Norfolk Island Burnt Pine

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  • Day 326

    Sunset Spot / Point Ross

    April 27 on Norfolk Island ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

    Heute hatten wir ein regnerischer Morgen und haben es gemütlich genommen und gespielt und den Balkon genossen!

    Ich ging noch einkaufen und langsam aber sicher werden die Regale im Supermarkt leer weil das Schiff sich scheinbar ziemlich verzögert!

    Da wieder die Selbstverständlichkeit mit welcher wir davon ausgehen dass es alles hat, aber nicht auf einer Insel wie Norfolk Island welche nicht soooooo populär ist! Es het solangs het… Brot habe ich heute jedenfalls nirgendwo mehr gefunden!

    Am Nachmittag war Low Tide und wir gingen schnorcheln in der Slaughter Bay! Zuerst Ian und Josh und danach ich alleine, es war wunderbar! Das Reef ist fantastisch und die Sicht war super heute 🥰

    Dann heim, kochen und ab zum Point Riss für den Sonnenuntergang! Wir gingen mit dem kleinen Truck und ich sass auf der Ladefläche und habe das richtig genossen!! Die Jungs vorne drin und ich hinten am chillen 😂

    Der Sonnenuntergang war spektakulär, einzig das Auto was ein wenig gesponnen hat war ein bisschen stressig! Aber hat schlussendlich alles geklappt und wir kamen gut wieder nach Hause!

    Norfolk Island ist definitiv einzigartig und ein Paradies 😍
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  • Day 331

    Das ersehnte Frachtschiff trifft ein…

    May 2 on Norfolk Island ⋅ 🌬 21 °C

    Am letzten Freitag war ein toller Tag für die Norfolk Insel, das lange erwartete und verspätete Schiff mit Supplies ist eingetroffen…. Wir gingen wie viele andere zum Cascade Pier um die Entladung des Schiffes welche mit Booten erfolgt zu beobachten!

    Die Regale im Supermarkt sind oftmals leer und man weiss nie was man kriegt die nächsten Tage!

    Es wird uns bewusst wie selbstverständlich wir den Überfluss an Lebensmitteln zu Hause in der Schweiz und auch in Australien nehmen…

    Milchprodukte hier sind so teuer, 1 Liter frische Milch kostet AUD 12.-, umgerechnet also etwa CHF 5.-!

    Eier werden bei uns am alljährlichen Eierläset durch die Luft geworfen und hier ist der Supermarkt seit Wochen ohne Eier! 🤗

    Der Lebensmitteltausch-, und Handel unter Privaten ist also ein Muss wenn man mal einen Kuchen backen möchte!

    Wir sind glücklicherweise mit Eiern versorgt von Ian‘s Halbschwester Sally welche fleissige Hühner hat!

    Für mich persönlich aber eine gute Erfahrung zu sehen dass es auch in den „first world“ Regionen nicht selbstverständlich ist, alles immer im Supermarkt bekommen!
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  • Day 329

    Slaughter Bay

    April 30 on Norfolk Island ⋅ 🌬 23 °C

    Wow, die Schnorchelerlebnisse in der Slaughter Bay sind wahnsinnig! Momentan sind die Tide Times so, dass am Nachmittag Ebbe ist, perfekt also um das Reef zu erkunden!

    Die Vielfalt der Fische, Korallen, Anemonen, etc. ist beeindruckend!

    Josh macht es mittlerweile einfach super, er taucht und schwimmt wie ein Fisch durchs Wasser! Auch von den zwei Fischen welche ihn in den Finger bissen lässt er sich zum Glück nicht einschüchtern! 🤩
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  • Day 6

    Markets, golf and murder mystery dinner

    November 17, 2024 on Norfolk Island ⋅ 🌬 19 °C

    A fairly relaxed day. Went to the markets where I bought a timber pot stand/s in the shape of interlocking spirals. Did a bit of window shopping (pretty much all shops are closed on Sunday). Drove to an area of the island we had not already visited with the crystal pool.
    After lunch the boys went to play a game of golf while Heidi and I watched a movie (DVD). They enjoyed the golf although it was very windy.
    In the evening, we went to a Murder mystery dinner, we were all given a character, dressed up, and had to try and work out who committed the murder. I played the teenage daughter of an American captain of a whaling vessel who was engaged to the son of one of the local mutineers (this was Brad's character). A fun night trying to work out who the murderer was .... and the biggest surprise... it was me!
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  • Day 5

    Cargo, Convicts and Culture

    July 29, 2024 on Norfolk Island ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    Very wet and dreary today. 1mm of rain was forecast but we got much more than that. Apparently the rain usually falls overnight, not today. However it is July so I can’t expect a holiday without any rain.

    I went down to Kingston Pier to see what was happening with the unloading of the boat. There was quite a crowd. One couple who were on the orientation tour had timed their trip to coincide with the boat as they have a container shipping company in Brisbane and pack the containers for this boat.
    They had unloaded one vehicle when I got there, someone wearing a bio security jacket was going over the vehicle very carefully. I got to observe two more vehicles being unloaded. The barges don’t look big enough to hold a vehicle but they are. According to different people the unloading can take 3 hours, 3 days or 10 days depending on the cargo and the weather. The boat will apparently stay offshore for a couple of weeks as it’s not due in Australia until then and there is no charge to anchor off Norfolk Island but there is off Australia.

    I did a tour of the Commissariat and No 10 Quality Row. This was a tag a long tour where we drove, following the tour guide. I had parked further away as I’d been watching the unloading and by the time I got back to my car everyone else had disappeared. The guide had mentioned something about going the back way and I eventually found them all behind the commissariat which was the store house during the second convict settlement. There have been four main settlements on Norfolk Island: Polynesian, first settlement with colonists and convicts, second settlement as a penal colony and then the Pitcairners.
    There was information on all settlements but very much a focus on the penal settlement. As Norfolk Island was used as a deterrent for prisoners in other colonies it was an extremely harsh system.
    The 2nd and 3rd floors were converted into a church. Evensong is held there once a month but unfortunately not the weekend I’m here.
    Quality row is where the officers houses were and many of the houses still stand and are used by government workers today (the Pitcairners resided in them until about 1905 but they had fallen into disrepair as they didn’t know how to maintain them so the government took them back).
    I took a look at some of the other buildings in the area as there is so much information around all the buildings.

    I made my way back to Burnt Pine for a cultural tour with one of the tour companies. We went to a private home and did some weaving of a flax leaf while the host spoke of the Tahitian traditions that have been passed down. Her first language is Norfuk and she only learnt English when she started school.
    We made a simple decoration and I found the weaving relatively easy. Quarantine means we can’t bring them back to Australia although if we were here long enough for them to completely dry they would be allowed in.
    We finished up with an afternoon tea of local foods. Most people garden here as imported fruit and veg is very expensive. They also have chooks and pigs or cows. Dairy production more or less stopped with the introduction of pasteurisation laws as no one had the electricity to do it so the cows are all beef cattle. The butchers have their own meat rooms to process animals. We had pumpkin and rocket frittata and fish cakes served with avocado, beetroot relish and green tomato relish. The avocados have all cross pollinated and it’s estimated there are around 40 different varieties on the island.
    Finished up with a banana.
    A great day with a lot of variety.
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  • Day 337

    Bye bye Norfolk Island

    May 8 on Norfolk Island ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    Unsere Zeit auf Norfolk Island ist leider schon vorbei und wir müssen wieder mal packen….

    Dabei habe ich noch nichts über die traurige Geschichte von Norfolk erzählt! Norfolk Island war ja praktisch Alcatraz von Australien/England! Die Sträflinge wurden nach Norfolk Island verschifft um das Festland zu entlasten! Dort angekommen wurden sie gefoltert und mussten sich praktisch zu Tode arbeiten! Viele haben sich selber so schlimm zugerichtet, dass sie arbeitsunfähig wurden weil die Arbeit so hart war! Diejenigen die nicht durch Arbeit oder Folter starben, bekamen schlimme Krankheiten….

    Kingston mit all diesen historischen Gebäuden zählt zum Unesco Weltkulturerbe! Als ich durch diese Gebäude/Ruinen gelaufen bin und die Geschichte gelesen habe hat es mich doch sehr berührt…. Was Menschen einander damals angetan haben und heute so viele Jahre später immer noch tun gibt einem doch sehr zu denken 😔

    Dies zum traurigen Hintergrund dieser wunderbaren Insel!

    Wir haben sie Zeit hier wahnsinnig genossen und jetzt gehts zurück „nach Hause“ an die Sunshine Cost für noch 25 Nächte bevor es dann tatsächlich ganz nach Hause geht…
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  • Day 325

    Mount Pitt

    April 26 on Norfolk Island ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    Nach dem Captain Cook Lookout fuhren wir noch zum Mt. Pitt welcher als zweithöchster Punkt mit 318 m als der schönste Aussichtspunkt von Norfolk Island gilt! Man hat eine 360 Grad Aussicht! Wir hatten leider Nebel und Regen daher ein wenig eingeschränkt aber eventuell fahren wir mal noch bei schönem Wetter hin 😊 Ist ja nicht weit 😂Read more

  • Day 6

    More Musuems and a Fish Fry

    July 30, 2024 on Norfolk Island ⋅ 🌙 18 °C

    Started the day with another museum tag a long tour. This time it was the Sirius Museum and the Pier Store Museum. The Sirius was one of the first fleet vessels and was wrecked off Norfolk Island in 1790. They’ve retrieved a lot from the wreckage, it just off the beach Kingston.
    The Pier Store Museum focuses on Norfolk Island after the arrival of the Pitcairners. I spent quite a while looking through a document that traced the descendants of the original mutineers. It was all very interesting.
    I also took a look at the presumed site of the Polynesian settlement. It’s estimated 1000 people lived at the settlement but they don’t know why they left.

    I came home via Rocky Pool Reserve. It road was quite rough and I decided not to follow it all the way to the end. It was very windy up there.

    Home for lunch and a some time to read my book before heading out for an early dinner. The fish fry was held on the west coast of the island and should have been accompanied by a gorgeous sunset but the clouds got in the way.
    The fish fry was a great experience. When I got my name ticked off the host insisted I sit with the only other woman on her own. I’m not sure that she was looking for company but neither of us really had much choice and it was nice to share the experience.

    The entertainment was great. The MC/singer was a Christian descendant who grew up on Pitcairn Island. He’s descended from one of the families who returned from Norfolk Island soon after the settlement there. He played a couple of songs in Pitkern/Norfuk and then lots of hits from the 50s and 60s. We also had 4 dancers from the Tahitian dance troupe perform for us.

    I got to sample some traditional foods: pilhi - a savoury banana slice; ana - sweet potato mash with coconut cream and curry powder; coconut bread; and a coconut pie for dessert. It was all nice although I confirmed I definitely prefer savoury coconut over sweet coconut.
    A thoroughly enjoyable evening.
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  • Day 4

    Quiet Sunday

    July 28, 2024 on Norfolk Island ⋅ 🌬 19 °C

    A quiet day today. I don’t always attend church when I’m away but when it works out I’m glad I did it. I had a choice of Anglican, Catholic, Seventh Day Adventist (although their service was yesterday), Living Faith Church (a Pentecostal church), Uniting Church and the Norfolk Island Community Church.
    Generally when I travel and there’s a choice I choose an Anglican service. The Anglican services here are held at the St Barnabas Chapel which we visited yesterday. It’s a beautiful stone church that was built for the Micronesian Mission in the island and left behind when the mission left the island.
    It was a very different service to what I am used to. We started with a prayer the last mutineer John Adams, wrote. There was only an organist to accompany the hymns and we used hymn books. There were about 40 people in attendance and I was made to feel welcome.
    I did overhear a conversation in Norfuk, the language of the Pitcairners. Until today I’d only heard a few words.

    I then went down to the Botanical Gardens and did several of the walks there. The gardens were started to grow some of the plants/trees that were endemic to the island and in danger of extinction due to the clearing of land.
    It was a cool day anyway and quite cold in the gardens.

    From there I went down to the Cascade Pier. There are two piers on the island, Cascade is on the east side, Kingston on the south. The weather and tides dictate which pier is used. It was high tide when I was down there and quite rough.

    Sometimes I find the journey is more interesting than the destination and that was the case with the Cockpit Waterfall. It was a nice drive along Prince Philip Dr but I realised I had gone past where the fall should have been with no sign of the falls. I’d been using a paper map as I didn’t seem to have an internet connection after losing it at the botanical garden and the map didn’t have a definite road to the falls. I backtracked a bit and took a very minor road that wasn’t on the map to end up in a paddock. A short walk led me to the falls and they were underwhelming to say the least. Apparently they are better after rain.
    Still it was a nice drive and walk.

    From there I explored a few different roads and then went down to Kingston pier. One of the tour drivers yesterday had said the supply boat was due today. They thought it would come to Cascade Pier but it was anchored off Kingston Pier. It’s apparently the MV Norfolk and is due tomorrow. The ship can’t come to the pier, everything is loaded onto barges and brought to the pier. There was nothing happening today and as the due date is tomorrow I’m thinking it will be unloaded then. Tomorrow’s plan is to explore Kingston so hopefully I’ll see something.

    Home then for a very late lunch and then sat down to catch up with the Olympics, read my book and have a nap.
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  • Day 2

    Bounty and a Boat Tour

    July 26, 2024 on Norfolk Island ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    I was exhausted last night and slept 12 hours. Felt much more refreshed this morning.
    First port of call was the tourist centre to get a SIM card. From there I walked up the main stop in Burnt Pine, which despite Kingston being the capital, appears to be the main settlement. Lots of interesting little shops to look in.
    The place I’ve booked most of my tours through ask that you check in with them when you arrive. I thought that that one of the reasons may have been to sell more tours. I was right and they were successful. I added a night tour of Kingston for tomorrow night.
    I usually like doing my own thing but watching all my friend Cathrine did while on a bus tour in Europe inspired me to book these tours or experiences. I’ve got at least one every day except Sunday and Wednesday and some days have two.

    I had a quick lunch in town and then went to the Fletcher’s Mutiny Cyclorama. No photos from inside as we were requested not to take any. It was great, the artists put in a lot of detail. It told the story of The Bounty from the UK through to Tahiti, the Mutiny and Pitcairn Island. It was very informative and well done. I did learn the purpose of the Bounty’s trip was to source breadfruit plants which were to be planted in the Caribbean and used as a cheap food source for slaves.
    From there I went down to Emily Bay for a glass bottom boat experience. I got there early and had a walk along the beach which was gorgeous.
    The tour operator is a seventh generation descendant of Fletchers Christian and he was very well informed and had a lovely manner. Saw lots of coral and various species of wrasse. I’m sure there were other species but wrasse dominated.
    As we got back to the beach about 3:30pm people were coming down to swim. It was quite cool but the water temperature is about 20 degrees year round.
    It started to rain so I cut my explorations of the head out past the lone pine short.
    Back to my cottage to read my book before coming out for tea. I always try and have one nice dinner when I travel and tonight is it. I’m at The Homestead which have a homemade charcoal grill out the back.
    The drive out was a bit dicey and I’m still trying to work out how to swap from high to low beam when I meet an oncoming car. Should be simple but it seems to go from high beam to low beam and then back to high beam in the one motion. I spent quite a bit of time last night trying to figure out how to turn the lights on in the first place. I eventually found the dial on the dash.
    Dinner was delicious and I’m looking forward to another early night as I’ve a tour at 8:30am.
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