn’t staff or from an earlier cancelled flight I was told my entertainment system didn’t work. I had to reassure them twice that it was okay and I’d still get on the flight. I had my iPad but hadn’t brought headphones so spent the flight reading, looking out the window and messaging a couple of friends. I’m sure the pointy end gets there quicker as the flight went quite quickly.

      We were late leaving Perth but early reaching Melbourne airspace. We were put in a holding pattern and landed 20 minutes late. I was stressing as the arrival gate was basically as far as it could be from the arrival gate. I was first in line to get off the plane which is unusual for me, I usually let everyone walk past. Then there was a problem with the gangway or whatever it is called. Another 5 minutes while that was sorted out. The plane staff member waiting to let us off the plane said there were 50 of us transiting to Hobart so I calmed down. I arrived at the gate as boarding started.

      We ended up leaving half an hour late and after a quick flight I landed in Hobart at 9pm. I opted to take the Skybus into the city as they said they could drop me at my accommodation (it’s not a standard stop). When I looked at my ticket he’d charged me as a senior! Not sure whether the stress of the day was showing or he was being kind.

      A friend has just pointed out that Tasmania is expecting some wild weather this weekend so my plans may be all in disarray. I’m sure whatever I end up doing it will be good.
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