• 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. Läs mer
  • Cervantes - Lobster Potting

    3 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ 🌬 26 °C

    Just the best day out. Boarding the boat we headed out over a rough sea to pull up six lobster pots. It was amazing to see how the process worked ,learnt how the Lobster was identified and processed. We didn’t expect the Lobster to be so heavy and strong. We pulled an array of sizes , threw back the females and anything under sized. We headed back for our Lobster to be cleaned and cooked , from sea to plate within 2 hours , freshest Lobster we’ve ever had.

    Western Rock Lobster

    The western rock lobster industry is an iconic, world-class fishery that is based on the spiny lobster (Panulirus cygnus), which thrives along Western Australia’s coast from North West Cape to Cape Leeuwin.
    The industry comprises around 230 vessels that rely on baited pots to catch rock lobster. With an estimated value of $400 million, the Western Rock Lobster fishery stands as Western Australia’s most valuable fishery and has long been recognised as Australia’s most valuable single-species wild capture fishery.
    Achieving global recognition, the WA rock lobster fishery holds the distinction of being the world’s first fishery to receive certification for ecological sustainability from the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) in 2000. Since then, it has successfully maintained its certification through five recertifications, showcasing its ongoing commitment to responsible fishing practices.
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  • Some thing just went pop! Lancelin

    8–10 feb. 2025, Australien ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    So it was time to leave the amazing Cervantes! We couldn’t have been more than 50km from Cervantes and the Mystery bus let out a great big pop , first we thought it was a blow out but after checking all the tyres they thankfully were still there! After investigation we put our bets on it something to do with the turbo! Again! OMG! Anyway we crawled into Lancelin making a sound like a truck had arrived ,moved sites after a few hours due to a bunch of ferrel kid decided to start chucking stones at the seagulls sitting on top of a permanents home and after appearing from the bus window shouting at the kids like some old lady !instead of trying to keep a lid on the old principles like” I don’t do animal cruelty “ and we were willing to cause WW3 with the waste of time parents who sat on their asses doing nothing , we opted to move and bingo we bagged a sea view site instead.
    Update - The turbo boost valve had popped out of its position , Jorden from Lancelin Mechanical came to the rescue on “Sunday” and popped it back!

    Wangaree, as Lancelin was initially called, was once a tiny fishing settlement and is now home to over 700 people. However, this number significantly increases on weekends and school holidays when Perth residents head out of the city for a more relaxed beach lifestyle.
    The beach shacks give Lancelin a distinct holiday vibe, although some are replaced with modern double-storey holiday homes.
    Lancelin Sand Dunes hold the Guinness World Record for the largest convoy of off-road vehicles organised by Lancelin District Community Association (Australia) on 15 October 2016. Lancelin also holds the World Record for the longest windsurfing race at 13.83 nautical miles.
    Another record for Lancelin is that the world’s oldest message in a bottle was found 30 km north of Lancelin in January 2018. A scrolled note was inside a bottle thrown overboard from the German ship Paula in 1886.
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  • Lancelin Sand Dunes -Sand Boarding

    9 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ 🌬 24 °C

    Here, you can go sandboarding down massive 45 degree angle dunes, which are the biggest in Western Australia.
    From the peaks, you are greeted with a panoramic outlook over Lancelin, surrounding farmland, sand hills and coastline. Considering both parties were in the over 50’s category, we did rather well and having said that had to turn down red bull’s offers off sponsorship due to unavailability! Mr James feels that he was miss represented as the oldest in the partnership and retired early to bed with his cocky cox now round the front! Basically he landed on his ass!

    The formation of the Lancelin Sand Dunes is a result of natural geological processes. The dunes are composed of quartz sand that has been eroded from nearby rocks and transported by wind and water to the area. Over time, the sand has accumulated and been shaped by the wind into the large dunes that exist today. The dunes are constantly shifting and changing due to the wind, which blows the sand grains from one place to another, creating a dynamic and ever-changing landscape.
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  • Lancelin Sand Dunes - Sand Buggy

    9–11 feb. 2025, Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    We opted for the UTV (Buggy ) it covers all accessible Lancelin Sand dunes . For 1 hour tour we enjoyed the adrenaline-fueled, blood-pumping ride through the spectacular Lancelin sand dunes. We had no idea the sand dune system is about 2 kilometres long and is nestled directly inland from Lancelin Township.

    Save Lancelin Dunes
    It is estimated that the sand dunes alone attracted around 200,000 day trips in 2023 including people who came to sand board, drive or ride motorbikes through them and photograph or film the amazing vistas of pure white sand and turquoise bay and island views. Tourism Council WA estimates the Lancelin had 84,096 overnight visitors in 2022. Comparatively over the same period, the Pinnacles received 250,000 visitors, putting the dunes on par with one of the State’s most famous tourist attractions in terms of visitor numbers. The dunes offer sustainable and scalable tourism opportunities, including 4WD, sandboarding or site-specific event experiences unlike any other in the state, in addition to being a beautiful natural phenomenon to witness.

    In recent years, conflicting uses of the Lancelin sand dunes has been raised as an urgent issue by the community. Agricultural lime sand mining extracted an average 350,000 tonnes of mobile sand each year. Impacts of mining are becoming increasingly noticeable and its impact on other sand dunes uses has become an immediate concern for the local community and businesses that rely on the Dunes.
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  • Seabird

    10–11 feb. 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    To be honest there isn’t a lot to do at Seabird though that’s half the attraction. This was a quick stop over before finally getting to Fremantle, Perth!

    This quiet coastal town is the perfect escape for those looking to escape , kick back and relax at the beach or the Seabird Tavern whilst taking in some of the best ocean views along WA’s coast.

    Seabird Tavern is a fantastic spot for those looking for a pub meal or a drink with a view. Perched up high above the beach, there is a big selection of tables to choose from with amazing views down over the coastline.
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  • WA Maritime Museum & Challenger Harbour

    13 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    Perched on the edge of the Indian Ocean, the WA Maritime Museum is symbolic of Fremantle’s past, present and future as a coastal city and port.

    Behind the doors there’s historic objects and vessels that highlight WA’s sporting, sailing and adventure heritage, including the America’s Cup winning yacht, Australia II and Jon Sanders’ Parry Endeavour,. Sanders was the first man to circumnavigate Antarctica solo, circling the continent twice in 1981 – 1982.

    Challenger Harbour
    Challenger Harbour was built to cater for racing yachts participating in the Americas Cup in 1987, but now services recreational vessels.
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  • Fremantle Prison

    13 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    We thought it was appropriate to go visit the temporary accommodation of our previous ancestors that were shipped over to build this place back in 1850.

    Fremantle Prison was built as a convict barracks in the 19th century and remained in continual use until 1991. The Prison was a place of hangings, floggings, dramatic convict escapes and prisoner riots. Inmates included imperial convicts, colonial prisoners, enemy aliens, prisoners of war and maximum-security detainees.

    The first convict transport sailed into Fremantle Harbour in 1850. The Convict Establishment, as the prison was first known, was built by convict labour between 1852 and 1859 using limestone quarried on the site. The first prisoners moved into the main cell block in 1855.

    The Establishment was renamed Fremantle Prison in 1867. Transportation ceased the following year when the Hougoumont carried the last convicts to Fremantle. Nearly 10 000 convicts passed through the ‘establishment’ between 1850 and 1868.

    At first only imperial convicts were confined at Fremantle Prison. By 1886 less than 60 convicts remained inside a prison built to hold 1000 men. Perth Gaol closed and Fremantle Prison became the colony’s primary place of confinement for men, women and juveniles. With the population boom of the 1890s gold rush, Fremantle Prison became busy once again.

    More space had to be found for a burgeoning prison population. After the Rottnest Island Aboriginal Prison closed in 1903, prisoners from Fremantle Prison were sent to the island to carry out public works. New Division was built and opened in 1907. During the Second World War, the Australian Defence Department sequestered part of the prison as a military detention centre. A large number of Italian Australians, identified as ‘enemy aliens’ were incarcerated at Fremantle during the war.

    Following a series of prisoner riots and growing concerns with prison conditions, a royal commission in 1983 recommended the Prison’s closure. Female prisoners had already been transferred to a new facility at Bandyup Women's Prison in 1970. Fremantle was decommissioned on 8 November 1991 and its prisoners transferred to Casuarina Prison, replacing Fremantle Prison as the state's main maximum-security prison.

    After its closure the WA state government embarked on a long-term conservation plan to ensure the Prison’s preservation for future generations. Fremantle Prison is one of the largest surviving convict prisons in the world today.

    We thought it was appropriate to go visit the temporary accommodation of our previous ancestors that were shipped over to build this place back in 1850

    1849 - ORDER OF COUNCIL
    Included in the dispatches sent to the Colonial Office in London by Governor Fitzgerald were "a set of resolutions…demanding the formation of a penal establishment on a large scale" delivered to him by a deputation from a public meeting held in Perth on 23 February. Secretary of State for the Colonies in London, Earl Grey, had an Order in Council passed permitting the Governor to declare the colony "a place to which convicts could be sent". This allowed ticket of leave men to be included amongst transportees, but they "had to be connected with some kind of establishment". Unwilling Emigrants (1959) 

    1849 - COLONIAL POLICE FORCE EST
    The Western Australian Police Force was officially established by the Police Ordinance Act. This Act established a formal police force with a Chief of Police, supported by a legislated organisational structure

    1850 - FIRST CONVICTS ARRIVE
    Convicts in WA arrived off Fremantle with the first shipment of 75 transportees aboard the chartered Indiaman Scindian on 1 June. Early convicts were men selected because they had almost finished their sentences and were therefore less difficult to control. There were no female convicts sent to WA. The first Convict Establishment was situated in premises leased from the Harbour Master of Fremantle, Captain Daniel Scott, consisting of a wool shed and some other buildings which occupied the land about where the Esplanade Hotel presently stands; a limestone store was added by convict labour later. All the original buildings were demolished to make way for other structures over time. Convict Depots, to handle the distribution of ticket of leave men, were gradually established in metropolitan and country areas including Fremantle, North Fremantle, Freshwater Bay (Claremont), Mt Eliza (at foot of Kings Park, Perth), Guildford, York, Toodyay, Bunbury, Albany, Champion Bay District (near Geraldton), Port Gregory (coast north of Geraldton) and Greenough. Ticket of leave men were allowed to send for their wives provided they had the money for it.

    1852 - CONSTRUCTION BEGINS
Ninety five sappers and miners, 20 Field Company, Royal Engineers arrived. Construction of the 4 two storey houses lining the west boundary wall at the front of the Establishment began; these were to house the senior officers of the institution and were all completed by 1857. A grand two-storey house, designed by Henderson (later to be known as ‘The Knowle’) was built slightly to the south of the Establishment. He moved into it with his wife and their young son when it was completed (this became the original premises of Fremantle Hospital when that institution was founded in 1897; it still stands in the Hospital grounds). In November the building of the Main Cell Block of the Convict Establishment began.

    1855 - MAIN CELL BLOCK OPENED
Southern wing of Convict Establishment’s Main Cell Block opened for use – On June 1 first convicts transferred from temporary Establishment at Scott’s Warehouse. Boundary walls of permanent Establishment completed.

    1859 - OFFICALLY COMPLETED
    Convict Establishment project at Fremantle officially completed on 31 December.

    1861-1864 - ASYLUM BUILT
    Asylum at Fremantle (now the Fremantle Arts Centre) built by convict labour.

    1868 - TRANSPORT ENDS
    Transportation of convicts from UK to Western Australia (and to Australia) officially ended. The last ship carrying 280 convicts was the Hougoumont, which arrived on 9 January. "It is believed that 9501 convicts stepped onto Western Australian soil alive" conveyed here on the voyages of variously named vessels

    1888 - ALLOWS BUILT
The gallows (execution chamber) built at Fremantle Prison — from this timeBandyupbecame the colony’s (and later the State’s) only legal place of execution.

    1889- NW CORNER WALLED OFF
The north-west corner of Fremantle Prison was walled off and some extra buildings added; this became Female Division (Women’s Prison).


    1964 - LAST EXECUTION
    Tried and convicted for murder, Eric Edgar Cooke was hanged at Fremantle Prison. In Western Australia, he was the last man to face capital punishment (later officially abolished by an act of State Parliament in 1984). Cooke was a serial killer, and although he was tried for only one murder, that of John Stucke, evidence plus his own confessions suggest he killed others during his 3 or 4 year reign of terror in the suburbs of Perth.

    1969-1970 - FEMALE PRISONERS TRANSFERED
    Inmates and staff of Female Division (Women’s Prison) were transferred to Bandyup Women’s Training Centre a newly built medium security facility (about 16 km from Perth) in January 1970.
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  • Fremantle Market

    15 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    The grand old Victorian building was designed by architects H.J.Eales and Charles Oldham. Sir John Forrest, the Premier of Western Australia, laid the foundation stone on Saturday November 6 1897, with construction finishing in 1898 at a cost of £8268.
    This building is one of only two surviving municipal market buildings in Western Australia, and one of the few in Australia that continues to be used for its original purpose.
    The building functioned as a wholesale food and produce market until the 1950's and would no doubt have been an eclectic mix of fresh produce, reflective of the many migrants who flocked to the Port City of Fremantle.
    The building eventually became a packing and distribution centre until the early 1970's before undergoing a complete restoration in 1975 by the Fremantle City Council. The Fremantle Markets was officially added to the Register of Heritage Places in November of that year.
    When the refurbished Fremantle Markets was reopened on 31 October 1975, there was a significant addition that continues to be one of its most popular attractions: Farmer’s Lane. This area to the rear of the market’s building because the site where fruit and vegetables were sold. It was not until 1993 however, that the permanent building to ‘Farmer’s Lane’ was completed, designed by Brian Klopper. The building was awarded a Royal Australia Institute of Architecture Commendation in the same year
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  • Fremantle Prison Tunnels

    15 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    We also took a tunnel tour , armed and dangerous with hard hat , modelling the climbing gear which happened to put Jamy’s balls into his neck! we descended 20m down three sets of ladders to the underground tunnel system built by the inmates by hand in the dark with just a pick and shovel, in waist height water,, clambering though dark tunnels mostly bent over with your fellow tunnellers arse in ones face you got the idea very quickly how brutal this work was back then. The humidity was intense but the temp was a comfortable 20 degrees. We also got to paddle a two man boat though the narrow tunnels filled with water. On the ascent back up the three sets of ladders to the surface I quickly realised how much of an oompa lumper I felt hauling a dead weight to freedom and feared my new very painful , very long breads might actually be the death of me.

    The tunnel system in Fremantle Prison was built by prisoners to provide the prison and later the town of Fremantle with a supply of fresh water from an aquifer. The tunnels are approximately one kilometre (0.6 mi) long and connect to South Beach in South Fremantle.They were constructed in the 1850s when shafts were sunk into the limestone bedrock to provide fresh water for the prison.The tunnels were closed in 1910, although the groundwater continued to be used for the prison's gardens.

    A tunnel network exists under the prison, including a one-kilometre (0.6 mi) connection to South Beach in South Fremantle. It was built by prisoners, but the purpose was not to enable escapes; their labour was used to provide the prison, and later the town of Fremantle, with a supply of fresh water. Guards in a gun tower adjacent to the tunnel entrance prevented any attempted escapes.
    In 1852, during construction of the buildings, shafts were sunk into the limestone bedrock to provide the prison with fresh water from an aquifer. In 1874, the Fremantle's "Water House Well", used to supply ships, suffered storm damage. This prompted a tank to be installed at the prison, behind the main cell block, to offer the town an alternative water supply. Prisoners worked a pump to fill the tank, which was connected to the jetties through gravity-fed pipes.
    Increasing demand led to the construction of a reservoir in 1876, from which water was drawn, still pumped by prisoners. From 1888 to 1894, additional wells were built, connected by a series of tunnels or horizontal drives[a] 20 metres (66 ft) under the north-east of the prison. A steam pump was implemented, which drew 68,000 litres (15,000 imperial gallons) per hour of water into the new East Reservoir. In 1896, a town reservoir was constructed on Swanbourne Street, fed from the prison by a triple expansion steam-driven pump which could take more than 4.5 million litres (1 million imperial gallons) per day from the prison tunnels. Prisoners, relieved of manual pumping, were employed to supply wood and stoke boilers.
    The Metropolitan Sewerage & Water Supply authority took over control of the pumping station from 1901 until 1910, when both the prison and town were connected to Perth's metropolitan water supply.The tunnels were closed in 1910 but the groundwater continued to be used for the prison's gardens. In 1989, oil leaking from nearby tanks contaminated the water. The pollution was eventually cleared by 1996 through bioremediation.
    Since the prison's closure the water supply system including the tunnels, were the subject of heritage studies, including a 2004 inspection by the Western Australia Maritime Museum. The tunnels were re-opened in mid-2005, and within one year the main shaft had been refurbished, including "installation of audio-visual equipment, railings and lighting as well as the removal of debris from the access shaft and tunnels, the creation of new steel platforms and ladders and the addition of extra limestone rocks in the tunnels to help lift users out of the water.
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  • Fremantle Cemetery - Heritage trail

    17 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    Now there’s cemetery’s and there’s cemetery, this is the biggest cemetery I’ve ever sen ,the cemetery occupies 46 hectares of land  I didn’t realise Fremantle had that many people to fill it since 1898, the variety of religions, nationalities is insane.
    It’s equipped with a crematorium and three chapels. Offers a wide range of monumental and lawn burial areas and memorial gardens and the opening of the Fremantle Mausoleum in 2005 has further expanded the range of options available to families, there’s the vault ,a below ground burial vaults are available at Fremantle for those who are seeking a below ground entombment option.oh and there’s a cafe!
    We were here to walk the heritage trail and I was on the hunt for Ronald Belford “Bon” Scott and since visiting the fremantle prison the unmarked graves of Martha Rendell & Eric Edgar Cooke.

    Fremantle Cemetery was established in 1898.
    The first burial took place at Fremantle Cemetery on 2 July 1899.  For its first six decades, the cemetery was used only for burials, until a crematorium and adjoining chapel were constructed in 1959.  Since its opening, over 42,000 burials and 66,000 cremations have taken place at Fremantle Cemetery. Now if you do the maths? Say $6000 for a funeral x that by 108,000 , that’s a whopping ,tax free turnover of 396,042,000 million! and that’s not including the head stone! Now if that’s not ringing bells? Come On!? I’m surprised they didn’t charge entry!?

    The Fremantle Cemetery Heritage Walk Trail encapsulates a sample of Fremantle’s history, passing by the gravesites of notable and notorious Western Australians who all, in their own way, contributed to the rich heritage of Fremantle.  

    Ronald Belford “Bon” Scott was the lead singer with legendary Australian rock group AC/DC from 1974 until 1980. His death after a heavy drinking bout in London left him a tragic hero. His memorial has become a cultural landmark and continues to be one of the most frequently visited sites at Fremantle Cemetery. It is listed with the National Trust of Australia as a historic site.
    Bon Scott moved to Melbourne from the Scottish village of Kirriemuir. When he was six, the family moved to Fremantle. He attended John Curtin High School and began his musical education at 11 with the Fremantle Pipe Band. In the early 1970s Bon appeared on vocals and drums with Fremantle groups The Spektors and The Valentines, and with the band Fraternity in Adelaide.
    In 1974 a motorcycle accident interrupted Scott’s musical career and he found casual work in the music industry working for Vince Lovegrove, his co-vocalist for The Valentines. Lovegrove introduced Scott to a small band called AC/DC who were looking for a new lead singer. Bon was able to persuade the band to take him on as their front man. His distinctive, hard-edged voice, rebellious presence on stage and song-writing skills helped to take the band to the top of the charts, gaining local and international success with iconic albums such as High Voltage, Let There Be Rock, and Highway to Hell.
    Each Christmas Bon would return to visit his parents, Chick and Isa Scott, at Spearwood to recuperate. The last time – in 1979 – it was apparent his health was suffering. When Bon died in 1980, the funeral at Fremantle Cemetery for one of the city’s favourite adopted sons was conducted in secret.

    Martha Rendell (1871-1909) Convicted Child Murderer  
    Details of the early life of Martha Rendell are sparse. It is known she left her husband and their several children in South Australia and came to Perth in her mid-thirties. Here she was instrumental in persuading carpenter Thomas Morris, who had known Rendell in Adelaide, to leave his wife.
    When Martha Rendell joined Morris at a weatherboard house in East Perth in 1907, she also took over the care of the five Morris children. Over the next 15 months, three of the children died from “throat afflictions”. It was only when another child became ill in 1909 that police became suspicious.
    The Coroner found that Rendell had killed the children by regularly painting their throats with hydrochloric acid. Soon after, a jury found her guilty of one death despite the lack of a motive. They had heard that Rendell was a “sadist and pervert” and the judge said she was a “moral deformity”. Morris, who had been jointly charged, was acquitted. Rendell became the only woman to be hanged in Fremantle Prison. She died protesting her innocence. There was controversy at the time, with many claiming she did not get a fair trial. The debate occasionally resumes.

    Eric Edgar Cooke (1931-1964) Convicted Serial Murderer

    Eric Edgar Cooke achieved notoriety as the last person to be executed in Western Australia. He was a random killer who ended Perth’s relaxed mode of living exemplified by unlocked doors and sleeping outdoors on a summer’s night.
    At 14 Cooke left the fifth school he had attended and took on a variety of jobs. Later he joined the regular army where he was noted for his skill with a rifle. He was discharged after it was discovered that he had a string of previous convictions for house break-ins.
    Meanwhile Cooke married Sally Lavin, a 19-year-old waitress, and they produced seven children. During this time, Cooke was arrested several times as a “Peeping Tom”, for stealing a car, and for other minor offences.
    Early on 27 January 1963 Cooke killed three people and wounded another two. In August that year he shot dead a student on a babysitting assignment. Police still had no suspect for the murders as Perth went into a state of deep hysteria. Locksmiths and dealers in large dogs prospered.
    Surveillance police arrested Cooke as he returned to reclaim a rifle he’d hidden earlier. The sigh of relief around the city was almost tangible. After his arrest, Cooke confessed to numerous crimes including eight murders, 14 attempted murders and many burglaries. It was generally agreed that Cooke had committed at least another two earlier and unsolved murders. The story which came out at his trial was one of parental abuse and brain damage.
    Cooke was convicted. He went to the gallows – the last person to be hanged in WA – claiming he had committed the murders for which John Button and Darryl Beamish had been convicted. John Button’s conviction was quashed in 2002, and Darryl Beamish was exonerated in 2005.

    Ivan “Russian Jack” Fredericks (c1864-1904) Miner

    One of Western Australia’s most colourful pioneers, Ivan Fredericks, better known as Russian Jack, was born in the Russian port of Archangel. In 1886 he arrived in the Kimberley to make his fortune in the gold strike. According to historian Geoffrey Blainey, Russian Jack pushed a barrow with shafts 2.2m long and a wooden wheel so wide it would not sink into soft sand.
    Russian Jack personified the notion of “mateship”. On one waterless stretch he overtook two old men who were too tired to carry their swags. He loaded the swags on his barrow and delivered them to the nearest waterhole. On another occasion he wheeled a sick prospector in his wheelbarrow through the Kimberley’s harsh landscape to shelter and water.
    But for all his noble deeds, Russian Jack never struck his bonanza. Once he fell 20m into an open cut while walking in the dark. He was found three days later in a sorry state. His first comment to his rescuers was, “I’ve missed a shift”.
    Russian Jack was about 40 when he died in Fremantle of a hard life coupled with even harder drinking. His last years were spent in a shelter for the homeless and in prison. A Catholic priest, Father John Smyth, performed the service around his unmarked grave. Almost a century later Ivan was chosen as “a symbol of nobility” by the Russian Orthodox Church and a marble cross was erected on his grave. He is also honoured by a bronze statue outside the Visitors’ Centre in Halls Creek.

    Annie Jane “Nurse Sheedy” Clune (1870-1945) Midwife

    Annie Clune was known for much of her life as Annie “Nurse” Sheedy. Annie came to Fremantle with her baker husband and five sons from Cessnock, New South Wales. They lived near Wray Avenue.
    When her husband, James Sheedy, died at the age of 40 in 1908, Nurse Sheedy started a small maternity hospital at her home. In 1920 she moved up to Ocean View, a large, luxurious house in Solomon Street built by Elias Solomon, which still stands to this day. It had been used as a military hospital since 1917 which must have had a particular poignancy for Nurse Sheedy, as two of her sons were killed in World War I.
    The hospital advertised “homely accommodation for ladies”, providing “fresh milk daily from own cows”. Some patients, particularly Italians and Yugoslavs, would trade fresh fish or vegetables in return for their accommodation.
    Nurse Sheedy remarried and officially became Annie Clune, but remained known as Nurse Sheedy. One of her sons Arthur (“Barney”) Sheedy became a celebrated footballer with East Fremantle. “Barney” Sheedy married Hilda Bee, whose mother worked at the hospital as a cook. Nurse Sheedy’s grandson, Jack Sheedy, was an even more famous footballer. Jack’s estimate of his grandmother’s significance: “She must have delivered half of the people of Fremantle."
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  • Quairading

    18–19 feb. 2025, Australien ⋅ 🌬 22 °C

    Free site WITH electric but no water , we were the only ones there! Billy got to run and play ball whilst a lovely breeze blew across the flat land. Equiped with a huge coop , servo ,bank and even next to the info board there are very clean toilets and a shower for the travellers passing though.Well worth the overnight stay with a few things to see.

    A vibrant community with a population of about 1200, their biggest industry producing cereal and grain crops, forestry, wool, sheep and cattle, supported by rural service industries. The community provides a variety of volunteer-run cultural, sporting and social activities.

    The Pink Lake
    The Pink Lake in Quairading is regarded locally as a natural phenomenon. Situated 11km east of Quairading, regarded locally as a natural phenomenon. Divided by the Bruce Rock – Quairading Road, at certain times of the year one side of the lake has a distinctive pink colour, whereas the other side remains blue.  During summer, evaporation causes the water level to drop and salt builds up on the fences and trees. When the water returns, the salt causes the pink colour.
    Around the lake and in it is the reminder that the blue tree project is reaching across Australia, we’ve heard the stories in Katherine NT , Gold Coast QLD, and travelling the length of WA you see it everywhere! Behind Each Blue Tree Lies A Story! https://bluetreeproject.com.au/

    El Toro
    A 500kg sculpture constructed from retired tools, machine parts and farm scrap sourced throughout the Wheatbelt by Narembeen artist, Jordan Sprigg. Sprigg spent over 400 hours through 2018 bringing life to El Toro and we're so delighted he's here in Quairading catching the eyes and hearts of locals and visitors alike.
    El Toro was purchased by the Quairading Rainmakers Inc after a successful eight month community crowd funding campaign.
    Contributions came from individuals and families within the community, but also the Shire of Quairading, local clubs and organisations plus grant funding via CBH (Cooperative Bulk Handling) and FRRR (Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal). The driving idea behind the campaign was to purchase a piece of art that would create a focal point in our main street worth stopping to look at, by a Wheatbelt based creative with an established following.
    The bull symbolises strength, prosperity and fertility-qualities we believe are mirrored in the community spirit of Quairading. As an added bonus, the bull is the emblem for our Quairading Bulls Football Club, Quairading Belles Netball team and Quairading Bullettes Hockey team.
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  • Wamenusking - Rabbit Proof Fence

    18 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ 🌬 22 °C

    The Rabbit Proof Fence

    Ever since discovering the book and film “the rabbit proof fence “ I’ve made it one of our missions to find some part of it. If you don’t know the story you need to read or watch it , it opens up the box to the appalling treatment of Indigenous Australians by the Australian gruberment!
    The film/book tells the true story of three aboriginal girls who are forcibly taken from their families in 1931 to be trained as domestic servants as part of an official Australian government policy. They make a daring escape and embark on an epic 1,500 mile journey to get back home - following the rabbit-proof fence that bisects the Australian continent

    Heading to Wave rock and staying at Quairading overnight gave us the opportunity to track down part of THE No. 2 RABBIT PROOF FENCE.

    The 'Longest Fence in the World' - the Rabbit Proof Fence of Western Australia.
    Location: Wamenusking, Shire of Quairading, 180km south east of Perth.
    We were standing here surrounded by some of the wheatbelt's most productive and fertile land and where at the site of a very important part of Western Australia's agricultural and engineering development.
    A remarkable example of Aussie pioneering determination and spirit, the Rabbit Proof Fence was constructed by the Australian Government to halt an invasion of rabbits in plague proportions from the other side of the country.

    RABBITS RUN RIOT
    Rabbits were first introduced into Australia in 1859 by Victorian farmer, Thomas Austin.
    He imported and released 24 rabbits from England on his property to breed for hunting.
    By 1872 these rabbits had bred to plague proportions in eastern Australia, eating out crops and pasture.

    Thirty five years after the initial rabbit release they had spread a distance of approximately 1300 miles ( 2093km ) on a direct course.
    Despite officials poisoning an estimated 200,000 rabbits each night, the destructive furry wave seemed unstoppable as it rampaged westwards leaving behind a wasteland.
    In 1901 a Royal Commission recommended a barrier be constructed across the country to divide pastoral land from the dry bush lands in the eastern part of Western Australia.
    The idea for a Rabbit Proof Fence was sown.

    The Fence was built in three stages.
    The No. 1 Rabbit Proof Fence began construction in 1901 and extended 1,139 miles (1,822.4km) from Starvation Bay on the State's south coast to 80 Mile Beach at Wallal.
    The No. 2 Rabbit Proof Fence was started in 1904 weaving its way 724 miles (1,158.4km) from Point Anne through Cunderdin, Yalgoo before connecting to Fence No. 1 at Gum Creek.
    The No. 3 Rabbit Proof Fence commenced in 1906, and extended 160 miles (256km) between Yalgoo and the west coast south of Kalbarri.
    The Rabbit Proof Fence, including No. 1, 2 and 3 fence lines was completed in 1907 and stretched 2,023 miles (3,236.8 kilometres) - four times longer than originally proposed.
    The total cost of construction was 337,941 pounds ($675,882).

    Traps were erected approximately 5 miles apart.
    They were 12 feet long, 7 feet wide and 3 feet 6 inches high, and entirely enclosed in rabbit netting, including at the base.
    A panel of the main fence formed one side of the trap.
    At each end, and hard up against the main fence, wire netting funnels lead into the trap.
    Leading out from the funnels at each end of the trap - and at 45 degrees angle to the main fence - were two wing fences, each 60 feet long.
    The stray rabbits running along the fence would get caught in between the wing and the yard trap. They would move through the funnel of wire into the trap and couldn't escape.

    THE No. 2 RABBIT PROOF FENCE
    Even before its completion rabbits were past what existed of the No. 1 Rabbit Proof Fence.
    In 1904 the rabbit invasion was a very real threat to the fertile Avon Valley. It was therefore decided to build an inner fence. Subsequently the No. 2 Rabbit Proof Fence - part of where we were standing - was commenced. The fence line was constructed north and south from Cunderdin.
    Because rabbits were in numerous areas west of the No. 1 Fence, high priority was given to the erection of the No. 2 Fence.
    An incredible effort by workers saw 724 miles of the No. 2 fence completed just four months after its commencement date
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  • Shackleton - Australia’s smallest bank

    19 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    The Bankwest bank at Shackleton claims to be Australia’s smallest bank. This is a claim that few would argue with. Measuring only 3 metres by 4 metres the bank closed its doors from business for the last time in 1997.
    Thoughout its life, the building has been an Aircraft Observation Post during World War II, a Child Care Centre and the Bank of New South Wales before it finally became known as Bankwest.

    Shackleton is a small town in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia.
    The town is located close to the Salt River and along the disused railway line between Bruce Rock and Quairading.
    The 2016 population was 96.
    Originally a railway siding for the railway line when constructed in 1913, the town was developed privately before being gazetted in 1951. The town is named after the Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton.
    The local Agricultural Hall was officially opened in 1920 by Mr. H. Griffiths MLA; it was built on land provided by Dr. Germyn.
    The Bankwest branch in the town claimed to be the world's smallest bank. The building measures 3 by 4 metres (10 by 13 ft), but was closed in 1997.
    The surrounding areas produce wheat and other cereal crops. The town is a receival site for Cooperative Bulk Handling.
    The town had an Australian rules football team from 1925 to 1970 before it disbanded.
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  • Bruce Rock - Centenary Mosaic Pathway

    19 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    The mosaic pathway was created for Bruce Rock’s centenary celebrations in 2013. The pathway contains over 300 mosaic slabs which show farms, buildings, churches, sporting groups, shops and families from days gone by.

    At Bruce Rock there is a sign which reads: "This marks the camp site of John Rufus Bruce after whom Bruce Rock was named." The town got its name from a low granite outcrop which lies to the east of the town and which was named after a sandalwood cutter, John Rufus Bruce, who set up his camp near a soak at the base of the rock.
    Bruce Rock is a small wheatbelt service town with the surrounding countryside being used primarily for wheat growing and sheep grazing.
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  • Wadderin - 1km Fence Of Shoes & Boots

    19 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    It’s certainly not what you expect to see when driving through the back roads of the eastern Wheatbelt.
    But stretching over more than a kilometre on the road between Narembeen and Mt Walker is a fence full of boots and shoes — more than 1000 of them. And we have to say there were some decent boots amongst the collection. On the other side people have started to leave underwear, so of course it would be rude not to!?

    It was the idea of Narembeen farmers Helen and Ross Fidge after a driving holiday through Nebraska about eight years ago when they took a wrong turn and came across boots on fence posts.
    The boots were designed to protect the posts during bad weather, but WA’s “boot mile” is solely for fun.
    “It took a while to take off, ” Mrs Fidge said. “Ross started off with some old shoes, then he put a sign up and the next thing we knew, people started dropping off shoes near the fence.
    “Ross would go out to the fence and there would often be a bag of shoes just left there, so he hanged them up.”
    That was a few years ago and while some new shoes and boots still arrive, the Fidges are not actively collecting and putting them on the fence.
    “The fence stretched to a rise in the road and we thought that was a good place to stop,” Mrs Fidge said.
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  • Wave Rock

    20–24 feb. 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    Wave Rock's journey began over 2.7 billion years ago. This magnificent structure, stretching 15 meters in height and 110 meters in length, is part of the larger Hyden Rock formation. It was shaped by the relentless forces of nature – wind and water erosion over millennia sculpted the rock into its current form, resembling a giant wave frozen in time just before breaking.
    The rock's composition, primarily granite, has been weathered through chemical processes, creating the stunning vertical stripes of colour. These hues, ranging from deep reds to yellows and greys, are the result of the iron and algae leaching on the rock's surface, painting a natural masterpiece that changes with the sunlight.

    A Geological and Cultural Icon
    Wave Rock is not only a geological marvel but also a site of cultural significance. For the Indigenous people of Australia, particularly the Njaki Njaki speaking people, this rock holds spiritual importance. It features in their Dreamtime stories and is a living reminder of their enduring connection to the land.

    For centuries, the Njaki Njaki speaking people of the Noongar nation knew and revered the rock, but it remained largely unknown to the outside world until the late 19th and early 20th centuries. European settlers and explorers, venturing into the interior of Western Australia in search of agricultural lands, stumbled upon this extraordinary formation. The rock captured public imagination when photographs began to circulate, showcasing its unique wave-like structure. By the mid-20th century, Wave Rock had become a symbol of Australia's rich natural heritage and a testament to its geological diversity. The formation, once a hidden gem known only to the Indigenous inhabitants, evolved into a celebrated landmark, drawing visitors from around the globe, eager to witness its grandeur and delve into its ancient history.
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  • Hyden - Mulka Cave

    21 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

    We didn’t get to do the humps as it was rather warm to leave the mystery bus 🚌 with Billy so we visited Mulka’s cave for 10mins. Paul got an instant hibby jibbies as he entered the cave yet at that point he knew nothing of the legend?

    The name Mulka comes from an Aboriginal legend associated with the cave. Mulka was the illegal son of woman who fell in love with a man with whom marriage was forbidden according to their law.

    It is believed that a result of breaking these rules, she bore a son with crossed eyes. Even though he grew to be an outstandingly strong man of colossal height, his crossed eyes prevented him from aiming a spear accurately and becoming a successful hunter.

    Out of frustration it is said Mulka turned to catching and eating human children and he became the terror of the district. He lived in Mulka’s Cave, where the imprints of his hands can still be seen, much larger and higher than that of an ordinary man.

    There are over 450 separate hand prints and images on the walls of the two main chambers.
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  • Hyden Iron Sculptures

    21 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    The sculptures are made from old machinery, implements and scrap metal that tell the history of Hyden, from early times prior to settlement, through to the first tourists in the 1970’s.
    This project was initiated by local business owners, the Hyden Progress Association and funded by Wave Rock Tourist Development and Government grants. 12 locals volunteered for this project and started searching rubbish dumps for suitable bits and pieces of old farm machinery, implements and scrap metal. Some of these volunteers had never welded prior to this project, but soon became adept, thanks to the lessons they received from local farmers. Over four weekend workshops, the six initial sculptures were completed. A local farmer and sculpture extraordinaire continued with the theme and made most of the remaining pieces laden with aspects of his wonderful humour.
    Other generous locals supplied limestone blocks for the plinth and the gravel fill. The Shire of Kondinin supplied the concrete path at the south end of the sculptures. Original mud bricks taken from a dilapidated local homestead were transported to the site and used to create a small mud-brick hut. This replicates the type of houses that pioneers built in the 1920s and 1930s. The bricks had been made originally for a house on a property east of Hyden that had been built in the 1930s by Tom Payne.
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  • Lake Magic Swimming Pool - Salt Bath

    22 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Salt Bath - Lake Magic’s swimming Pool

    Denis Collins constructed a 20m round, 6m deep swimming pool-like gypsum pond whose buoyancy and therapeutic properties are greater than those of the Dead Sea.

    What better place to update one’s gardening skills whilst lying back with a sensation of weightless with the sun cooking you as one floats effortlessly.You could spend all day in there if there wasn’t a threat of third degree burns!
    More buoyant than the Dead Sea. It’s like sitting on a noodle under the water or sitting on a submerged inflatable device but there’s nothing there, what you notice is swimming is actually more difficult as we learn to become buoyant, it’s impossible to sink, the water is a vibrant turquoise blue and extremely salty. You become aware you can actually put your hands in the air without putting your feet on the bottom , bobbing up and down (it’s 6m deep ) or put your hands behind your head or reading a book with your legs crossed infront of you which usually you would sink! A surreal experience in a stark beautiful location next to Lake Magic.

    Lake Magic
    Lake magic is known for the water changing colours from green to pink.The colour of the water varies significantly according to the weather and time of the year, for us we could see yellow, especially round the edges.
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  • Kulin - The Tin Horse Highway

    23 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    We did laugh as we came upon the Rachael "Raygun" Gunn, who became a global laughing stock after her performance at the Paris Olympics .Officially now know in Kulin as NEIGH- GUN!
    The Kulin locals have strategically placed their tin horse masterpieces in the paddocks lining the 15-kilometre stretch of road which is known as 'The Tin Horse Highway'.

    What started as an authentic community marketing campaign to promote the annual Kulin Bush Races has become one of Western Australia’s most popular self-drives.

    There are currently over 70 tin horses displayed on the Tin Horse Highway, in the town site of Kulin and along other roads to Kulin.
    The horses are made to reflect a diverse range of themes, with inventive use of materials. This eclectic exhibition is a one-of-a-kind and a credit to the creative spirit of the local community of Kulin.

    Kulin Tin Horse Highway Documentary

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HG6RyLQnJCM
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  • Corrigin Dog Cemetery

    23 februari 2025, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    A peaceful and very moving place amongst the trees surround by the wheatbelt, a dedicated space for beloved pets. The cemetery features various gravestones, some adorned with solar lights and artificial lawns, one precious boy - Beau McDonald , an amazing tribute to a beautiful boy who moved from Townsville 2009vto Corrigin showcases the deep affection owners have for their dogs.
    A worthwhile stop for dog lovers and over the far side lies the cat called Bluey , the perfect life companion.

    This unique resting place came about because of the death of Strike, who was Paddy Wright's best mate.

    The Dog Cemetery was originally established in 1974, when local identity and returned serviceman, Paddy Wright buried Strike at this site, with a cross signifying the resting place of his faithful old dog.
    Years later in 1981 another local, Alan Henderson also buried his dog, Lassie in the same spot and built a headstone to recognise his dog's devotion to their family. People who saw the headstone asked Mr Henderson for the same treatment for their own pets and Alan spent many years during his retirement, tending to the upkeep and beautification of the cemetery area.
    Since then the Corrigin Dog Cemetery has grown remarkably and so has its fame, as a tribute to 'man's best friend' with over 200 loved ones now buried, the cemetery is unique to Corrigin.
    In 1992 a large sculpture of a dog was established at the entrance to the Dog Cemetery.
    This sculpture is approximately 5 feet high, and was constructed by a professional sculptor at a cost of $5,000, paid for with Prize Money awarded to the Corrigin Tidy Town and Tourism Committee, for their hard work over the previous 3 years. The committee felt that a statue would be a good attraction to the area and assist in the promotion of Corrigin.
    Time has proved their decision to be a valuable one, with the Corrigin Dog Cemetery creating much public interest and visited by many visitors form all over Australia and around the world.
    The Dog Cemetery, a famous attraction that adds to the uniqueness of Corrigin!
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  • Swan Valley

    28 feb.–4 mars 2025, Australien ⋅ ☁️ 32 °C

    Swan Valley 27th Feb - 3rd March

    The Swan Valley, Western Australia's oldest wine region and the second oldest in Australia, has a winemaking history spanning nearly 200 years. Established alongside colonial Guildford, it remains a cornerstone of the state's viticulture.

    In 1829, botanist Thomas Waters planted the first grapevines at Olive Farm in South Guildford, recognising the Mediterranean climate's suitability for viticulture. By 1834, the region produced its first commercial vintage, marking the start of its rich winemaking tradition.

    The actual caravan site was a strange place to get your bearings , surround by industrial estates and doggie neighbor hoods and a rough round the edges caravan park that was in desperate needed of care and attention or just flatting. We hired a couple of electric bikes so choose this park solely because of location being so close to the winery’s.

    28th Feb Old Young’s Distillery- Henley Brook
    The bikes got delivered to the park, it was late morning we set off!With our seats burning in 30deg heat! The temp was set to rise over the next few days so we only had two days to wizz round without risking heat stoke!

    First stop Old Young’s distillery.
    We knew we were in for a ride as soon as we entered though the wrong door and was greeted by the anti christ! Her words not ours!
    I have to say I’ve never tasted such good gin and vodka but then again that could have been the wall paper that seems to move when you stared at it!
    Obviously we finished off with a small purchase.

    SIX SEASONS GIN
    This herbal and earthy gin pays tribute to the six seasons of the Noongar people indigenous to the Swan Valley. A savory gin for special occasions that makes a unique and complex martini.

    SMOKED VODKA
    Gather around the campfire. We’ve collected hickory, cherrywood, peat and eucalyptus to make a distiller’s mix that adds a smoky dimension to classic cocktails such as an old-fashioned or manhattan, not to mention making a downright dirty vodka martini.

    Next stop
    Beelzebub Brewing Co
    We were actually looking for a different brewery but as one can imagine when you’re on a bike and have traveled Km’s and pub will do!
    We had the brewery to our selves maybe because it was early afternoon and only two alcoholics riding electric bikes would make the journey in a modest heatwave but someone has too!
    We walked away with a 1lt pale ale jug after having ordered their sample paddle with an array of different tasters accompanied by a rather poor cheese board!
    The function room was a surprise a giant shed with decor which resembled the Victorian era with a mix of the squid games with a dash of industrial which I rather liked.
    On the way back Paul received his “first” puncture, we had just enough time to get to the local bike shop , fix it and get a back up tube and pump incase!
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  • Swan Valley Day 2

    1 mars 2025, Australien ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    32c today, last day on the bikes as the thought of riding in 34-36c wasn't really appealing!

    Harris organic wines
    First stop 11km bike ride to Baskerville, with 1.5km to go , can you believe we got a second flat from the winery.
    Thankfully we were armed and dangerous with a pump and spare.

    Greeted by the owner and his very friendly dog , sadly the owner had as much ump as a wet dish cloth.
    Thankfully his wine didn’t match his enthusiasm towards his customers, again we were the only people there! We purchased half a dozen different wines including a dessert wine which I would never of chosen if not of had a tasting,

    After our wine tasting we got to work fixing our second puncture in the shade under the QUERCUS SUBER Cork Oak.
    The bark from this tree is used for the production of wine corks.

    We returned the following day in the mystery bus to collect our wine via the house of honey and to our surprise it’s as if the owner had received a personality transplant during the night! A totally different greeting and during the conversation he did say “he wished more of the public were like us!?” but then again we did purchase 6 bottles of wine, maybe that’s a clue! But hats off to him he makes incredible organic wine and his logo is really cool even if he was a miserable fart!

    Second stop- Sittella Winery
    Wizzing down the HWay we arrived rather wind swept to our next location, walking into a rather flash winery looking like you literally has been pulled though a bush backwards wasn’t the look I was really going for as it was coming apparent that this type of winery was attracting the WW!? ( Wine wankers) if at 50years.
    If there is one thing I’ve learnt to be comfortable with is “I don’t give a fuck” I been there got the t shirt , worked and played hard in some really ,what some people would love to label as “refined, exclusive” take me as I am, I’m coming though!

    Founded in 1998, Sittella is one of Western Australia’s newest, privately owned wineries. Owners Simon and Maaike Berns have the support of an enthusiastic team of professionals to create and produce high quality traditional wine styles, from both their own and contract vineyards throughout the Swan Valley and Margaret River Region and the Deep South. The winery is named after a small Australian bird, the Sittella, which abounds in the nearby tree-lined Swan River.

    Over the two days we must of covered over 50km’s. Even though the temperature was bordering on v hot , with the wind and tastings life was great wizzing around Swan Valley, up and down hills, over bridges , passing working wineries all the time being assisted by a small power pack lodged between one’s legs whilst modeling the latest gonky head wear.
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  • Estuary Hideaway - Mandurah

    3–8 mars 2025, Australien ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    Estuary Hideaway- Boulevard Mandurah was way too busy for us so we discovered the Estuary Hideaway.
    Nestled upon the serene waters of the Harvey Estuary, the Estuary Holiday Park provides an ideal blend of coastal and estuarine experiences.
    We must of timed it just right coming at the start of the week and leaving just before the weekend as this place is usually full!
    Mud crab is the thing here, Paul tried but the water went too cold, nothing, not even a bit. There were two blokes next door that come here solely for the crabs, they go out in the boat which makes a difference. One of the guys yes kindly offered to show Paul how to cook and dress crabs for whenever the situation finally arises.
    Each afternoon we would stroll down to the waters edge mostly no one there and play ball with Billy.
    Herons and seagulls hung around the still waters edge.
    The site was quite Sandy and at one point we did wonder if we would get out!?
    We had to have a tyre replaced while we were here which turned into a real mess, waking up to the tyre replaced completely flat to then find out they had changed our front with our spare not replacing the tyre at all and paying for that privilege, in the end it was sorted but we had to check into Mandurah Quay Resort to have the time to sort the issue out. This is the joys of traveling in your home when it needs work, it’s very rare you can stay in it while the work is carried out and sometimes it can be all day! You can't walk around all day with a dog in 30+ heat!
    The Quay Resort insisted on a $200 deposit because we had Billy and of course there’s always an issue and you always end up having to fight for your deposit back, which we did!
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