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  • Day 21

    Heide Museum Of Modern Art

    October 10, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    Sometimes we come across great things in the most unexpected places. That was the case with lunch today. We’d said our goodbyes to Chris & Wendy and set off to meet M&R for lunch at the Heide Museum Of Modern Art. M&R were meeting Elizabeth, a friend who used to live in Brisbane before moving to Melbourne. By the time we arrived, they had already been around the museum and had finished their lunch - we were late! We ordered and were presented with the most delicious lunch, presented very beautifully. It takes a lot to make Avocado toast look special, but the added soft-boiled eggs, pickled chilli & fennel made it just that. The same with the Brown rice breakfast bowl with grilled zucchini, spiced carrots, kimchi and sweet corn. Hopefully, we will be back.

    After lunch, we wandered around the outside sculpture park and enjoyed the afternoon sunshine while walking and chatting. When we arrived back at the car park it was time to say our goodbyes and go on our way. M&R flew back to Brisbane, we sought out the cheap fuel at COSTCO and then drove to the Macedon Caravan Park for the night as we are seeing John & Kerri nearby tomorrow.

    The reviews of the showground were pretty damning. The place was hit hard by COVID and hasn’t managed to get back on its feet. When we couldn’t find the caretaker and, when we did, he was cooking his dinner and told us to find our “happy place” in the lower paddock and he would see us at 9:00 tomorrow to collect the $15 fee. Unfortunately, what he didn’t tell us was that the lower paddock was very wet after the rain. Consequently, we ended with spinning wheels as we tried to find a place to park. Bill would not be beaten, slipped him into 4WD and off we went, no harm except a big hole in their field! The showers were warm, with plenty of water, but the buildings were very dilapidated. Goodness knows what was lurking in the cobwebs and crevices.

    At 9:00 a.m., Smokie turned up in his golf buggy. He was late 70yrs and spent 20 minutes telling me his life story. The caravan park is owned by developers and, he believes, it will become a housing estate quite soon. He hopes it will not be before he retires in a few years time.
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  • Day 20

    Dandenong Ranges Botanic Garden

    October 9, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    As Mike & Renate had not seen the Dandenong Ranges Botanic Garden, and the weather was a lot brighter than when Bun and I had visited, the four of us decided to go there for the afternoon.

  • Day 20

    Alowyn Gardens

    October 9, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    As a follow-on from the party, Chris had arranged for us to go to Alowyn Gardens for a walk around and some lunch. The gardens were beautiful; but the lunch was not fantastic as we arrived after a rush of people had eaten and there was not much on offer.Read more

  • Day 19

    Wendy's Party

    October 8, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Wendy's party was not a surprise, she knew it was happening, but she didn't know where or who was coming. The venue was the Kilara Estate vineyard about 30 minutes away. Wendy arrived earlier than the 12:00 start so that she could greet her guests. She was surprised on many occasions, even Mike and Renate was a surprise to her - yesterday's deception worked. Her cousin and husband had travelled from Queensland, Wendy was not expecting them. We had travelled the furthest and tried to persuade her that our whole travel itinerary had been determined by her birthday party. On this occasion, we could not deceive her.

    The party went well and continued back at Wendy's house with a few close friends. She appeared to have had a great time.

    For me it was a first - the first time that I had seen Bunny with her brother and sister in the same room. I managed to get some photos as I don't know if this will happen again!
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  • 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.
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  • Day 17

    Karwara Arboretum, SkyHigh, Olinda Falls

    October 6, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Sleeping on that much of a tilt had not been a good idea. We'd spent so long chatting to Wendy & Chris that it was dark by the time we went to bed and, frankly, we couldn't be bothered to try to level Bill. During the night I found myself slipping downhill and had to push on the side of the truck to get back to where my pillow was. Note to self, level Bill tomorrow.

    Approx 9:00 we went into the house to join W&C for coffee/tea and then spent most of the morning chatting.

    To get some fresh air and get some exercise we first drove to Karwara Arboretum. This is a small garden in a little town. We walked around it for 30 minutes so went back to Bill, put the kettle on and made a warm drink and sandwiches for lunch.

    We then set off to SkyHigh at Mount Dandenong. In clear weather, this has amazing views across Melbourne and far-off ranges. Today it was pretty murky and not much more than the tall buildings of Melbourne's central business area could be made out. The location is a small, multi-purpose events venue. I felt that it did the bare required and everything was very superficial. the fact they didn't have any decaffeinated tea or coffee didn't win them prizes with Bun.

    In search of a bit of exercise, we then went on to Olinda Falls. There was a fire pit burning near the car park and a couple of guys were standing around it having a drink. We set off along the track to the falls but, despite the large amount of rain, they were not impressive. In the UK I don't think that they would have been marked as falls on an OS map. Nonetheless, we had a bit of exercise going down and back from the falls so went back to Mount Evelyn to the supermarket and bought some food for dinner. Chris & Wendy were out that evening so we parked up, and used the chocks in an attempt to level Bill, but it was not sufficient. Boz had heard us so came to investigate. He sat outside the truck and barked for a while and then he walked up the hill until he was at a level where he could look into our window and watch us; this he did for ten minutes before going back to the house.

    Another night on a slope.
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  • 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 16

    Dandenong Ranges Botanic Garden

    October 5, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    After the kiln, we drove over to the botanic gardens via the Puffing Billy Railway Station at Gembrook but unfortunately, it wasn’t running that day.

    The rain had mostly stopped but it was still grey and overcast. We have walked around many botanic gardens, I enjoy some while others leave me uninspired. This was one of the better ones. It was free to enter, it’s spring season here, so there were huge swathes of colour. OK, we’d missed the avenue of daffodils and cherry blossom, but the azaleas and rhododendrons were out and looked beautiful. Add some honeysuckle and a few magnolia and I was starting to be impressed. There was also the Chelsea Garden which is based on a design for the 2013 Chelsea Flower Show. This new garden was only opened in June 2023 and is twenty times larger than the Chelsea garden. For the 2013 show, the garden included the "Waratah sculpture that had been created specifically to deliver its premier view in accordance with the Queen's eye height of 5'3'' (160cm)." From that height, all of the pieces of metal are seen edge-on so as to maximise visibility through the structure. The garden aims to showcase native and endangered plants, sustainable design, water-wise features and the clever use of recycled materials. The huge stones are beautiful.Read more

  • Day 16

    Kurth Kiln

    October 5, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Despite the occasional thump on Bill’s roof just above our bed from an enormous drip off the trees, we slept well. We set off around the track where we had camped and admired the ingenuity of some people with the semi-permanent shelters they’d made and the disappointment at some apparently vacated sites where the shelters and mess had just been left. Maybe the humans had been dragged off by a dingo and were being very unfair to them for not tidying before that happened. We drove to the kiln to learn about its history.

    At the start of WW2, Australia was totally reliant on imported fuel and had a limited storage capacity so the Government heavily rationed oil. An alternative fuel for tractors and cars was wood gas which could be created when charcoal was burnt. In 1942, the Australian Government “made an Order empowering the seizure of any dead wood on private property; if it be suitable for charcoal production and is wanted for that purpose.” “A wood gas generator is a gasification unit which converts timber or charcoal into wood gas, a producer gas consisting of atmospheric nitrogen, carbon monoxide, hydrogen, traces of methane, and other gases, which – after cooling and filtering – can then be used to power an internal combustion engine or for other purposes”. I recall that, while at school, I went caving a couple of times and used a “miners lamp” that used a reaction between water and something to produce a gas that was then lit to produce light … and burn the bum of the person in front of me! However, that was a carbide lamp rather than charcoal. (Carbide lamps are powered by the reaction of calcium carbide (CaC2) with water (H2O). This reaction produces acetylene gas (C2H2) which burns a clean, white flame.). Kurth Kiln was built to a design based upon the patented of Dr Ernest Edgar Kurth which continuously produced charcoal. It commenced operation in March 1942 but transport difficulties combined with an oversupply of charcoal from private operators meant the kiln was used only intermittently during 1943 and was shut down soon after. While charcoal was a good source of power, its use was not without issue: “As the charcoal was used, refilling the hopper became a drama, the lid was opened and you needed to look in to see how much charcoal was needed to be added at a certain period, which varied greatly; but generally when you had your head over the hopper a violent explosion took place covering you with flame, dust and charcoal. Drivers of cars fitted with gas producers could be readily recognised by their lack of frontal hair and eyebrows!”
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  • Day 15

    IKEA

    October 4, 2023 in Australia ⋅ 🌧 10 °C

    We are still waiting for our adventure to begin when we can get away and explore Oz as we had planned. So far we feel that we've spent a long time hanging around between seeing family and friends which, while it's been great, has been a bit frustrating. We are looking forward to after 20 October when we will be off to the great unknown - except we know it will be warmer!

    We had to vacate the campsite by 10:00 and needed to fill our water tanks and empty our toilet and grey water. None of this was difficult, just unpleasant in the rain. We left at about 10:15 and headed for Melton Botanic Gardens. “The Melton Botanic Garden has an easy 2.4 km walk which includes an interesting diversity of dry climate plants (mostly from Australia) and a circumnavigation of the Darlingsford Lake.” Probably lovely in the sunshine, and the “dry climate plants” looked happy enough in the rain. We met someone walking their dog who wanted to chat with us like we were long-lost friends. She was in full waterproofs and I didn’t even have my umbrella with me!

    Back to Bill and off to 4WD Supacentre (via Bunnings to return something that didn’t fit - plus a takeaway coffee) to find all the things we never knew we needed. I had high hopes that the 4WD place would be filled with gadgets and gizmos that would keep me occupied for hours and that I’d want to buy to kit out Bill with. Nope, all very mundane and pretty uninteresting. There was a pink swag with a matching pink sleeping bag that didn’t seem very Oz, but nothing of interest. Next stop … IKEA.

    Bun had wanted to come to IKEA first after collecting Bill as you can buy single plates, cutlery, see and touch all duvets etc. However, that would have required a 4-hour round trip and all savings would have gone in fuel costs. As it was, we couldn’t find most of what we wanted and extra things we saw that we thought would work well in Bill, they didn’t have in stock. It was a pretty disappointing visit but we did get a few things, so the visit wasn’t entirely wasted, plus it was en route to our campsite and we had food there so we wouldn't have to cook tonight.

    After two hours of driving into the mountains, we arrived at the “Kurth Kiln Scout Loop free camping” campsite. As the name states, a free campsite near Kuth Kiln but, unfortunately, in the woods. Despite our desire to camp in the open - or at least not under trees, that was going to be impossible. We were going to have another disturbed night with mega drips off the branches and leaves. The site was pretty vast and consisted of a number of looped dirt tracks through the forest. As we drove around to find a suitable place to camp, we could see people camping in an array of vehicles, under tarpaulins, tents etc. However, we were out of a commercial campsite and free camping again and Bill looked much more at ease in a forest.
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