Australia
Little Possum Beach

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    • Day 117

      Hobart to Port Arthur

      February 29, 2020 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      We walked a couple of blocks from our hotel to take in the Saturday morning market. There were plenty of food trucks, local liquor stalls, wooden & glass handicrafts, & clothing stalls, lined up. It was very busy with cruise ship passengers. We rented a car to drive to Port Arthur on the Tasmanian Peninsula. We’re in an AirBnB for a couple of nights to explore this area. Our Toyota Camry hybrid is a little annoying, because not only is the steering wheel on the wrong side, but the wiper blade controls & signals are reversed. Switching lanes & turning were met with a few honking horns & stares! We arrived at our place without incident, where we were greeted by our friendly host Cathy, looking forward to cooking our dinner on the barby! Before dinner we drove 4 minutes to one of the most beautiful beaches we’ve seen on our trip, so far, & walked it from one end to the other. Even on a Saturday, the beach was nearly deserted.Read more

    • Day 69–70

      Hobart und Port Arthur

      January 20 in Australia ⋅ 🌨 16 °C

      Samstag:
      Wir stehen früh auf, weil heute in Hobart der bekannte Salamanca Markt ist, der nur einmal in der Woche stattfindet. Der Name ist abgeleitet vom Salamanca Place, der so benannt ist, um an die Schlacht von Salamanca zu erinnern. Und erschließt sich nicht warum es in Tasmanien ein Andenken an diese Schlacht von 1822 gibt. Im Hafen liegt das Kreuzfahrtschiff Queen Elizabeth. Entsprechend gut besucht ist der Markt. Es ist ein Markt, auf dem hauptsächlich tasmanische Produkte aus Handwerk und Landwirtschaft angeboten werden. Wir nutzen die Gelegenheit, um einige Köstlichkeiten zu probieren (z. B. Jakobsmuscheln am Spieß). Wir genießen ein frühes Abendessen und fahren mit dem Bus zurück auf unseren Schotterplatz. Bei den Busfahrten sehen wir, wie Hobart weitläufig in die Berge gebaut ist, mit seinen ziemlich steilen Straßen links und rechts erinnert es uns ein wenig an San Francisco.

      Sonntag:
      Den ursprünglich geplanten zweiten Tag für Hobart lassen wir sausen. Zum einen gäbe es für uns nur noch Museen anzuschauen, was uns weniger interessiert, zum anderen fällt es uns nicht schwer den hässlichen Campingplatz zu verlassen. So brechen wir zu unserer Tasmanien Rundreise auf und fahren als erstes auf die, im Süd-Osten gelegene, Halbinsel, nach Port Arthur.
      Wir durchqueren wunderschöne Landschaften, kommen an einmaligen Look-outs vorbei, einzig die Sonne und der blaue Himmel, lassen uns im Stich. In Port Arthur machen wir eine Bootsrundfahrt durch den offenen Naturhafen und besichtigen anschließend die Gefängnisanlage aus dem vorletzten Jahrhundert, in die die wirklich schweren Jungs deportiert wurden.
      Da wir nicht mehr weit fahren wollen, nehmen wir den nächsten Busch Campingplatz für sage und schreibe 40 Dollar mit einer urigen Zelt-Campkitchen und Busch Toilette.
      Read more

    • Day 118

      Port Arthur’s Historic Site

      March 1, 2020 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

      Today we spent the entire day at Port Arthur’s Historic Site, which is 43 degrees South Latitude. We are 43 degrees North Latitude back home! This is a sprawling 100 acre site with over 30 historic buildings, many of which are just shells, as wild fires swept through in the late 1800s. This is where the famous penal colony was that housed repeat offenders, mostly from the UK. They housed boys on a separate island, which was rare in those days. Boys as young as 7 were often housed with the most dangerous adult prisoners back in the UK and elsewhere in 1830, when this place accepted its first boatload of prisoners. Military officers & their families lived on the site, as well. Many floggings were conducted on prisoners with bad behaviour, but what was more feared by convicts was being sent to the separate silent prison, where they were in solitary, silent confinement for 23 hours a day, & only let out for an hour of silent exercise, when they wore a hood so no one could recognize them, & they couldn’t communicate. Some of the most hardened criminals were broken after only a short time there. As a result, they had to build a lunatic asylum next to this building for the increasing number of convicts that went “insane.” Our introductory tour guide was terrific, & shared many interesting stories about what life was like between 1830 & when the place closed to convicts in 1877. We had a boat cruise that circled the “isle of the dead” where more that 1100 convicts are buried. Another tour guide told us stories, sometimes gruesome ones, about the many escape attempts. Fascinating stuff. The day ended with a “Ghost Tour”. Another excellent guide told us more documented stories about visitors to the place seeing, smelling or hearing strange things. Only 3 months after the prison closed, in 1877, tourists, many from England, started to visit the site, and they’ve been coming ever since. They’ve done a great job resurrecting fire damaged buildings to help paint a picture of daily life for the convicts & guards. When we returned to our AirBnB we had to open and close the gate. The gate keeps the wallabies & Tasmanian devils off of her lawn.Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Little Possum Beach, Q21956103

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