• The Ungovernables Winging It...
  • The Ungovernables Winging It...

Queensland

Queensland is the second-largest and third-most populous of the Australian states. It is bordered by the Northern Territory, South Australia and New South Wales to the west, south-west and south, respectively. もっと詳しく
  • 旅行の開始
    2024年7月2日

    Lake Monduran & Freed Haigh Dam

    2024年7月3日〜9日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 17 °C

    Lake Monduran attracts fishermen world wide being the location where the world’s biggest barramundi was caught.
    The Fred Haigh Dam (also called Monduran Dam) was constructed across the Kolan River in 1978 creating Lake Monduran.
    When full Lake Monduran has a surface area of 5340 hectares, a capacity of 586 000 mega litres at an average depth of 11 meters.
    もっと詳しく

  • Mount Morgan Silver Wattle Caravan Park

    2024年7月8日〜22日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Weather freezing at night , frost on the windows early morning but the weather in the day time was the complete opposite to the point of hot! I can’t imagine what summer is like here?
    Was initially only supposed to stay for a couple of nights but on the morning of the 9th we set out to get supplies from Rockhampton and the gear stick was totally jammed! Fast forward to Fri 19th , one new gear box that took a world trip round the North East /West of Australia and 9 nights of accommodation in what only can be described as an up market prison cell but on the positive side we had a camp kitchen where we could prep Billy’s food , a double bed , hot shower which was a blessing due to the temperature drop and bone chilling drafts from the window . Even the fresh fungus people delivered out here! We witnessed such acts of kindness from fellow travellers offering trips to the local bottle o and iga to keep us sane, we even saw TV for the first time in 4 years! The actual caravan site was really quirky ,with recycled rusty machinery and tools placed in random place, we even left our nacked jack behind in the garden bed as memory of our “extended” stay here.
    We finally got our home back 13 days after witnessing it being towed off the site, we picked up some supplies , a new jack! food , beer etc and got ready to head off to Sapphire bright and early , only after witnessing a bloke emptying his caravan toilet modelling his red Chernobyl gloves with the sunrise in the distance.
    もっと詳しく

  • Mount Morgan Mine

    2024年7月21日, オーストラリア ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    Commencing operation in 1882, the mine became one of the richest gold mines in Australia, and for a period of time- the world. During its 99 years of mining the area declared a total of 225 tons of gold, 50 tons of silver and 360,000 tons of copper.
    During its time it paid off two of the country’s 🇦🇺 debts , the government took everything from the town and never put anything back, today it looks like a town that was forgotten , squeezed of its wealth and left in pieces with only it’s history!
    もっと詳しく

  • Mount Morgan Cemetery

    2024年7月21日, オーストラリア ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    Established more than 120 years ago, the Mount Morgan Cemetery is steeped in history. The monumental section of the cemetery is heritage listed and contains many examples of fine monumental craftsmanship, cultural diversity and historical significance. Such examples include the Linda Memorial, erected in 1909 in memory of miners who perished in disastrous mining accidents, to the Chinese Heung Lew or incense burner. もっと詳しく

  • Blackwater & Emerald

    2024年7月22日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    First McDonalds in at least 10years!
    And oh my did it confirm that it will be another 10years till the next one!

    From Blackwater you see Rail track transporting the coal , old harvested Cotton can been seen all down the side of the highway up until Emerald

    Blackwater coal mine
    The Blackwater site, located south-east of Emerald, is also one of the southern hemisphere's longest coking coal mines, with a striking rate of 80 kilometres.

    Cotton Growers from the Queensland Central Highlands town of Emerald are the first in the country to plant their crops due to climate, seasonal conditions and plant science which allows for planting earlier than the normal period for irrigated cotton of October/November in areas to the south.
    もっと詳しく

  • Sapphire

    2024年7月22日〜26日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Weather has a lovely chill in the morning and warms up nicely, not too hot - perfect
    Sapphire , Ruby Vale and Anakie is dry , flat and resembles in parts of a war zone, the houses are tents, corrugated sheds and caravans joined together with signs claiming mining rights literally in the back garden!
    Booked for two stayed four, arrived minus a number plate but everything else all in place.
    Darell and Victoria from Yorkshire own Sapphire caravan park , set in the dry dusty outback bush the site had a real bush camping feel about it , people buzzing around hoping to find the big gem.
    The bush surrounded each camp with main buildings blended into the landscape , exterior walls lined with stone , French doors giving it a mountain lodge feel , recycled iron wares , rusted mini trucks and the windmill could be heard pumping water round the fish pond. A retreat and relief from the battle zone outside the gates.

    Fossicking
    Never done it and it’s extremely addictive!
    You have 2 sieves with different size grills, you pour a little of your wash (bag/bucket of stones ) into your sieve, shake of the dirt , dip it into the water and drain , then if you go with a pair of tweezers looking for your retirement stones! If only it was that easy!
    What did surprise us was how many different colours of sapphire there are, pink, red, green, yellow, brown, black! Tiny little gems that if you put on your mobile phone the light shines straight through! We spent hrs looking through dirt and oh what fun we had! We collected a fair few sizes , are they worth anything? Well? I have no idea but doubt it very much, we shall be sending them off to a Australian company in Thailand to be cut and polished and some day and hopefully create a piece of jewellery or something that we can look at to remember those fabulous memories created in the dust and dryness of the outback of central Queensland.
    もっと詳しく

  • Charter Towers

    2024年7月27日, オーストラリア ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Weather has noticeably gone warmer since leaving Sapphire 4degrees 25c
    Two roads 469km
    first road took us out of sapphire for most of it was navigating around dead animals , Gregory devopmemt Rd was a straight run for 348km same landscape, we never turned once! The land is flat as far as you can see, dry , some cattle and small trees. We were going to stop at Belyando Crossing Roadhouse 268km in but pushed on to Dalrymple Tourist Park based at Charters Towers for just one night.もっと詳しく

  • Wongaling Beach (Mission Beach)

    2024年7月28日〜31日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    Last time we visited Mission was back in 2007 when we came out as tourists and didn’t catch the connecting flight from Hong Kong to Heathrow and didn’t come back to the UK until we had winged it round the world in 2008.
    Mission beach was the place we threw ourselves from 14000ft from a perfectly good airplane we decided to revisit this area because of the beauty this place holds.

    Bali Hai Holiday Park directly over the road from Wongaling beach , the first day was over cast and we had rain the following ,Billy got to visit his first beach, curious and nervous about the sea at first but it didn’t take long for Bill to be licking the wave coming in ,running from the small tides and smelling the air with a big smile.
    We took a ride round to mission beach ,one long road still with tiny shops booking tourist adventures.We parked outside the local pub and had a beer take out from the local in the mystery bus and ordered fish & chips from the No 1 chippy and drove up to clump point lookout and had late lunch and wine with a windy view.
    もっと詳しく

  • Tully

    2024年7月29日, オーストラリア ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    Tully Sugar Limited is a wholly owned subsidiary of Chinese agribusiness company COFCO.

    All the sugar is exported. Molasses is produced as a by-product of the sugar extraction process and is a valuable cattle feed supplement. The molasses they produce is sold into both the domestic cattle feed and the international markets.

    The Company also owns and operates a number of cane farms, has commercial and residential real estate interests in Tully and is a Registered Training Organisation.
    もっと詳しく

  • Paronella Park

    2024年7月31日〜8月2日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    I’d read about this place being a no 1 attraction in Queensland and it didn’t disappoint!
    We visited the gardens during the day and of the evening.

    José Paronella arrived in Australia from Catalonia in Spain, in 1913. For the next 11 years he worked, cutting sugar cane initially, then purchasing, improving, and reselling cane farms. In 1924 he returned to Spain and married Margarita in 1925. The trip back to Australia was their honeymoon.

    José first saw this 13 acres of virgin scrub along Mena Creek in 1914. He eventually purchased it in 1929 for £120 and started to build his pleasure gardens and reception centre for the enjoyment of the public.

    The earliest structure, the Grand Staircase, was built to facilitate the carrying of the river sand to make the concrete.

    First they built a house to live in, then they started on the Castle itself.

    Apart from the house, which is made of stone, all of the structures were constructed of poured, reinforced concrete, the reinforcing being old railway track. The concrete was covered with a plaster made from clay and cement, which they put on by hand, leaving behind the prints of their fingers as a reminder of the work they had done.

    Official opening To The Public

    They laboured with unswerving determination, until, in 1935, the Park was officially opened to the public. The Theatre showed movies every Saturday night. In addition, with canvas chairs removed, the Hall was a favourite venue for dances and parties.

    A unique feature was the myriad reflector, a great ball covered with 1270 tiny mirrors, suspended from the ceiling.
    With spotlights of pink and blue shining on the reflector from the corners of the hall, it was rotated slowly, producing a coloured snowflake effect around the walls, floor and ceiling. During the mid-sixties the Theatre ceased to be, and the Hall became devoted to functions, particularly Weddings.

    Above the Refreshment Rooms was the projection room, and up another flight of stairs was the Paronella Museum. This housed collections of coins, pistols, dolls, samples of North Queensland timbers and other items of interest. Originally, food service was from the lower Refreshment Rooms downstairs.

    The concrete slab tables forming the lower Tea Gardens and the swimming pool both proved extremely popular, as they still do today. The avenues and paths were well laid out with the familiar shaped planters which are still to be seen wherever you go in the Park. Two tennis courts were behind the Refreshment Rooms, with a children's playground, The Meadow, situated near the creek.

    Upwards of 7000 trees were planted by José. These included the magnificent Kauris lining Kauri Avenue. A Tunnel was excavated through a small hill. Above its entrances are the delightful stonework balconies. Walking through here brings you to spring fed Teresa Falls, named for his daughter.

    The creek is lined with rocks and traversed by small bridges. Some parts have cascades built out of rocks, so the sound of water is always there. The Hydro Electric generating plant, commissioned in 1933, was the earliest in North Queensland, and supplied power to the entire Park.

    In 1946, disaster struck. Upstream from the Park a patch of scrub had been cleared and the logs and branches pushed into the creek.


    When the first rains of the Wet Season came, the whole mass began to move downstream until it piled up against a railway bridge a few hundred metres from the Castle. Water backed up until the weight broke the bridge, and the entire mass descended on the Park. The downstairs Refreshment Rooms were all but destroyed, the Hydro was extensively damaged, as was the Theatre and Foyer.

    Undaunted, the family began the task of rebuilding. The Refreshment Rooms downstairs were beyond repair, so this service was moved upstairs, and only the structure of the building recreated. In addition, José built the fountain. The Castle was repaired, the gardens replanted, and the Park was alive again.

    End of an era José's Passing

    In 1948, José died of cancer, leaving Margarita, daughter Teresa, and son Joe, to carry on. In time, Teresa married and eventually moved to Brisbane with her husband. Joe married Val in 1952, and they had two sons, Joe (José) and Kerry.

    Renovations and maintenance meant there was always plenty of work, and the floods of 1967, '72 and '74 further added to the load.

    In 1967 Margarita died, and in 1972, Joe died, leaving Val and the two boys to continue the hard working tradition and keep the dreams alive.

    The Park was sold out of the family in 1977 and sadly, in 1979, a fire swept through the Castle. For a time, the Park was closed to the public.

    Cyclone Winifred in 1986, a flood in January 1994, Cyclone Larry in March 2006, and Cyclone Yasi in January 2011 were all further setbacks and challenges for Paronella Park.

    A new era

    Mark and Judy Evans, the current owner/operators, purchased the Park in 1993 and formulated a plan to put the Park back on the map.

    They see the Park as a work of art, and work on maintaining and preserving, rather than rebuilding. Small restoration projects have been undertaken, pathways uncovered and improved, and the Museum, an ongoing project, is continuously being enhanced.

    In November 2009, the ambitious project to restore Paronella Park's original (1930s era) hydro electric system was completed. At a cost of $450,000, the system once again provides all of the Park's electricity requirements.

    This work, and other environmentally focused initiatives culminated in Paronella Park being awarded Eco Australia's GECKO award for Ecotourism in 2011.

    Paronella Park's life as a pleasure gardens continues as José intended with visitors continuing to make use of this unique location.
    もっと詳しく

  • Millaa Millaa

    2024年8月2日〜5日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Rain , rain and more rain!
    Know as the village in the mist, Should be known as wet and wild, wet because It rained none stop from when we arrived to when we left and wild because of the laundry and bathroom facilities , is a imaginewhole new adventure.
    The park it’s self was negated ,the owners had seem to of lost interest in running it , bought nine years ago by driving into the park on holiday ,finding out it was for sale , imagine having that sort of wealth that you can just buy a caravan site but it wasn’t the dream they thought ,it can really back fire - seven days a week and then the public get involved, hence they have had enough and are selling due to ill health and sick of working so hard! Maybe the energy in that place was the problem, I cart imagine what it was like during the tyrannical rules during covid!?
    The grounds were lovely ,rain forest backing on to the golf course. We got the dudd site , no rain forrest , no golf course , just a hedge in front of us on the end next to the highway, traffic wizzing past till late, starting again early morning but the area its self set in the tablelands made up for the rain.
    Set above 1000m the mist and rain bought out the colours of the lush volcanic lands , cattle grazing ,farmers offering organic produce, cheese , milk , veggie’s.
    もっと詳しく

  • Millaa Millaa Falls - Waterfall Circuit

    2024年8月3日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    Millaa Millaa Falls is a heritage-listed plunge waterfall at Theresa Creek Road, Millaa Millaa, Tablelands Region, Queensland, Australia. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 5 December 2005.

    Milla Milla Falls
    The falls are adjacent to the town of Millaa Millaa on the Atherton Tableland. 'Millaa Millaa' is a MaMu Aboriginal phrase referring to the rainforest vine Elaeagnus Triflora whose fruit appears from May to February.

    The Millaa Millaa Falls are approximately 18.3 metres (60 ft) in height and are formed from volcanic basalt which has weathered to create distinctive vertical striations (pipe formations) in the surface of the rock and which gives the falls its pleasing textural backdrop. There is a large pool below the falls that is surrounded by rainforest, except for a grassed viewing area facing the falls and a concrete block pad on the waters edge.
    もっと詳しく

  • Zillie Falls & Ellinjaa Falls

    2024年8月3日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Zillie Falls
    Zillie Falls is a single-drop, plunging waterfall that jets off the edge of an eroded basalt column into dense, tropical rainforest. This waterfall is roughly 30 metres in height, making it the tallest waterfall on the circuit.

    The plunging waters crash onto large boulders beneath the waterfall.

    Ellinjaa Falls

    Ellinjaa Falls waterfall is an approximately 12-metre cascading waterfall that tumbles down a wide, vertical face at the base of a dense rainforest valley.

    Below the waterfall is a blue-tinted pool that is deep enough to swim in.

    The freshwater creeks that flow from the waterfall are home to one of Australia's most iconic animals; the platypus.
    もっと詳しく

  • Malanda Falls Swimming Pool

    2024年8月4日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Malanda Falls Swimming Pool is a heritage-listed swimming pool at Malanda Falls Park, Malanda, Tablelands Region, Queensland, Australia. It was built from 1906 onwards. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 5 February 2010.
    The Malanda Falls Scenic Reserve comprises the North Johnstone River flowing through dense rainforest and over the basalt rock of the Falls into a man-made swimming pool. The Falls has a height of about four metres and a width of approximately 30 metres (98 ft).
    もっと詳しく

  • Mount Hypipamee Crater

    2024年8月4日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    The Mount Hypipamee Crater, also known as The Crater.
    The Hypipamee crater is also referred to as a volcanic pipe. The pipe was opened upward through surface rocks by gas produced from molten rock below and as a result of tremendous pressure, the vent exploded sending volcanic bombs far across the landscape. It has a diameter of 61 metres at the water level which is 58 metres below the platform. Even 85 metres below the water surface, the pipe hasn’t lost any of its dimensions, the surface is covered with a green layer of native waterweed.

    A remarkable variety of vegetation types, including high-altitude rainforest, grow in this small park.
    もっと詳しく

  • Dimbulah

    2024年8月5日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    The township of Dimbulah (aboriginal word meaning “long waterhole”) was born after 1906 as a watering place for locomotives travelling from Mareeba to Chillagoe.

    For many years, Dimbulah was the centre of a thriving tobacco industry. At its peak, there were approximately 800 growers in the area, producing over 8,000 tonnes of tobacco a year; however the last tobacco sales contracts in North Queensland were filled in early 2004 after a Federal Government and industry-funded buyout.

    Camp 64

    Owen Davies , the solo adventurer, author, and bushman walked 1,000 kilometres through the desert, with a pack of goats and two dingoes as his only company and also lived and worked for almost a decade on one of the most remote properties in the Northern Territory. He spent 13 years in the Territory, nine of those years were on Pungalina Station.

    The building itself has been lovingly restored and fitted out by his own hand; from the sheep's wool-lined ceiling, to the lamp shades recycled from old billies, to the table tops made of the doors of an old tobacco shed in the Dimbulah district.

    An eclectic outback collection of personal memorabilia fills the front room, along with items of local historical interest and framed photographs of Owen, flanked by his trusty goats and dingoes, walking across the red sand dunes of western Queensland.

    Of the 80 or so camps he passed through between Camooweal and Birdsville, on the eastern edge of the Simpson Desert, number 64 stuck in Mr Davies' memory.

    "Camp 64 was one of the remote, desolate, it was waterless, it was treeless,”
    もっと詳しく

  • Chillagoe Eco Park

    2024年8月5日, オーストラリア ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    You get to Chillagoe from Dimbulah  on the wheelbarrow Rd, the landscape changes from lush green rainforest to the dry Barron outback within a couple of hours, termite nests everywhere, occordimg to the soil colour you see an array of various sized triangle mounds , one minute red , next grey , next brown all changing with the colours of the land.
    The backdrop of the mountains highlighted from the dry landscape below.

    We arrived at the eco lodge and was immediately taken with the simplicity of the place, rocks outlined the pitches complete with its own fire pit made of stones, dotted around were bush dunnys! The showers were made up of corrugated sheets, shower heads were watering cans , we decided after a day or so to go no power as the sun shined! Sat next to the air strip , used for the flying doctor and in the distance you could see the chimneys of the Chillagoe smelters. One night we entered into the world of star gazing at the onsite Observatory, so peaceful , if the chairs had reclined I was happy to sleep under the stars, a still night , no clouds and a few lessons in star gazing, the Milky Way , Omga senatory , the jewell box cluster , constellations such as the emu and southern cross .
    もっと詳しく

  • Chillagoe Smelters

    2024年8月6日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    The Chillagoe smelters is a heritage-listed refinery at Chillagoe-Mungana Caves National Park, Mareeba Mining District, Chillagoe, Shire of Mareeba, Queensland, Australia. It operated in the early 1900s. It is also known as Chillagoe State Smelters. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.

    In its heyday the Chillagoe Smelters were the centre of a thriving mining industry that brought wealth and development to the Chillagoe area. By June 1901, when the railway was completed, Chillagoe was a flourishing town. The railway enabled equipment for the large, innovative Chillagoe Smelters to become operative by September 1901.[2] The Chillagoe Railway & Mining Company equipped its work sites with the most up-to-date machinery and the surrounding mines at Mungana, Zillmanton and Redcap worked on a large scale. At times, the mines, railway and smelter provided employment for up to 1,000 workers.

    Chillagoe Smelter operated until 1943 and in its 40 odd year lifetime treated 1,250,000 long tons (1,270,000 t) of ore, yielded 60,000 long tons (61,000 t) of copper, 50,000 long tons (51,000 t) of lead, 181 long tons (184 t) of silver and 5 long tons (5.1 t) of gold. By 1943, other smelters were built closer to the then major ore producing areas such as Mount Isa. Easy access to these areas outweighed the economic usefulness of the state run Chillagoe Smelter. In 1950, the buildings and equipment were auctioned.
    もっと詳しく

  • Balancing Rock - Chillagoe Mungana Caves

    2024年8月6日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    The Balancing Rock is a most spectacular giant monolith that looks as if it could topple over at any minute

    Balancing rocks occur in the rocky limestone outcrops, towers, and bluffs of the karst topography around Chillagoe. These geological formations are created by the action of slightly acidic rainwater. This percolates into the cracks, crevices, and fissures of the stratified blocks of resistant stone exposed on the surface by the slow wearing away of overlying burden of sandstone.

    The rainwater gradually dissolves the limestone and widens the cracks until individual blocks are formed and left balancing one upon another .
    もっと詳しく

  • Chillagoe

    2024年8月6日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    The local pub was the post office hotel , every man and his dog from around the world had signed on the walls , roof , doors , you name it it had been signed with I was ere! So it seemed rude not have a pint and graffiti a wall!?
    The village consisted of a local hardware store , a petrol station which had the most expensive deal so far , laundry , local produce store and info centre which became our off load rubbish bin.
    Down the road apparently was a swimming hole and up the road a dump point by the roado rink!
    もっと詳しく

  • Donna Cave - Chillagoe Mungana Caves

    2024年8月7日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Donna Cave is an important site for understanding the region’s geological history. The cave’s formations are a testament to the area’s rich geological heritage, shaped by millions of years of erosion and deposition. The unique combination of minerals and water has created a stunning array of colors and textures, making it a fascinating destination for geology enthusiasts.もっと詳しく

  • Trezkinn Cave - Chilagoe Mungana Caves

    2024年8月7日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    Trezkinn Cave is home to various speleothems, including stalactites and stalagmites, formed through the slow accumulation of mineral-rich water droplets over thousands of years.
    The cave is carved out of limestone, a sedimentary rock formed from ancient marine deposits. The cave’s passages and formations are a testament to the region’s complex geological past.
    Fossils of coral and shells can be found within the cave, remnants of a time when the area was underwater.
    もっと詳しく