Australia Coldstream

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
  • Day 9

    Yarra Valley Wine Tour

    November 9, 2023 in Australia

    An early start to proceedings today but with good reason, a wine tour! If memory serves me right we visited 3 wineries, a gin distillery and also a stop for lunch. I was already growing to like both rose and white wine before this voyage but turns out I like red wine too!Read more

  • Day 18

    Mont De Lancey homestead

    October 7, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

    Again we went to the house for coffee/tea with C&W and also to discuss plans for today. We were invited to join them in meeting up with some friends that evening. We had plans to meet Bun's brother Mike, and his wife Renate that evening and, having temporarily forgotten that their visit to Melbourne to join tomorrow's party, was a secret from Wendy, I responded "That will depend upon what M&R's plans are." Chris then jumped in with "Are you FaceTiming them" and kicked Bun who was sitting closest to him. And so the story was created about how we FaceTimed M&R every Saturday evening when it was Saturday morning in England ...

    Pleased to get out of the house, we headed to Mont De Lancey, a historic homestead that was lived in by the Sebire family for many generations has "lots to see when you visit the property – the former milking shed, the slab kitchen on the original house site, the museum collection in the remodelled former farm buildings (which is home to over 5,000 eclectic objects, from egg whisks and butter churns to wedding dresses and pig scrapers), plus the historic dairy and chapel."

    There was a wedding taking place in the gardens when we arrived. There were no guides available so the gentleman in the office offered us the keys and asked if we were happy to show ourselves around. He explained the half-dozen keys and told us where the light switches were etc, and off we went.

    The main museum that contains the 5,000 eclectic objects was interesting to walk around. There were photos of the family throughout the generations plus photos of other families who had first settled in 1867.

    "Henry Sebire, his wife Martha and their four children settled in Wandin Yallock where Henry leased 80 acres of newly-surveyed Crown Land.

    As they began to build their farm, the hamlet of Wandin had literally only just been ‘put on the map’. The Sebires, along with a handful of other European families, had to fell trees and clear their land before they could build their homes. Henry built their first home using the timber he’d just felled.

    Fortunately for him, he was a former stonemason, so he and local labourers made bricks by hand, using clay quarried from the dam – Mont De Lancey became the first brick built house to be built in the district."

    After the homestead, we went to the Yarra Ranges Regional Museum in Lilydale. This was not hugely interesting except for a display about the Aborigine leader William Barak — 'Beruk' in the Woiwurrang language of his people. He became the leader of a number of clans and is closely associated with the Coranderrk settlement established near Healesville in 1863. The displays described the relationship between Barrak and Swiss emigrés, the Baron Frédéric Guillaume de Pury and his brother Samuel, whose Cooring Yering vineyard was next to the settlement. Barak was a regular visitor to the baron’s vineyard, Yeringberg – where three generations of the de Pury family still live today – and Barak taught the Baron’s young sons Wurundjeri culture, often taking the two boys out hunting. It appeared that Barak was treated as an equal, and the vineyard also employed some of the Aborigines. In the 1920s, many years after Barak's death, Coranderrk was closed by the authorities, and the land was sold off. In 1999, the Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation bought 80 hectares of the land and handed it back to the Wandoon Estate Aboriginal Corporation. Members of the Wandin family, descendants of Barak, now run the property as a working farm and cultural centre, open by invitation or appointment.

    So the Aborigines were thrown off their land where they had lived for maybe 35,000 years or more, and given a settlement. When the settlement became valuable to the Westerners, the authorities closed the settlement (threw the Aborigines off their land again) and sold it off for more vineyards. The vineyard that now farms some of the area covered by the Aborigine settlement of Coranderrk has the following on their website home page:

    "Centare Vineyard is located on Wurundjeri country, by Badgers Creek, approximately 4km from the central Yarra Valley township of Healesville. The land once formed part of the Coranderrk Station, an Aboriginal reserve run by the Victorian government between 1863 and 1924. The property has recently been included in a nomination for registration on the Victorian Heritage Register. We acknowledge the Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung People as Traditional Custodians of the Yarra Valley Wine Region and their connections to land, water and community. We pay our respects to their elders, past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today."

    Well that's good of them, they took the land, but they acknowledge them and respect them - just not enough to allow them to live where they always used to live.

    After the museum, we mooched around Lilydale and then made a cuppa in the back of Bill before driving to Castello's Croydon Hotel to meet Mike & Renate. This place surprised me on many levels. Firstly it wasn't a hotel but more akin to being part of the "Hungry Horse" chain of family-friendly pubs. A large uninspiring dining area, lots of families with young children, more food on the floor than on the table and a sound level to match. Fortunately, M&R had been put into an annexe with other "seniors" where it was much quieter. Secondly, the food was delicious. Bun and I each had a NASI GORENG, mine was chicken and Bun's was prawn, the best we've eaten outside of Malaysia. Thirdly, there was a seniors menu, but if your chosen meal wasn't on the senior's menu, you had a 20% discount!

    We had a lovely evening eating and chatting with M&R, catching up on the almost 4 years since we saw Renate and the 4 months since we saw Mike at Toby's wedding.
    Read more

  • Day 16

    Chris & Wendy’s

    October 5, 2023 in Australia ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Wendy came to Oz as a £10 Pom with Carole (Bun’s sister), so Bun has known her since the mid-1970s when Carole and Wendy shared a house in the UK. They also lived together in Oz and, for a while, Mike (Bun’s brother) also lived with them with his wife Renate. It is Wendy’s 80th birthday party this coming Sunday so we wanted to be nearby. We had contacted Chris to ask about nearby campsites and he offered us to camp on his 4-acre property for as long as we wanted. Other than the fact that there is very little level ground on his property, it was perfect. We arrived during the late afternoon and set Bill up on a bit of slope, but our heads would be above our feet when we slept! We were invited in for dinner and, upon finding our dietary requirements, Chris had to quickly improvise as the planned menu was steak. Oh, how I dream of eating a lovely juicy, rare steak. The temperature was falling as we went to bed but, for the first night since it had been raining, we weren’t under trees. The faint pitter-patter of the rain on Bill was quite soothing.Read more

  • Day 148

    Selling Bertha

    March 7, 2020 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    We spent a couple of nights and days with Bun’s niece, on their farm and a trip to Ballarat to see her sister Carole. Carole is vacating her house as her youngest son, William, is returning from Japan where he has spent the ski season, and is returning to “voluntary isolation”. As William has no residence in Australia, he’s taken over his mother’s house!

    On Friday we drove 4 hrs to a dealer on the west side of Melbourne only to be told that, due to coronavirus , the motorhome market had collapsed. Many “grey nomads” rely upon their superannuation funds for their income and those funds are invested in the stock market which is collapsing, la la la.

    We already have a fallback position, the dealer we bough Bertha from will buy her back from us at approx 60% of what we paid, not a great deal, but better than leaving Australia without having sold her.

    I received a message to say that the person who was going to view her on Saturday had family problems and had put off buying a motorhome. This situation is getting me down 😡

    I didn’t have much confidence in the guy who was looking at her today (Friday) as he’d told me all of the problems with the way I was going about selling her. It’s not my fault that the system of each state having different requirements makes selling a vehicle terribly complex.

    Allan and his wife Gaye met us, looked around Bertha and we went for a test drive. Lots of questions but many negative comments. They said they’d let us know.

    As we were “in the area” we had contacted some people that Bun hadn’t seen for many years and agreed to drop around for a cuppa. We are getting used to the Australian perspective of distance, driving two hours to go out for dinner is not a long journey.

    Chris and Wendy live in Mount Evelyn so not hard to imagine that it made Bertha puff to get up there. Having said that, Bertha covered 250km averaging 84kmph earlier in the day so she can get a wiggle on if need be. Wendy came out to Australia with Bun’s sister Carole around 1972.

    A cuppa turned into a take away fish and chip dinner and spending the night in Bertha outside their house. Allan and Gaye phones to ask if they could have another look at Bertha on Saturday, they would be driving through Mount Evelyn and could meet us there.
    Read more

  • Day 91

    T1 - Yarra Valley

    January 19, 2019 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    ▪️Um 12 Uhr habe ich Jeanne von ihrer Gastfamilie abgeholt - diese ist super lieb, der Vater hat uns 2 Bier mitgegeben :P
    ▪️Auf ging es nach Yarra Valley, dieser Ort ist bekannt für seine Weinfeldern und Weingütern
    ▪️Nach ca. 1h sind wir beim 1. Stop "Domaine Chandon", ein riesiges und gut besuchtes Weingut mit Restaurant, angekommen
    ▪️Haben 6 verschieden Weine im Wert von ca. 100 AU$ probiert und uns eine mega leckere Wurstplatte geteilt
    ▪️Saßen eine Weile auf der Terrasse und hatten eine wunderschöne Aussicht auf die Weinfelder
    ▪️Der 2. Stop "Yarra Yering Vineyard" war ein ruhiges, kleines 30 Hektar großes Weingut im Vintage Style
    ▪️Die Weinprobe hier hat 15 AU$ gekostet, selbstverständlich hat hauptsächlich Jeanne getrunken, da ich ja fahren musste - habe nur kurz genippt
    ▪️3. Stop "Four Pillars Gin", Gin Probe
    ▪️Auf Anfrage haben wir eine kleine, private, kostenlose Führung durch die Halle der Gin-Herstellung bekommen :D
    ▪️Dann ging es zu unserem "Free Campground" leider war dieser nur für Wohnmobile oder der gleichen, die eine Toilette besitzen, also "Self-contained" sind
    ▪️Mussten somit illegal auf einem öffentlichem Parkplatz vor einem Pub schlafen - der Pubbesitzer meinte, dies machen einige hier und es sei okay
    ▪️Jeanne ist die erste, die mit mir zusammen in Henry übernachtet hat :D

    💡Eine "Yarra Valley Winetour" kostet bei einer Organisation über 100 AU$. Es ist kostengünstiger es auf eigene Faust zu machen und man kann länger an einem Ort verweilen.
    Read more

  • Day 137

    La famille et 1 mois de packing

    April 21, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Hello les amis, 👋🏼
    Nous voici dans notre maison pour 4 semaines, que nous partageons avec 8 personnes de la ferme. Nous sommes installés dans un village de Lilydale à une heure de Melbourne dans un Airbnb très confortable. Évidemment que le chauffage, une salle de bain et des toilettes dans la même pièce est pour nous un confort. En même temps, nous passons d'un extrême à l'autre si l'on compare notre ancienne tôle en Tasmanie et notre maison actuelle.

    Le travail au packing consiste à trier les myrtilles, à jeter celles qui sont pourries, à les peser et à les emballer dans des barquettes prêtes à être commercialisées. Je travaille dans un entrepôt, où l'atmosphère est lugubre (pas de fenêtres, la pièce est blanche, avec des lumières qui tombent sur les tables de travail). Pour être honnête, nous avons souvent l'impression d'être dans un cartel avec Jake comme baron.
    Nous travaillions en chaîne comme des fourmis de 8h à 15h30 et nous n'avions pas le droit de nous parler, mais la musique était autorisée.
    En sortant du travail, nous allions tous à la salle de sport. Nous avons pris une sorte d'abonnement pour 20$ par semaine mais elle a oublié de nous faire payer les autres semaines, donc nous n'avons eu à payer qu'une seule fois BENEF !

    Petite parenthèse : le sport est devenu important, voire essentiel à remettre en place, car la nourriture en Australie n'est vraiment pas saine (beaucoup plus de sucre qu'en France et plein d'OGM etc.) ainsi que ma non-attention pendant 1 mois en Tasmanie, j'ai pris entre 9,5 et 10kg en 3 mois et demi. Donc heureusement je suis partie avec une marge mais à partir de maintenant il va falloir que je fasse attention car je reviendrai en France obèse si je continue comme ça.
    La prise de poids fait que je suis heureuse aussi (je me console comme je peux).

    Pour clore mon mois à Lilydale, c'est avec émotion que je quitte cet endroit.
    Nous avions créé une petite famille où chacun avait sa place et avions trouvé un certain équilibre entre nous, le sport et le travail. Et il faut tout quitter... mais c'est la règle du jeu dans ce voyage. Je dirais que les émotions sont mitigées et c'est ce qui rend les choses difficiles. Entre avoir le cœur lourd de quitter les gens qu'on aime, et l'excitation de la suite de l'aventure, ça nous a un peu perdu et déstabilisé.
    Nous avons vécu 3 mois de folie avec des inconnus qui sont devenus des personnes si proches, notre famille australienne, une famille très précieuse que l'on choisit.
    Read more

  • Winter / Sommer Pause

    December 19, 2024 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Hallo
    wir verabschieden uns in die hier Sommerferien, bei euch Winterferien.
    Wir sind jetzt bei meiner Verwandschaft Tante und Onkel angekommen und melden uns wieder im neuen Jahr.

  • Welcome to Melbourne

    December 18, 2024 in Australia ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

    Alles hat geklappt wir konnen gut in Melbourne an.

  • Day 5

    Weingüter im Yarra Valley

    October 11, 2016 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    Diese 5 Weingüter haben wir besucht: Coldstream Hille, Chandon, Punt Road, Yering, DeBortoli.
    Bei fast allen gab es mehr oder weniger folgende Sorten: Pinot Noir, Gamay, Shiraz, Cabernet, Sauvignon, Semillon, Pinot Gris, Chardonnay. Insgesamt haben wir wahrscheinlich ein bisschen etwas über 40 verschiedene Weine probiert :)
    Es war echt ein super Ausflug, der sich gelohnt hat!
    Read more

Join us:

FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android