Australia
Rosny Hill

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    • Day 15

      Day 1 at Cradle Mountain

      March 19 in Australia ⋅ 🌬 26 °C

      Morning broke and it was very overcast, and we both felt like that too – I don’t know why but I seemed to have had a relapse and Gran is still fighting her bout of Covid.
      We took our time doing the morning chores and decided we would do what we could and see. We bought some chocolate bars for sustenance and waited for the bus. All parts of the Cradle Mountain in the National Park are controlled and very few vehicles are allowed in. Transport to and from tracks is by bus. It is a very efficient service with buses all the time going down to the Dove Lake (the end of the road) and back to the bus centre at the info offices.
      We had decided to start at a place called Ronny’s Creek and we’d walk to Dove Lake and if we felt ok, do a some of the Dove Lake trail (it goes around the lake parameter 2-3 hr walk).
      Our walk started out on a board walk that sat above marshy, and/or bushy open ground. This was Wombat territory, and this was something Robyn in particular wanted to see. The going was easy, and we could see the Wombat droppings everywhere and, on the boardwalk, too – but not a sighting – so disappointing. Then about half way along our trail the track changed to stones and rocks and began to climb - not what we had expected. The surroundings changed to gums and bush.
      The scenery was fantastic, and the cloud began to break up and we had some warm sunlight. Parts of the trail were similar to our climb up to the Wineglass Bay viewing platform. It was in this area that a number of trails joined and we saw lots of people young and old tramping like us.
      We got to Dove Lake and sat in the sun and had some more water and a chocolate bar. We had a good rest and decided that was enough for the day and lined up for the bus.
      Back at the Info centre we thought we grab a snack for lunch and some coffee – the coffee was okay but the toasted croissants we had were not great.
      Back to our van we rested up which included periods of sitting in the sun or on the bed. We agreed that we hadn’t done the walk that we intended, but that we had enjoyed our experience today – this is an amazing part of Tasmania, well the world really and we had a taste of it. Perhaps tomorrow we can try some other shorter trails if we feel up to it.
      I processed my photos and Gran read.
      The weather is packing up for the next 2 or 3 days – tomorrow is a new day and we see what it brings.
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    • Day 15

      Leaving Beautiful Point

      March 19 in Australia ⋅ 🌬 26 °C

      I typed this into Word each night so it was relevent to the day. I will only put up photos if the wifi can take it.

      We planned to get going early and we did – Gran told me that she pulled back the blind earlier and the sky was full of stars. So, we did all the breakfast, ablutions and the van stuff and we were out of the camp by 9:30.
      We had booked to see the platypuses at the zoo/aquarium at 10:00. They started with an intro and basic information and learned that they have been on this planet for 160 million years and they are very strange beasts. They are called Monotremes – and there’s a clue in the first part of that word – mono, meaning one. They have one hole and it serves many purposes, including breathing – I will leave you to imagine the other uses – the females are smaller and produce eggs that are reptilian (soft). You can look up the rest on Google.
      We first went into a room with a large glass tank were there was one male and he swam about – the keeper fed it with worms and a yabbi (like a small crayfish) it scurried away for its life. With the food in the tank our platypus became very active.
      We all took photos and some videos, but without a flash the shots were a bit hit and miss.
      Then we went to see the females and they had access to and from smaller tanks that we could get close to.
      Then we went to see the other Monotreme in the Ichida room – this had a sort of small forest and 3 Ichida’s lived there, but only 2 came out. We sat in a circle and the keeper put food in the centre. They were fun but couldn’t sit still and we left.
      On the road we stopped 30 kms down the road at Exeter and had a coffee and had a plan to buy some meat to add to our veges in the fridge for dinners at Cradle Mountain but decided to try further down the line. And we didn’t get any meat so had tuna, rice and veges – pretty good dinner and icecream for afters.
      Headed to Devonport (where the ferry crosses from Victoria) to try and buy some chemical toilet tablets – we did, and they cost $35 to 25 tablets – so we cut our losses and bought the liquid version for $22. Had lunch at a nearby Subway.
      Then on the road south to Cradle Mountain. This was some drive passing through very rural roads, climbing up through tree forests – very narrow road, some tight bends – lots of 25km bends and a few 15km. They might be narrow, but they are all sealed and most without potholes.
      Got to Cradle Mountain before 4 and found our campsite – plenty of space and right near the brand-new kitchen and ablution block – handy. We went down to the Information Centre and got our bus pass for tomorrows hikes (Sunday).
      We are looking ahead at the weather, and we are likely to get some rain on Tuesday – the first rain for us since leaving Hobart.
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    • Day 53

      Willkommen in Tasmanien, Hobart

      October 24, 2016 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

      Ein letzter Blick auf Perth und unser Mercure Hotel (4x sind wir hier eingekehrt) und dann starten wir zu unserem nächsten Ziel unserer Australientour, der Insel vor der Insel - Tasmanien, so groß wie Bayern aber nur etwas mehr als 500.000 Einwohner. Die leben vorrangig an der Ostseite. Hier ist das Klima trocken und gemäßigt. Im Westen trifft das Wetter vom Meer kommend auf Tasmanien und bleibt an den bis zu 1.600 m hohen Bergen hängen. Der Westen ist weitgehend unbewohnt. Neben der Hauptinsel Tasmanien gehören mehrere kleine, meist unbewohnte Inselgruppen dazu. Ein Viertel der Insel ist Weltnaturerbe und in viele Gebiete hat noch nie ein Mensch seinen Fuß gesetzt.
      Tasmanien hatte bis vor 12.000 Jahren eine Festlandverbindung zu Australien, bis diese zur heutigen Bass-Straße überflutet wurde.
      1642 segelte Abel Tasman die Südküste Australiens entlang und entdeckte neben Neuseeland auch diese Insel für die Europäer. Die Reise erfolgte im Auftrag des Generalgouverneurs von Niederländisch-Indien, Anton van Diemen, nach dem er das neu entdeckte Land benannte (Van-Diemens-Land). Tasman glaubte allerdings, dass es sich um eine Halbinsel des australischen Kontinents handelte. Erst 150 Jahre später stellte der britische Kapitän Matthew Flinders durch die Entdeckung der Bass-Straße fest, dass es sich um eine Insel handelt. Bis dahin umsegelte man Tasmanien auf dem Weg zwischen Ost-, Süd- und Westküste. Vorrangig als Strafkolonie vorgesehen, entwickelte sich Van-Diemens-Land zu einer eigenen Kolonie.
      Der Namenswechsel von Van-Diemens-Land in Tasmanien erfolgte erst 1856 mit Erreichen der Autonomie der australischen Kolonien und dem Willen, sich vom Makel, eine ehemalige Strafkolonie gewesen zu sein, zu befreien. Dazu erfahren wir morgen mehr, wenn wir in das Mustergefängnis nach Port Arthur fahren.
      Wir fliegen mit Qantas über Melbourne nach Hobart, der Hauptstadt des kleinsten Bundesstaates und zweittrockenste Stadt Australiens. Hier lebt die Hälfte der Bevölkerung Tasmaniens, gefühlt alle mit Meerblick 😎.
      Angekommen in Hobart und 3 Stunden Zeitverschiebung (wir sind jetzt 9 Stunden vor euch), sind wir nur 2.500 km von der Antarktis entfernt und damit so südlich (wir bewegen uns immer zwischen dem 40. und 44. Breitengrad) und so weit weg von zu Hause wie nie zuvor.
      Hobart, die Stadt am Derwent River, wurde 1804 gegründet, ist damit die erste dauerhafte europäische Siedlung in Tasmanien und Ausgangspunkt für deren Besiedelung und zweitälteste Stadt Australiens - nach Sydney.
      Wir fahren mit dem Bus zu unserem 180 Jahre alten Hotel "Hadleys Orient Hotel". Alles ist sehr gediegen und gemütlich. Hier scheint Queen Victoria allgegenwärtig und spukt wohl als weiße Lady umher 😮. Keine Fahrt ohne Unterbrechung, natürlich werden zwei Lookouts anzuvisiert. Vom Rossny Hill Lookout und Mount Nelson haben wir einen tollen Blick auf die Tasmanbrücke und die Stadt. Auch der 1.270 m hohe Hausberg Mount Wellington ist zu sehen, aber seine Spitze liegt wie so oft in den Wolken. Kurz frisch gemacht, laufen wir über den Hafen (hier starten alle Versorgungsschiffe für die stationären Antarktisstationen) zum ungewöhnlichen Lokal "The Drunken Admiral" (Der besoffenen Admiral). Klasse Ambiente, super Essen.
      Auf dem Weg erhalten wir kostenlos eine Hörprobe des Halb- und Vierteltonläutens des Glockenspiels der gegenüberliegenden St. David's Cathedral. Hier scheinen die Glöckner zu üben, denn es dauert lange und wird wiederholt: https://1drv.ms/u/s!AiUv8teodO-roBsJ1Eybh0Zj9-D2
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    • Day 29

      Sallamanca Market

      February 29, 2020 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      Another nice day, expecting temperatures around 24 degrees. Sallamanca Market is huge with hot food stalls and a variety of arts and crafts stalls. We walked around Battery Point a very English looking neighbourhood above the harbour where the cruise ship Arcadia had recently come in to dock. We sat and had a beer and then picked up some massive prawns from a floating fishmonger and then made our way back to the apartment. Because it was such a clear day we decided to take a trip up Mt. Wellington which dominates the skyline behind Hobart.Read more

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