Australia
Champion Bay Beach

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    • Day 13

      Sun 17 Dec. Geraldton WA

      December 17, 2023 in Australia ⋅ 🌬 24 °C

      After a couple more nights at Jurien Bay looking round the local area and relaxing we drove the 200 kms to Geraldton. This is the furthest north we are going and staying in the middle of town by the marina.

      We did a bit of exploring on Saturday and saw the Giant Marble, which is a clever piece of art on the beach and as you look through it, it turns everything upside down..... even Joy 😊.

      Sunday we drove to Hutt Lagoon, which is supposed to be pink due to the algae in it. However as it's been so dry the level had dropped and no colour to see. Hey ho....we tried.
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    • Day 177

      Museums

      March 20, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

      Ok so Geraldton does not have much to do. But I managed to find a few things of interest.

      I began my day with a dip in the sea, cause why not. Bit of a swim and reminding myself this is somehow my reality and I'm not dreaming.

      Then headed out to the museum. I may have accidentally walked into a thrift store and left with two books. But I had a very good reason, the books needed saving from this boring little town. One is on serial killer couples which is awesome. and the other is a LGBTQ+ book and there is no way anyone in this little racist town was ever going to by it. So I performed a powerful daring rescue and left with new reading material in tow.

      Also on the way was the arts and crafts centre. It is situated in the old goal making it both a point of interest historically and arty. However for some reason the front door was looked for 'security reasons' and told me to go to the other door. The other door had a sign that read 'locked on mondays'. So I'm not sure how I was supposed to get in. Very strange but it didnt look great from the window so no big.

      Finally arrived at the museum. For a place so small it has a rather large museum. There was the standard section for the aboriginal heritage of the coral coast. Lots about the old lore and how the british 'discovered' amazing things thanks to the aboriginal guides showing them. There was another section on a tv show, I think it was at least. It is set in a modern setting but the characters are all superheroes and it's based on aboriginal stories. At least that's what I thought it was. I'm honestly not sure as there was little to no text on the walls explaining it and most was in the aboriginal language. So I got throughly confused.

      The final two sections were the ones I went to the museum for. The VOC, a trading company based in the Netherlands in the 15-17th century used to use the west coast of Australia to get up to Batavia (now Jakarta in Indonesia) where they did trading with Asia for Europe. However the west coast had notoriously large amounts of tiny island, reefs and random shallow waters. As a result a large number of boats run aground here during their voyages. The museum is responsible for the protection of these ship wrecks and the artifacts within them.

      Most simply crashed due to not knowing where they were thanks to dreadful maps they had. However a few of note had sections in the museum. One run a ground after its captain decided they would chart a new route and hit land instead. Another managed to survive the reefs and outlying islands and hit instead straight into the mainland cliff. This one is interesting as accessing the wreckage is still extremely difficult today, and evidence was found at the top of the cliff, of survivors. If this is true, then neither the British nor the Holland sailors who first arrived here are actually the first settlers. However there is little evidence beyond the cliff so that is impossible to confirm.

      And finally another ship called the Batavia, name after the companies headquarters in Asia ran a ground. The survivors not only split into factions on the islands they were now stranded on. One faction beginning a brutal annihilation of any who opposed included the women and children sailing for pleasure aboard. The captain and other higher ranking officers had taken the remaining lifeboat and managed to sail all the way up to Batavia and somehow survived. The final group created an alliance with those running from the first group and managed to build themselves a boat out of the wreckage. They luckily did not have to test its ability as the captain returned soon after.

      What is also interesting is the boat held a large number of stone slabs. These slabs were intended for Batavia and when placed together created a massive arch way that would have signalled the opening to the city. Needless to say, this boat being lost had a lot of significance to both the people aboard and the company that owned it.

      Once thoroughly impressed and freaked out by this museum I left for lunch. Did a bit of stuff on my ipad and finished my world packers profile. Fingers crossed something comes of that but we shall see.
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    • Day 29

      Geraldton: Museum of Geraldton

      January 9 in Australia ⋅ 🌬 77 °F

      Having taken a lunch break following our visit to the HMAS Sydney II Memorial, we were ready to tackle the first museum on our list for today … the Museum of Geraldton.

      The museum is described as celebrating “the rich heritage of the land, sea and people of the Mid West region.” Exhibits cover topics ranging from ancient landforms, to Yamaji culture, to the unique landscapes and marine environment of the region.

      On display in the Shipwrecks Gallery are finds from Dutch vessels that went down in nearby waters — Batavia, Gilt Dragon, Zuytdorp, and Zeewijk. A popular exhibit covers the sinking and wrecks of HMAS Sydney II and HSK Kormoran … both of which lie some 8,200 feet below the surface of the ocean. A screen displays images of the wrecks.

      The museum is not very big … but it is well done. We enjoyed wandering around the various exhibits, but freely admit that we did so in a hurry as there was one more museum we wanted to check out before returning to Regatta.
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    • Day 402

      Geraldton Museum

      December 9, 2023 in Australia ⋅ 🌬 19 °C

      A lovely afternoon at the Geraldton Museum where we learnt about the ship wreck of the Baldavia and the mutiny that occurred as well as some of the history of the area!

      They had a visiting dinosaur exhibition with a room full of animatronic dinosaurs that the kids loved and then a room with activities!

      Bella enjoyed dressing up, whilst Lottie did the giant floor puzzle. And they each created their own dinosaurs that got scanned into the computer and projected onto the screen! Very clever! 🦕💗🦖
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    • Day 2

      Museum of Geraldton

      December 11, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

      Fascinating history! Learnt all about the Dutch Batavia ship and the massacre that occurred on the Abrolhos Islands just off the WA coastline of Geraldton

    • Day 8

      Pt Denison - Geraldton.

      March 29 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

      29 March, Friday.
      0545 - 1245 Pt Denison - Geraldton. 78km

      BF: Muesli, Yoghurt & Fruit
      Snack: Fruit cake & Fruit
      Lunch: Ham, lettuce, cheese and tomato sandwiches
      Dinner: Chicken curry

      A relatively short day. Negligible wind, so all motoring.

      Arrived at Geraldton at lunchtime and had a cruisy afternoon, including a swim.

      A very pleasant evening meal prepared by Lesley. Followed by another game or 3 of dominos.
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    • Day 9

      Geraldton - Lay day.

      March 30 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 25 °C

      30 March, Saturday.
      Lay-day Geraldton.

      BF: Toast
      Lunch: Sandwiches
      Dinner: Spag Bol & Salad

      Pete had a taxi booked for about 6:30 to take him to the airport for an 8 am flight back to Perth. We said our farewells and agreed would definitely catch up either in Perth or the UK, as he and his wife Liz do a somewhat annual shuttle from Blighty.

      Had breakfast then Les and I did a shop up at Coles and Liquorland. Only a five-minute walk (trolley push!) from the marina, which was very handy. Had a swim at a nice beach about 10 minutes walk away.

      We pumped up the Zodiac runabout and made sure it was all ship shape. Also gave Haywire a good wash down.

      After lunch, we went to the Geraldton Museum which was also only a 5-minute walk from the boat. Excellent display on the early maritime history of the region, especially focusing on the Batavia saga, which is fascinating. Plenty of wreck artifacts on display. Also a very good space exhibition, particularly relating to WA and Australia’s involvement in the Apollo lunar program. Only got about halfway around all the various sections as had not realised the museum closed at 3pm. Oh well, another day. A replica of the Batavia longboat that Pelsaert and a handful of his men sailed to Batavia (Jakarta) is moored in front of the museum. Amazing feat to have made that passage in such a small vessel and in only about 30 days.

      Pete sent us a photo of Pt Denison taken as he flew overhead back to Perth. Took him about 7 minutes to travel what had taken us half a day sailing,

      After a hearty meal of spag bol and salad we were in bed by 7 pm as we planned a 2330 wake up for a midnight departure for the Abrolhos.
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