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

Western Australia

Western Australia is a state of Australia occupying the western third of the land area of the Australian continent. It is bounded by the Indian Ocean to the north and west, the Southern Ocean to the south, the Northern Territory to the north-east. Weiterlesen
  • Cactus Garden Canarvon

    27. November 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 36 °C

    Carnarvon Cactus Garden started as a hobby for Rob Westcott. Rob’s passion for cacti came from his father.

    "Dad had a couple of little cactus plants at home when I was a youngster, and when I left and bought my own place, I took a couple with me."

    The first cacti at the garden were planted over 15 years ago. The ‘hobby’ quickly became a place of interest to many who passed by on the Fruit Loop Trail.

    Today, we have over 350 cactus plants in 30 different varieties, some of which tower over 5m tall!

    The day we popped in was watering day, Rob had decided to pull his own tooth out this morning and was in a lot of pain , Rob was from Portugal 40 years ago , a small , thin man with dark black hair and a rather swollen face!

    it’s an incredible site when you see a garden full of cactus’s ranging from different sizes and heights, the variety and colours are stunning against the blue sky!
    Rob also collected old bottles,cans and rustic metal machinery parts, some placed around the garden setting off the cactus colours.
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  • Point Quobba -Blowholes

    27. November 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 31 °C

    Powerful ocean swells force water through sea caves and up out of narrow holes in the rocks, jets of water erupt into the air, sometimes up to a height of 20 metres, creating a spectacular sight.

    We stayed two nights at the Quobba Blowholes ground, $20 a night , we decided to leave after two nights as “people” just couldn’t control there dogs, two many off lead! Pal met a chap who was the third generation ownership of one of the beach shacks in the picture , for over 40 years the beach shack owners have been fighting the council with regards to rates etc because the shacks lie on sovereign ground. Some of the instructions the council have tried to implement are they have “told” the owners that the council are going to rent out there shacks , take away the bins, remove the shacks and are going to charge rates. The shacks stretch all the way down the West Coast to Perth and every time they are taken to court all the owners gather together and attend the court hearing and not once has the Council been successful , now if that’s not people power! What I have noticed during this trip is the amount of signs ,do not do this , do not do that , don’t camp here , don’t fish there , so I have one question , if this is sovereign land why do we have to pay to stay here?Weiterlesen

  • Monkey Mia

    3.–7. Dez. 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    Arriving just after sunset. Two roads, 345km, 5hrs later, the wind over the flat lands was pretty wild which kept pushing the bus along the straight roads to the resort.

    Shark Bay is the most western point of the coast of Australia and is made up of two peninsulas jutting out into the Indian Ocean.
    The 160 kilometre Shark Bay World Heritage Drive runs between the Overlander Roadhouse on the NW Coastal Hwy to Monkey Mia, where a pod of dolphins have made their home and freely interact with visitors

    Mia is the local Aboriginal term for home or shelter, while the Monkey part of the name is thought to derive from a pearling boat called Monkey that anchored at the now Monkey Mia in the late 19th century, during the days when pearling was an industry in the region.
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  • Gladstone Scenic Lookout

    3.–6. Dez. 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 29 °C

    Carnarvon was good to us, we had such acts of kindness.
    From a place we intended to only stop for a few nights, we ended up 4 nights , the campsite managers even helped us out with a secure garden to hang around in whilst the mystery bus went in for the service and the check on a whistling noise and they wouldn’t take anything in return, we didn’t leave till 2.00 and in the world of caravan parks that’s unheard off!

    Leaving Carnarvon we headed to Monkey Mai , two days late we had 349km to travel.
    On the way to Monkey Mia we stopped to stretch our legs at Gladstone Scenic Lookout , now Mr Gates and his cronies keep banging on about we are over populated , now what do you think? Over populated? Good god where on earth are we going to fit everyone!?

    Gladstone Scenic Lookout is a scenic spot in Wooramel, Western Australia. It is located about 250 meters off the North West Coastal Highway.The lookout offers stunning views of the Shark Bay area, including the Hamelin Pool and Faure Sill.
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  • Shell Beach -Denham

    4. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    Formed from billions of tiny shells, the aptly named Shell Beach is located 45 kilometres south-east of Denham in the Shark Bay World Heritage Area.

    Shell Beach is one of only a handful of places on earth where shells replace beach sand in such a dramatic and picturesque way. On a still day, the ocean here transforms into a palette of the most intense greens and blues.

    In the early 1900s, the shells were quarried and hard packed, cut into blocks and used to construct a number of historic buildings in the nearby town of Denham, some of which can still be seen today such as the Old Pearler Restaurant.
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  • Fowlers Camp & Whalebone - Fran Peron NP

    4. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    Francois Peron National Park covers 52,500 hectares which includes dramatic coastal scenery with red cliffs, sand plains, white beaches and arid desert shrublands. It was originally a pastoral station

    Fowlers Camp
    The camping area is located on Fowlers Camp Road, off Shark Bay Road, 22 kilometres south east of Denham. Camping is located on the waters front, this area is typified by low coastal scrub.

    Whalebone
    Just 26 kms south of Denham in Western Australia is the Whalebone Bay Campground which is a fabulous place to stay for 24 hours.

    The Whalebone Bay camping area is located looking directly out over the bay with spectacular views and stunning sunsets.

    Access to Whalebone Bay Campground is via the main Highway road on to a gravel road which has some corrugations and is 2kms from the beach and camping area.
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  • Eagle Bluff - Francois Peron NP

    4. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    Francois Peron National Park covers 52,500 hectares which includes dramatic coastal scenery with red cliffs, sand plains, white beaches and arid desert shrublands. It was originally a pastoral station.

    Located 22 km south of Denham is Eagle Bluff offers a particularly impressive lookout over Denham Sound where a huge population of dugongs live in the seagrass meadows. This is also a home for dolphins and sharks as well as osprey and sea eagles.
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  • Denham

    7.–17. Dez. 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 29 °C

    Denham is both the western most town in Australia (at the 113°32" East meridian of longitude) and the gateway to Monkey Mia with its famous dolphins. The town survives on the influx of tourists who come to the area to see the dolphins. It offers alternative accommodation to Monkey Mia, has restaurants and an airport. It is also the place where most people leave who are heading to Dirk Hartog Island. Denham is primarily a stopover for people heading to other places around Shark Bay. It has an almost Mediterranean feel about it with a small and beautiful beach and a jetty from which fishing and boating are popular activities.Weiterlesen

  • I’m Back …. Diving with Sharks In Denham

    9. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    It’s been 8 years since I explored the depths of the ocean , since the retirement of my buddy (Paul ) it never felt right but after meeting the team from shark bay eco tours i felt it was time to get back into the water.

    A 2 hr refresher at Denham pier was the best thing I did, remembering to put the equipment together, hand signals, buoyancy , mask clearance and how bloody heavy the equipment was came flooding back as well as how difficult it was to not just walk in this stuff but trying to get your fins on with a weight belt is near impossible.
    Once we overcome how “ floatie” I was with even more weights tucked into my pockets , then I was nailed to the bottom! Weight adjusted we had a swim in zero visibility which added to the challenge of being back in the water!

    The following day I boarded the boat with 4 other divers and two instructors and headed out for two dives to the most Westerly point of Australia “steep point”.
    The highlight of the dives was a total of eight grey nurse sharks 🦈 they could be found in the cave located in a dive area called purple rain swimming in a figure of eight resting.

    Grey Nurse shark 🦈 Facts*

    It’s now appreciated that this shark is more like the family Labrador and harmless to people, unless provoked. Nevertheless, that previous mistaken image saw it hunted relentlessly by people during the late 20th century, which contributed to its numbers crashing in Australian waters and elsewhere around the world.

    In 1984 this species became the first shark anywhere in the world to be safeguarded under an act of parliament, when it was declared a protected species in New South Wales waters. Grey nurse sharks now continue to be protected under fisheries legislation in waters off NSW, Western Australia, Tasmania and Queensland.

    The grey nurse shark, which is also known as the sand tiger shark and spotted ragged-tooth shark, is found worldwide in tropical to temperate coastal waters. In Australia, it occurs in two distinct and geographically separate populations – one on the east coast, the other on the west coast. The east coast population is critically endangered. The conservation status of the west coast population is vulnerable.

    Sharks in the east coast population have been reported from all the eastern states but are mostly encountered from southern Queensland down the NSW coast. Along that section of coast there are several sites where the species forms aggregations that are thought to be important for mating and pupping.

    Despite being widely protected, the species has been slow to recover from the slaughter it endured in the 20th century. It continues to be incidental bycatch in some fisheries and is also caught in nets set across beaches to protect swimmers, particularly along east coast beaches.

    However, these continued threats aren’t enough to explain why grey nurse numbers haven’t bounced back since the species became protected. The main reason why is the species’ unusual reproductive physiology, which sees the females produce no more than one pup per year. Grey nurse shark reproduction is governed by a strategy known as intrauterine cannibalism, which means that ultimately females give birth to no more than two live young at a time.

    Each female has two uteri in which a number of eggs are produced and from which baby sharks hatch. However, the strongest of these hatchlings eats the others meaning that only one pup can ever survive in each uterus.

    Because the females only reproduce every second year it means that, on average, each produces only one pup a year.
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  • The Old Pearler Restaurant- Denham

    10. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    The Old Pearler is the only restaurant in the world to be built predominantly of sea shells. The shells are essentially of the small molus family being bonded together by pressure, anu calcium (as found in all shells). Shell stocks come from the Hamelin Pool area, and blocks were cut by saw from the ground. The restaurant was built by an Englishman, Tim Hargreaves, who in 1974 took some three to four years cutting and laying the shell blocks.
    The railway sleepers used for the doors and window frames (lintels) were originally cut for the Kalgoorlie railway line but used instead on the Carnarvon Jetty. The tables and settles were of timber salvaged from the original Peron Station shearers quarters which were situated where the town garage now stands. The various artifacts adorning the walls are mainly of early Shark Bay days, eg the haymes used not on horses, interestingly, but on camels, various ships tackle from off the vessels "Will Succeed" and "Success". the naming of these vessels was synonymous with the aspirations of one of Shark Bays self styled "Kings" - one Henry John Spaven. The
    "Will Succeed" was last seen as a burnt out hulk in Beadon Creek Onslow, and the "Success" went down in a cyclone off Willy Mia near Useless Loop.
    The restaurant has exceptional acoustics within the Old Pearler. This is due to the myriad of air pockets in the shell blocks, the blocks being made up of coquina.
    They also make for extra-ordinary coolness in the hot summers of the north west.
    It is also the most westerly restaurant in Australia.
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  • Stranded At Denham Coastal Caravan Park

    15.–19. Dez. 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    If there is one place you want to be stranded it is Denham.
    On the morning of 12th we were ready to head off to Geraldton, the coaster needed some much needed attention as the clutch had been playing up after literally coasting back to the campsite, we were going to take advantage and get the turbo and exhaust gasket done but fate decided different , that morning, nothing! no clutch, it had totally failed.
    It turned out though after so many acts of kindness we didn’t need to chance the trip 400km to Geraldton , Steve & Andrew- Denham diesel came to the rescue.
    We needed a place to stay , Shark Bay cottages was the place, Seaview, right on the front and even had a bunk bed for Billy!

    Denham coastal caravan park is perched on the stunning shores of the world heritage listed Shark Bay and is Australia’s most westerly caravan park. With direct water frontage to the sparkling Indian Ocean, it’s a fantastic beach destination along Western Australia’s Coral Coast.
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  • Port Gregory

    17.–19. Dez. 2024 in Australien ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

    Due to the holidays we had to book up places from around 20th a Dec through to around 16th Jan.

    The Plan ( this is why we don’t like having a plan!) had been turned upside down being delayed in Denham which wasn’t a bad thing and having our stay shortened at the sleepy seaside town of Port Gregory worked out well!

    WHY IS IT PINK?
    Hutt Lagoon boasts a pink hue created by the presence of carotenoid-producing algae, Dunaliella salina, which is a source of beta-carotene; a food-colouring agent; and a source of Vitamin A.

    Port Gregory is a scenic fishing village encircled by 5km of exposed coral reef. The village is located near the mouth of the Hutt River, and was originally developed to serve the Geraldine Mine at the Murchison River - the first site for mining in Western Australia!
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  • Geraldton Caravan Park

    18.–20. Dez. 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    We’ve ended up going back on ourselves as we had booked 5 nights in Geraldton solely because of having work done in the coaster but as we never made it out of Denham we had 5 nights credits because they wouldn’t refund, it seem this is how the caravan parks carryon, they get away with it! So we used up two night to get supplies even though we would need to go back on ourselves to Horrocks.

    We had booked a cabin as originally we wouldn’t have had the coaster and what a surprise! $133 a night and again they get away with it! It’s drab. It belonged in a skip.

    30 painful permanents reside, some live in beautiful shanty town like structures that involve that many tarps enough wind would make the Hindenburg disaster look mild.
    Next door resembled jump jack flash with his bass music thumping out at 9.00am , there’s a drunk on the other side of the site who likes to abuse people walking passed. You expect Jonny 🎥to be tearing through your door with an axe at any point.

    All night an overhang tree scraped the metal roof while if you made a move so did the bed. Overall it had a flushing clean toilet, shower and kitchen and the bonus for us ? We need a fridge/freezer for all the food supplies for over the Christmas period. Oh and we get to use another night up on the 28th! When we pass through in our way to Julimar, lucky us! But hey at least we had a roof over our head even with Freddy Kruger spending the night clutching the roof!
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  • Geraldton

    19. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 24 °C

    The Horizon -
    Beresford Foreshore is home to Lucy Humphrey's “Horizon” which has won several Sculptures by the Sea accolades. The 1.5-metre sphere turns the world upside down. The Horizon ball is a 1.5m ball made of clear 40mm acrylic with 1,800 litres of water inside the ball. The ball lends itself to amazing photography, particularly at sunset.

    Port Moore Lighthouse-
    The red and white candy stripes of Point Moore Lighthouse are a spectacular sight that stands out proudly amidst the Geraldton landscape. Standing 34 metres high it was the first all-steel tower built on the mainland of Australia, back in 1878. With its bold colours, the lighthouse has become an icon of the port city of Geraldton.

    Geraldton Port -
    Mid West Ports operates seven (7) commercial berths and critical marine and land assets which enables the facilitation of trade for the Mid West region, exporting a variety of products including iron ore, grains, mineral sands, non-mineral sands and mineral concentrates. The Port also imports fuel, fertiliser and break bulk cargo.

    Berths 1 & 2 are currently non-operational due to their age and condition.

    Berth 3 is a dedicated agri-bulk facility used by CBH to export grain. On occasion it also hosts cruise ships.

    Berth 4 is primarily used for the export mineral and non-mineral sands.

    Berth 5 is primarily used for the export of iron ore.

    Berth 6 is used primarily for importing; break bulk, fuel and fertiliser.

    Berth 7 is a dedicated iron ore berth operated by Karara Mining.

    In addition, Mid West Ports is unique in that it also manages the Geraldton Fishing Boat Harbour (FBH), supporting the region's largest fishing industry, Western Rock Lobster. The FBH comprises of boat pens and a significant landholding with sites leased principally to businesses that support the local fishing and mining industry. The harbour also supports tourist-based operations.

    Geraldton Railway Station -
    On 26 July 1879, the original Geraldton station opened as part of the Northampton line. It was the first government railway station in Western Australia.
    With the discovery of gold in the Murchison River, a new station was built off Durlacher Street. On 8 August 1900, it became the Geraldton Mechanic's Institute Library, with a second storey added in 1908. In 1975, the library was shifted to a new location and in 1979 the building was handed over to the WA Museum.
    When the WA Museum relocated to its new premises in 2000, the old station building lay vacant until restored in 2014 as the City of Greater Geraldton Visitor Centre.[1][2][3] In 1911, a third station opened, with the second relocated to become the District Engineers Office.[4][5]
    The station is today utilised by Transwa road coach services to Perth.[6] Creative, cultural and health services operate out of adjoining rooms, and a small cafe also operates from this building.
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  • Horrocks

    20.–28. Dez. 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 28 °C

    The sunsets are amazing, every evening we are blessed with the sun disappearing over the turquoise waters of the Indian Ocean not just from the balcony but the dinner table, lounge and bedroom.

    Horrocks (also known as Horrocks Beach) is a town in transition. Once the northernmost of a series of tiny holiday-fishing villages it was untouched by modernity with simple fibro holiday houses, streets which had grown out of the sand dunes, and a simplicity of life which seemed to belong the 1950s. Today, thanks to transportation and a desire to find a piece of paradise "far from the madding crowd", it has an impressive beachfront (parklands, play areas for children, modern facilities) and Glance Street has a number of new, large houses with spectacular, panoramic ocean views. The small population increases dramatically in the crayfish (rock lobster) season and during school holidays. It is a true holiday destination for families, surfers, anglers and birdwatchers. There is the added advantage of the local reef system which encloses the beach making it more like a lagoon.
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  • Christmas Day At Sunnyside - Horrocks

    25. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 23 °C

    So if you asked us a year ago where will you be spending your next Christmas? and that on Christmas Eve Santa will be coming pass on the lollipop run with the emergency services for the kids/adults and Billy! And you’d be waving like a mad women from the balcony at them all!?
    There is no way in a million years we would have said Horrocks! We didn’t even know it existed and being in WA was never a plan ( we don’t have a plan ) until recently.

    Back in a Oct we were struggling to get even a space on a caravan site and it became apparent it was going to be very uncomfortable on any campsite during the holidays! So we took the plunge and found two air b&b’s. We had to split the time between two because of the holiday period, our first location being Horrocks, then a stop over at Geraldton for supplies and then a 435km drive to Julimar.
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  • The world’s biggest tractor

    29. Dezember 2024 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 37 °C

    On our way to Julimar it became more apparent that the turbo still wasn’t working , the journey up and down the roads of the wheatbelt became painful crawling at 30km while cars wizz pass you.
    During the journey you pass though towns smack bang in the middle of wildflower country, these towns come to life during the wildflower season Aug- Oct and is the best blooming place for all of your wildflower wanderings. Sadly this wasn’t possible for us but what we did find is the world’s biggest tractor!

    In a town of 400 people, one pub, one restaurant and one grocery store, there now stands the world's biggest tractor.

    The Chamberlain 40K replica stands in the rural WA town of Carnamah, 300km north of Perth.

    At 11.5 metres high, and 16 metres long, the steel statue is big enough for a 4WD to drive clean underneath it, and can be seen from 2 kilometres out of town.

    The Big Tractor was designed by engineer Frank Kidman, who had an original Chamberlain 40K parked close to the back door of his house so that he could take precise measurements of every part, and enter them into a computer.

    Mr Lukins put enormous effort to ensured each component was exactly five times the scale of the original model, down to the nuts and bolts.

    The statue was then fabricated piece by piece in Geraldton by a team of 58 tradespeople from mining contractor DIAB Engineering.

    Project manager Xavier Sequeira says the Big Tractor was built by 58 people over about 12 months.
    Project manager Xavier Sequeira said it took 800 litres of orange paint and 42 tonnes of steel to complete the structure.

    "It was designed to look exactly like the 40K," he said.
    "It's a dead replica."

    The tractor parts were trucked 180 kilometres from Geraldton to Carnamah in 18 truckloads.

    A large truck carried the orange front grill of a huge replica of an old Chamberlain 40K tractor.
    Trucks carried parts of the Big Tractor to Carnamah in 18 trips from Geraldton.
    Two cranes were used to install the tractor on-site, and it was bolted together by the same project team that fabricated each piece.
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  • New Year In Julimar

    29. Dez.–6. Jan. 2025 in Australien ⋅ ☀️ 37 °C

    We literally crawled up and over the hills to Julimar , we couldn’t do anything now until the workshops opened on the 6th Jan after the holiday period, so we sat back and enjoyed our stay at the cabin in Julimar.

    On the 20th Dec 2023 The Bureau of Morons issued a fire weather warning covering large parts of WA, while people living in West Toodyay and Julimar where being urged to leave to survive.The cabin we are staying in was in the line of fire ,at one point the owner was told that the property couldn’t be saved but thankfuly the water bomber released its cargo over the rustic retreat saving it from bunning down. Just over a year on the owners have newly fenced the property and the fields have regenerated to a golden carpet as far as the eye could see. Remains of the fire could still be seen around the base of the trees surrounding the side of the house.

    I spent most of the time resting after 5 months on the road , catching up on films, watching both seasons of the South Korean dystopian survival thriller horror television series Squid Games.
    Billy enjoyed the fenced property playing catch with the frizby while I caught up on cooking homemade sauces and pizza bases.

    Julimar has a history that includes both natural and industrial developments. The area is known for its conservation park and its potential for mineral extraction.
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  • Toodyay To The Rescue

    7.–8. Jan. 2025 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 35 °C

    So the Mystery bus had been diagnosed with a worn EGR valve and thankfully a chap in Toodyay could help fix the issue.
    We booked into the local campsite and arranged for the Coaster to go in the following morning. The problem we had was where was we going to wait , we asked the caravan park if they had a dog friendly cabin but turned us down because a while ago they let a lady in with a dog as they were struderling with the heat but apparently the person after sued the caravan park because they could smell dog so they don’t let people with dogs anymore in the cabins.It became apparent very quickly no one around Toodyay would rent a room out to us because we had Billy!

    The heat here starts around mid day , a very hot dry heat ,direct sun so the plan was to drop off the Coaster at 7am and that we set up a picnic area within the bush down from the pitch we were on under the tree’s , lots of water , wet towels , table and chairs and Billy’s bed with all three of the Maktia fans. The work on the Coaster was going to take approximately 4 hrs so we should have the Coaster back by 11.00am well that was the plan! But it didn’t take 4hrs!

    So Billy and I set up camp and Paul went and took the Coaster for 7am, straight away I discover that suddenly I couldn’t get a signal , nothing but SOS even on Telstra , apparently Telstra was down because they were doing some work in the the exchange in Toodyay! So that ment Paul could phone me etc.
    Billy and I was fine up to about 11.30am but then the heat really started to kicked in, Billy was getting agitated with the files thinking everything was biting him , I coved him with wet towels , we drank litres and litres of water but it was starting to get very uncomfortable, every so often if I held the phone up to the trees I’d get a bar , Paul managed to send me a text saying Telstra has gone down and I’m sorting something out , What? Is the Coaster ready? Nothing , no signal! “Trying to call you” nothing no signal, it was getting hotter and hotter then just as it reached mid day he arrived in a borrowed ute! We basically packed up and jumped into the air con ute and drove away from the picnic! It turns out that Paul had been scouring the streets of Toodyay trying to find a room for us to rent , asking people in the streets, hotel’s until at one point he saw a guy behind a glass door of the Toodyay manor and rushed over asking for help , explains Billy and I was in the bush and the coaster was taking longer and no one would rent us out a room and thankfully the guy rented out the suite for $200!Yes I know but when your at a point of “this is starting to go horribly wrong!?…
    Paul had walked km’s to find this room ,he must of walked 7km in the heat and as he went back into M&M mechanical he passed out! After being revived by tip tops and water they lent him their Ute and told him to go get us! And so he did just in time!

    The Toodyay manor was an absolute god send.

    Toodyay Manor, has a rich history dating back to 1862. Initially built as the Newcastle Hotel, the property was constructed for Joseph T. Monger on Pensioner Guard lots S8 and S10, which were originally allocated to guards Hackett and Smith. Monger built a hotel and a steam mill on the site, with the hotel being licensed in 1863 as the Newcastle Hotel.
    In 1870, Monger transferred the hotel’s license to J.G. Findell, who was succeeded by Ebenezer Martin in 1872. Martin was replaced by Thomas Donegan in 1874, who held the license for only a year before passing it on to W.G. Leeder. Leeder became the owner of the property in 1877. The site saw further development in the late 1890s with the construction of a pair of parapeted fronted shops abutting the hotel at 84 Stirling Terrace.
    The mill ceased operations in 1908 and was later converted into a skating rink for the townspeople and used as a picture theatre. In 1921, architect G. Pickering of Perth undertook some restoration of the hotel. Since then, the building has undergone several renovations in 1920, 1921, 1947, 2014, and 2020. The property has been known by various names over the years, including Newcastle Hotel, Newcastle Tavern, Lavender Cafe, and Toodyay Tavern, before settling on its current name, Toodyay Manor.
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  • The dark side of Bindoon

    9.–15. Jan. 2025 in Australien ⋅ ☀️ 34 °C

    So we left Toodyay and by the time we got to Lower Chittering we realised the Mystery bus still wasn’t right , better but no power on hills.

    Our friend we had meet had invited us to stay at theirs intactly it was only supposed to be a flying visit which turned into 6 nights. Vincent recommended Dane to look at the Coaster , he found the intercooler was broken but needed it confirmed and asked Vincent ( who happens to be quite mechanical ) to take it out! But as usual it wasn’t a five minute job more like alll day and into the evening, the radiator had to come off! It was confirmed that the intercooler had blown and the part needed ordering from Toyota , so we got prepared to be bent over and shafted with a big stick!
    All our plans/trips for Cervantes, Jurien had to be cancelled , RAC resorts and parks wouldn’t put the deposit on account and refused to help the situation , yet the local business Lobster pot refunded us immediately the trips we had booked and the Jurien Summerstar park credited us on account, put it this way I hadn’t finished with RAC , watch this space!

    As we headed to Lower Chittering I noticed a sign Bindoon? Bindoon rang a bell and I realised that the place was out of a movie called Sunshine & Oranges. So we took a visit, the barrier was down and the place was closed.

    Historically, the school was called Bindoon Boys Town, which started in 1938.The name was changed after revelations of institutionalised cruelty to Australian and migrant children. A series of inquiries, as well as the research of Margaret Humphreys, found that systemic sexual, physical and emotional abuse was perpetrated at the school. In one instance, a priest used a bullet attached to a stick to penetrate students as a form of punishment.
    In 1989, Senator Jean Jenkins, the Australian Democrats senator for Western Australia, raised the issue in the nation's Senate on behalf of the Child Migrant Friendship Society of Western Australia and a number of individual former child migrants who had asked for her support.In 1994, the Parliament of Western Australia was presented a petition with 30,000 signatures which demanded an inquiry into the sexual and physical assaults that took place in Bindoon. Other institutions run by the Christian Brothers in Castledare, Clontarf and Tardun were also named in the petition.The child abuse that took place at Bindoon is alluded to in the 2011 film Oranges and Sunshine which portrays the dedication of British social worker Margaret Humphreys in seeking justice for child migrants.
    Margaret Humphreys, CBE, AO (born 1944) is a British social worker and author from Nottingham, England. She worked for Nottinghamshire County Council operating around Radford, Nottingham and Hyson Green in child protection and adoption services. In 1986, she received a letter from a woman in Australia who, believing she was an orphan, was looking to locate her birth certificate so she could get married.
    In 1987, she investigated and brought to public attention the British government programme of Home Children. This involved forcibly relocating poor British children to Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the former Rhodesia, and other parts of the Commonwealth of Nations often without their parents' knowledge. Children were often told their parents had died, and parents were told their children had been placed for adoption elsewhere in the UK. According to Humphreys, up to 150,000 children are believed to have been resettled under the scheme some as young as three about 7,000 of whom were sent to Australia.
    Saving money was one of the motives behind this policy. The children were allegedly deported because it was cheaper to care for them overseas. It cost an estimated £5 per day to keep a child on welfare in a British institution, but only 10% of that, ten shillings, in an Australian one.

    In 1998, a British Parliamentary Select Committee began an inquiry into child migration schemes, and published a report in August that year which criticized the policy in general, and particularly certain Roman Catholic institutions in Western Australia and Queensland such as the Christian Brothers where child migrants were housed and allegedly abused. The Western Australian Legislative Assembly passed a motion on 13 August 1998 apologizing to former child migrants.
    In 2007, both the Queensland and Western Australia governments announced redress schemes for those who as children were abused while in State care. These schemes allow former British child migrants to apply for financial compensation if they do not wish to or cannot pursue civil litigation claims against the State.
    In December 2014, a royal commission found that "Christian Brothers leaders knew of allegations of sexual abuse of children at four WA orphanages, including Bindoon, and failed to manage the homes to prevent the systemic ill-treatment for decades.It also found that the institution was concerned by the cost of legal proceedings, and "there was no sentiment of recognising the suffering of the survivors.

    The part arrived Monday and was fitted by the guys , the Coaster needed tuning which lead to discovering the turbo booster pipe was split! Omfg! Really! We said our goodbyes and headed back to Toodyay to M & M as the pipe wasn’t easy to get hold of! Suprise! So it either needed welding or making , we contacted Toodyay manor to see if they would put us up again.
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  • Avon Valley

    22.–27. Jan. 2025 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 37 °C

    Australia Day and all the West Coast caravan parks were full , after the Coaster was fixed we needed to move from the Toodyay Manor and moved back to Toodyay holiday Park . The park is set in the bush , little shade but a lovely setting amongst the trees. The park had a huge lake which was starting to look like it was drying up ,the local wildlife took advantage of the green water floating around and enjoying the safety of the murky lake, you could hear the Ducks and see them wondering about the park. Toodyay was hot , not a lot of wind being inland and the Holiday Park some days hitting 42degrees, even with the aircon the mystery bus still felt like we were heading to the centre of the earth! Most days we adventured out as we found travelling about more comfortable than sitting still.

    Avon Valley - An hour east of Perth, the Avon Valley offers rolling green hills, tranquil brooks, and historic towns. WA's first inland settlement, this region is steeped in the heritage of the Ballardong Noongar people and early pioneers.

    Toodyay is located around 85km north-east of Perth City and is nestled in a valley between scenic hills and on the banks of the Avon River. The village presents some perfect examples of 19th century architecture, while at the same time retaining its own unique country charm with verandah-clad pubs and shops. In fact, Toodyay oozes colonial history and architecture. Connor's Mill is a fine example and is your only opportunity in WA to witness working historical machinery demonstrating antiquated flour milling processes. You can also visit the intriguing Old Gaol built in the 1860s, which now houses a museum dedicated to the varied history of the region.

    York - Established in 1831, was the first inland European settlement in WA. While still remaining distinct from other towns in the region, York is yet another fine example of colonial architecture and is renowned for its heritage precinct. 

    Northam - WA's largest inland town and is home to a great number of heritage listed buildings.
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  • Jurien Bay

    27.–30. Jan. 2025 in Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    As much as we appreciated how good Toodyay had been to us we were glad to be heading back to the Coast as originaly planned.

    Jurien Bay is a seaside resort town devoted to recreational fishing, tourism and professional cray fishing. It was a very sleepy coastal village until the 1950s when the town became a major port from rock lobster fishing. This led, inevitably, to holiday makers and today it is home to an impressive marina and popular with travellers wanting to enjoy the attractions of the area. The town is situated at the southern end of Jurien Bay which stretches over 9 km from Island Point at the south to North Head. The waters of the bay are sheltered by a string of islands and reefs which lie just off the coast. The town has been built on low lying sand ridges beside the beach and is characterised by cottages built for holidaymakers and weekend anglers.
    In 1801 a French expedition led by Thomas Nicholas Baudin and Louis-Claude Desaules de Freycinet mapped and named much of the coastline. Two ships - Le Geographe and the Casuarina - sailed up the coast of Western Australia mapping and collecting samples of the local fauna and flora as they progressed. Freycinet, a brilliant cartographic surveyor, took soundings and surveyed Jurien Bay which he named after Charles Marie, Vicomte Jurien, of the French Naval Administration.
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  • Cervantes

    30. Januar 2025 in Australien ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    It’s a town in transition. While there are still many 1960s holiday houses built of fibro and permalum and catering for enthusiastic fishermen, there are also large, two storey modern houses designed for family holidays and retirement. It was as recently as 1962 that the government removed 505 hectares from the northwest corner of the Nambung National Park to establish a town. The journey is through typical coastal scrubland (huge white sand dunes separate the road from the coast - this is an excellent opportunity to inspect the dunes and visit the incredibly white beaches.

    Cervantes is a small, modern fishing village and holiday destination where the major attractions include The Pinnacles, one of the great geological attractions in the country, and a huge rock lobster processing plant - The Lobster Shack

    The Lobster Shack
    We’d been really looking forward to visiting the lobster shack since we’d had to cancel the previous excursions becuase of the issues with the mystery bus but we finally got here and boy did we make up for it. We’d had issues with losing the deposit at the RAC caravan site but the managers really came though and sorted that all out, they went above and beyond with even gifting us two free nights which of course gave us more of an excuse to visit the lobster shack for lunch , even though we didn’t need an excuse!Well we had saved ourselves until we reached the coast particularly for seafood and we were never disappointed.
    1966 was the year the Thompson family’s story started with David Thompson Senior on the helm of his boat ‘Seatips’.
    Back in the 60s living out of a coastal shack settlement 200 kilometres North of Perth, David and his three sons worked on the sea together, fishing every day for the elusive Western Rock Lobster.
    Today, these three sons have raised their own sons to become lobster fishermen. That first single boat has now been surpassed by a fleet of modern and highly efficient vessels, which today continue to fish the waters off the coast of Cervantes.
    The Cervantes lobster fleet is a collection of approx. 14 modern, fast and efficient boats.
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  • Cervantes - Swimming With Sealions

    30. Jan.–6. Feb. 2025 in Australien ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    We booked with the Lobster Shack on their Sea Lion Tour . The boat took us out into Jurien Bay Marine Park to the South Cervantes Island, the islands the sea lions occupy. Jumping in, the water was warm and the tide was pleasant ,sheltered by the rocky edges of the island, approximately 2-3m deep it wasn’t long before the sea lions stated to appear over the rocks and into the water.

    The Australian Sea Lion

    Known scientifically as Neophoca cinerea, is a highly communicative, sedentary sea mammal native to the Western and Southern coasts of Australia. Unlike other marine species, they don’t migrate seasonally. Instead, they remain close to their haulout and rookery (breeding) sites on offshore islands, rocky bays, and sandy beaches, with occasional movement being noted from New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania.

    Known to have stocky bodies, large heads, small ears, long and tapered muzzles, and short and narrow flippers, the Australian Sea Lion has the ability to walk on all fours (unlike their seal cousins) and swim up to almost 30 kilometres per hour. Adult males and pups are dark brown in colour, with the adults having a mane-like yellow area on their neck and heads, and the pups having a pale crown, whereas the females are instead a variation of grey, silver, and tan tones with darker backs and lighter undersides. Size-wise, adult males measure between 2-2.5m in length and weigh between 250-300kg. Adult females, on the other hand, measure 1.3-1.8m in length and weigh between 61-104kg.



    Life Cycle
    The female’s breeding cycle spans 1.5 years, giving birth after a gestation period of 12 months to a singular pup between the months of January and June. Sadly, pup mortality is quite common, and sat at 60.2% in 2019. With the females having 2-3 years in between pregnancies, the protection of newborn pups is integral to the conservation of the species.

    Over the first year, pups spend their time living alongside their mother, during which they play and join in mock battles with other pups. From then, weaning will begin to take place at around 15-18 months.

    After about 4-6 years, females will have become sexually mature, followed by males at 8-9 years. It’s estimated that the Australian Sea Lion’s lifespan can reach up to 25 years.



    Habitat and Lifestyle
    Endemic to Australian waters, these diurnal species occupy around 50 islands off the coastline, from Houtman Abrolhos to the Pages Islands – the latter of which is close to Kangaroo Island.

    In addition to islands, they enjoy residing on isolated bays and sandy beaches in social units of about 10-15 individuals and can move from one subgroup to another depending on their needs. When hunting for food, they can reach depths of over 180 metres and remain underwater for up to 40 minutes. They can also be found on cliffs, thanks to their ability to climb – some of which have reached heights of up to 30 metres!



    Diet and Nutrition
    Australian Sea Lions are carnivorous beings, fitting into the piscivores and molluscivores subcategories. Their sagittal crest indicates that they have incredibly strong jaw muscles, which helps them to latch onto prey; octopus, blue-throated wrasses, squids, fairy penguins, cuttlefish, small sharks, stingrays, and whiting are amongst the common sealife in their diet.

    Great White Sharks and Orca Whales, more widely referred to as Killer Whales, are the Australian Sea Lions’ natural predators.



    Mating Habits
    Their mating habits are of a polygynous form – each male having a pup with multiple females. Males will guard female social units for up to 4 weeks at a time, and engage in fights with other males to decide who is allowed to breed with the females at that time.



    Sea Lion Conservation
    Unfortunately, the current population of Australian Sea Lions is dropping rapidly, with the last recorded number of 6500 in 2014 classifying them as an endangered species.

    An early catalyst of their population decline was due to their hunting in the 18th and 19th centuries for their skin and oil. Since then, their biggest man-made threat has been gillnets; panels of undetectable mesh that are anchored vertically in the water to trap fish. When fishermen secure them properly, they provide a firm, wall-like resistance that larger marine animals can bounce off of, however in many cases, they are loose enough to trap sea lions, causing them to drown.

    Other threats to their population include chemical pollution, noise pollution, oil spills, climate change, a decline in prey and liveable habitat, and diseases brought upon by contamination of their waters.

    What’s being done about it? In 2018, their endangered status led to the WA Government establishing protection zones situated around designated breeding colonies, which prohibit the use of gillnets.
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  • Pinnacles Desert of Nambung NP

    2. Februar 2025 in Australien ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    The Pinnacles are amazing natural limestone structures, formed approximately 25,000 to 30,000 years ago after the sea receded and left deposits of sea shells. Over time, coastal winds removed the surrounding sand, leaving the pillars exposed to the elements. The Pinnacles range in height and dimension - some stand as high as 3.5m!Weiterlesen