Australia
Pencil Pine Creek

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    • Day 8

      Cradle Mountain National Park

      February 8, 2023 in Australia

      Mein Tag startet heute morgen um 5 Uhr. Ich mache mir Frühstück, mich fertig und ein kurzer Call nach Deutschland. Ich fahre mit meinem Auto zum National Park. Ausgangspunkt ist das Visitor Center. Hier geht es nun weiter mit dem Bus zu Ronny Creek. Ziel ist für heute den Cradle Mountain (1545hm)
      Die Tour ist ein richtiges Highlight für mich.
      Sie geht entlang des Crater Lake, Wombat Peak (1105hm) über den Marion's Lookout (1223hm) und von dort aus auf den Cradle Mountain. Die Tour war spektakulär!! Es waren 13,4 km in 6 Stunden und 30 min. Auf der Strecke entdeck ich noch einen Ameisenigel, einige Wombats und Kangoroos.
      Ein Glück schaffe ich auf die letzte Minute noch den letzten Bus zu bekommen:)) Vor lauter Aufregung merke ich bei Ankunft des Visitor Center das ich meine Brille an der Haltestelle liegen lassen habe.
      Ich überlege was ich machen soll und fahre erstmal zur Unterkunft. Lustigerweise treffe ich dort die zwei Mädels von gestern. Sie bieten an mir zu helfen und dann fahren wir zusammen dort hin. Wir müssen gar nicht suchen, denn sie liegt wirklich auf der Bank. Was für ein Schreck. Wir unterhalten uns über den Tasmanian Teufel und entscheiden uns spontan die Night Tour der Auffangstadion mit zu machen wo der Teufel vorhanden ist. Es war sehr interessant. Abends bin ich sehr erschöpft und falle dann ins Bett.
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    • Day 233

      Tasmanie nous revoilà!

      July 26, 2023 in Australia

      Hello les amis, 👋🏼
      Une page qui se ferme à l'hôtel Surf Inn, ce fut une expérience formidable mais nous avons une belle opportunité de travail en Tasmanie.
      Nous sommes arrivés en Tasmanie le 26 juillet, mais assez tard pour que personne ne puisse venir nous chercher, alors nous avons passé une nuit dans une auberge plutôt inhabituelle. Ça ressemblait à une cellule spatio-temporelle 😂 .
      Nous travaillons dans un hôtel 4 étoiles qui nous fournit le logement et la nourriture, et nous travaillons environ 40 à 50 heures par semaine. De quoi mettre de l'argent de côté pour nos futurs projets !
      Il fait très froid, environ 5°C en plein hiver.
      Nous sommes logés dans un chalet à 5 minutes à pied de l'hôtel, et je croise sur mon chemin de jolis petits animaux (wombat, wallaby, pademelons...) ce qui rend l'endroit plutôt charmant.
      Nous ne sommes pas vraiment là pour le plaisir, et nous comptons les jours avec impatience... J'ai fait un compte à rebours pour me motiver, comme en prison.
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    • Day 54

      CMNP: Around the Lodge

      February 3 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 59 °F

      It was a wombat kind of day @ Peppers Cradle Mountain Lodge! Saw three of them around the grounds today! Two of them cooperated for close-ups!

      We’re supposed to be taking it easy here, so we reserved breakfast — included in the room rate — for 8:00a. A lazy but good start to what turned out to be a comfortably warm, mostly-wind-free, blue-sky day at CMNP. Even the driver of the shuttle we took into the park later remarked on what an unusual day this was. Hey, after the cold and windy welcome we got yesterday, we deserve it!

      In keeping with our “take it easy plan” we were going to stay close to the lodge today. We jiggled things a bit, but mostly abided by that plan. That’s not to say we sat around and did nothing. No, there are several walking trails — more than a stroll, but not in the hiking category — that can be accessed from the lodge. We picked the one with a “Tasmania’s 60 Great Short Walks” designation sign at the trailhead.

      The “Enchanted Walk” is basically an easy boardwalk trail … a circuit of about .7 mile. It follows the Pencil Pine Creek through a mossy forest. Wildlife abounds along the trail we were told. We saw only a kookaburra and a couple of skinks. And lots of “poo evidence” of other critters. Having started around 9:30a, we didn’t expect to see much anyway.

      We also stopped in to check out the Interpretive Center, and I did a short walk to the Pencil Pine Falls to wrap up our walks in the immediate area.

      Somewhere in between all this, was the jiggle that took us to Dove Lake. But I’ll leave that for the next footprint.
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    • Day 71

      St Valentin

      February 14, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      Hello les amis, 👋🏼
      Fraîchement réveillés, nous rangeons tout et prenons un petit café.
      Nous avons une heure de route pour arriver à notre randonnée de Cradle Mountain.
      Nous avons fait deux groupes, un groupe qui fait une randonnée plus tranquille et un groupe qui fait le tour du lac ( bien plus physique).
      Je suis restée plus soft en faisant la randonnée tranquille de 4h30. Une vue magnifique sur tous ces lacs, une vue à 360 degrés.
      En ce jour de Saint-Valentin, les garçons ont cueilli des fleurs pour nous les offrir (ils sont vraiment attentionnés avec nous).
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    • Day 54

      CMNP: Devils @ Cradle

      February 3 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 61 °F

      When we signed up for the “Tasmanian Devil Night Feeding” through the lodge, we anticipated just that. The devils would be fed after nightfall.

      Well, that might be the case in the winter time when it gets dark early. They do add an 8:30p feeding in the summer, but — in hindsight — I’m glad we were put in the 5:30p group as this was a better time for photos. As well, we could freely roam the grounds prior to the feeding and check out the various pens to see not just the iconic Tasmanian devils, but also two separate species of quolls — Eastern and spotted-tail — that are part of the species conservation work done by Devils @ Cradle.

      In the footprint for the Unzoo in Port Arthur, I mentioned that a contagious cancer — Devil Facial Tumor Disease — has decimated the wild devil population by some 80% since its appearance in 1996. There is hope for eradicating the tumor … as a result of the vaccine research done for COVID-19. But that is still a work in progress. In the meantime, other solutions have been implemented to protect the now-endangered Tasmanian Devil.

      One such solution is the Insurance Population Breeding Program … of which Devils @ Cradle is a part. The program works to protect species from extinction. Signage explained that “… A meta-population has been established throughout Australia, which strategically combines multiple facilities or sites operating under various management levels. Devils can be moved between these bio-secure sites to maintain the genetic diversity of the population.”

      A similar program applies to the quolls as well. There are only 10,000 or so of them in the wild in Tasmania … and only because there are no foxes here. Individuals from this breeding program have been shipped to the mainland to start repopulating quolls in the wild there.

      The pens here — open air for the devils, which cannot jump out … fenced-in for the quolls, which can easily jump out — are described as free range enclosures. Thus, the animals are considered to be under semi-wild managed conditions. The plan is to release individuals from these protected sanctuaries into off-shore Tasmanian Islands … into wild managed conditions. In fact, 15 devils were released on Maria Island in 2012 and their population is flourishing in that disease-free environment.

      The feeding experience here was different from the one at the Unzoo in that we saw multiple feedings … first the females in one enclosure; and then a “paired couple” in another enclosure. At first, they peacefully shared the wallaby carcass that the keeper staked out for them. Once the meat dwindled down, however, the animals became quite vocal over who would be eating the remaining bits.

      The meat, by the way, is specifically purchased for the critters from a hunter. They are not allowed to use any of the many road kills we’ve seen all over Tasmania.

      The quolls got their treats as well. It was interesting to see these small, carnivorous marsupials go at the meat with such relish.

      The visit to Devils @ Cradle was interesting and informative … I’m glad we went … all the more so because the admission goes towards the care of the animals in the program.
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    • Day 53

      Cradle Mountain National Park (CMNP)

      February 2 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 48 °F

      The drive from Sheffield to CMNP was pretty much that … a drive … flat and straight roads part of the way … winding and curvy in other parts. Nothing exciting.

      Shortly before 4:00p, we pulled into the Cradle Mountain Lodge … our base of operations for three nights. Initially, we were assigned to Pencil Pine Cabin #12. It had the lake view we had requested. But it was missing the veranda. No worries, Working with the manager, we got ourselves switched to PPC #24. Perfect … and we were immediately rewarded with a wombat grazing right out front.

      In fact, we’ve had plenty of wildlife sightings already … platypus in the lake (pond really; 3 sightings); native hens; a couple more wombats; a Bennett’s wallaby; a couple of pademelons; and right at our front door, a brush-tailed possum. Thrilling … even if I didn’t manage to get photos of all of them.

      After settling into our cabin, we returned to the main building to have dinner at the Tavern … which does not require reservations. Our tummies sated, we hopped in the car to check out the national park itself. Once the mandatory shuttle stops operating, cars are allowed inside. In February, that is at 6:30p.

      The road into the park is about 7.5 miles long and dead-ends at Dove Lake. The sun wasn’t due to set until about 8:00p, but the light disappears fast due to the high mountains. Even if that weren’t the case, today we would not have been able to stay long. It was polar-region-cold with a wind strong enough to push me around. Back in the car, Mui said it was 46F … but I bet the feels like with the windchill was below 32F. The good news is that the wind is expected to die down. Fingers crossed.

      Oh, by the way. Despite reports that there is no cell signal to be had hereabouts, we have a strong 4G with our Telstra eSIM … no need to go to main building to connect via WiFi.
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    • Day 297

      Au revoir la Tasmanie

      September 28, 2023 in Australia

      Hello les amis, 👋🏼

      La dame Alice est de retour saine et sauve, non sans complications mais enfin arrivée à destination et c'est bien là l'essentiel. (après avoir été retardée sur le premier vol, puis sur le second, elle a dû prendre une nuit dans un hôtel en Tasmanie car l'emploi du temps du manager ne permettait pas de la récupérer).
      Nous voilà réunis pour de nouvelles aventures ! 1 mois s'est écoulé et nous changeons à nouveau nos plans. Nous partons rejoindre Arsène et des anciens amis de la Tasmanie en ferme dans le New South Wales . Et vous savez quoi ? C’est dans une ferme de blueberries, finalement j’aurais tout le savoir dans l’exploitation des champs de myrtilles.
      Voilà pourquoi la décision a été prise très rapidement :
      - nous devons terminer nos 88 jours de ferme ( certes nous ne renouvelons pas directement le visa mais nous préférons nous laisser le choix . Nous avons jusqu’à 35 ans pour revenir en Australie).
      - Quitter ce trou perdu ( c’est bien mignon mais la vie en Tasmanie à Cradle Mountain est bien ennuyeuse) .
      Au revoir à la Tasmanie et ses endroits merveilleux , au revoir Cradle Mountain et à son froid , au revoir Pepers et à son staff .

      Et mon ressentie face à tout cela ?
      Je suis un peu anxieuse à l'idée des futures pistes qui ne sont pas du tout sûres, stressée à l'idée de rencontrer de nouvelles personnes et de ne pas m'entendre aussi bien qu'avec les personnes en fermes de Tasmanie. Mais c'est ça l'aventure, savoir ce que l'on quitte mais ne pas savoir ce que l'on va trouver.

      Ps : la bouteille de bière vide
      Alice se souviendra de cette histoire, une bière datant de plus d’un mois bu après une défaite au billard ( je l’ai éliminé oups .. )
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    • Day 21

      Tasmanian Devils

      February 2 in Australia ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

      Visited a Tasmanian Devil sanctuary to watch them get fed and learn more about them.

      They have the strongest bite for size of any mammal, when the mate the male blocks the exit so the woman can't mate with another male, they weren't only in Tasmania, there's a cancer (the only one passed through biting) that is killing lots of them at the moment but they hope a vaccine might be available in about 3 years so they can start releasing ones from the sanctuary.

      There were also Quolls which I had never heard about.

      Ultimately they were all really cute, until they were eating then it got a bit messy, then cute again.
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    • Day 22

      Ein Tag am Cradle Mountain

      November 17, 2022 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 6 °C

      Eigentlich wollten wir von der Lodge aus los wandern aber der ausgesuchte Weg war auf Grund des Wetters sehr schlammig. Also ein Blick auf die Karte und schon ist die Entscheidung gefallen. Wir wandern heute erst mal um den Dove Lake am Fuße des Cradle Mountain. Die Wanderung ist als moderat beschrieben und dauert ca. 3 Stunden. Mit dem Bus geht es zum Ausgangsort, der ist für uns kostenlos, wir sind ordentliche Touris und haben schon ein Permit für alle Nationalparks und das ist auch hier die Fahrkarte. Es ist wirklich ein sehr schöner Wanderweg. Nach reichlich 3 Stunden sind wir rum und beschließen den Wombatpool zu besichtigen. Der Weg geht über viele Treppen bergauf und ist ganz schön anstrengend, geschafft. Der kleine See liegt in der Sonne aber kein Wombat zu sehen also Rückweg und über den Lake Lilla Track zurück zur Bushaltestelle. Belohnung gibt es hundert Meter vor der Bushaltestelle auf der Wiese tummeln sich mehrere unserer felligen Freunde.Read more

    • Day 5

      Pencil Pine Falls and Knyvet Falls

      March 2, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      First walk up was the Knyvet Falls walk through a beautiful rainforest. Short walk of the track leads to Pencil Pine Falls. Lovely waterfalls but to crowed to i just took a picture and went on to Knyvet Falls.
      The track was going up and down a little, not to bad but a good training for my Canyoning Trip tomorrow!
      The walk is about to take around 45 min, I think I finished it in around 30 min.
      Knyvet Falls was a little bit disappointing as you are standing on top of the waterfall but you can't get down there. The rock formations were really special.
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