We made it to Adelaide with little fuss on our two flights. Interesting in that some domestic flights they don’t check ID, don’t care about liquids and it is just get on board. Some are more stringent and involve the X-ray machine and sometimes a tap down. The airports so far are small, like Oakland, and easy to get around. We Ubered to our apartment in the CBD of Adelaide. Great location though we were on the verge of getting into an area that was a little dicey.

We got up in the dark at 7am and went out for coffee. Turns out many places don’t open that early. I don’t know when these people go to work but the streets are dead! We walked over later to the Central Market and that was fantastic. Great selection of fruits, nuts, cheeses and meats. We decided to walk around the Torren River which flows thru town. There is a park on both sides and lots of birds.

We walked by the famous(?) Adelaide Oval which hosts cricket and AFL games. Apparently holds 100,000 people. No games during our visit but the ‘Gather Round’ was coming the following week which brings football teams from all over Australia to play a several weeks tournament. Kinda glad we missed it as apparently it is mayhem with all prices skyrocketing. We ended up walking 8 miles that day. We walked thru the Botanic Gardens where some 30,000 fruit bats live! They are also called flying foxes and they are huge, roughly 3 ft wingspan.

Had lunch in the Wine Centre which was great though the Centre sucked as far as any real info on wine in the area. The Botanic Gardens was hosting a Chihuly glass exhibit which we dutifully walked around to each art piece.. OK, but pretty repetitive designs. Took the tram in the am to Glenelg, a beachside community which was great. EZ public transportation. Bought a new slimmed down version of a backpack from Kathmandu as my old Eagle Creek was just that old and had too many pockets. I could never find anything I put into it. Had a great lunch of Bahn Mi and Pho at a hole in the wall and then back to the hotel. We looked for live music as Adelaide is known as ‘The City of Music’, but never really found anything. We tried several other nights but it is nothing like Austin or Nashville for music. The night we went looking for music we walked back thru the fruit bat colony and OMG, 30,000 giant bats taking to the air and all of them are talking! Amazing!

We Ubered to the airport the following day and picked up our Toyota Corolla Hybrid. Small to carry luggage but great on gas mileage. We drove one of these in Margaret River. We drove out to the Barossa Valley and stopped for wine tasting at Penfolds, a veteran and a king of wine making in Australia. We enjoyed a great wine tasting with many very good Shiraz and Cabs. We tasted their signature wine ‘The Grange’, a $1000 a bottle wine and it was very good. I would never buy it though. We visited two other wineries in the Valley but none were as good or even noteworthy. We did have lunch at one of these vineyards, ‘Seppesfield’, and that was good. A gnocchi dish and a prawns dish. Guess which one I had :-).

We finished the day with a hike in Kaiserstuhl Nat’l Park. A pretty walk with birds, a variety of eucalyptus (surprise!) and then some Kangas. The following day, up early. Some coffee then on to Cleland Wildlife Sanctuary. It is run by the Nat’l Park system so just Australia animals. No exotic rhinos etc like other parks. We were one of the first in the park on purpose, and soon after entering Katie is head to head with Red Kangaroos. She gets to feed some of those then on to Swamp Wallabies. We are surrounded by them. They are in our laps, eating our purchased animal food. So cute and gentle.


We are able to feed other K.I. Kangaroos later but there are also many different Cockatoos, Emus, Wombats that are moving about, Echidna’s that are scurrying about, Koalas eating in the trees and Tongarewa Wallabies. A great morning.


We were then off to Adelaide Hills. We tried the sculpture park that was close by. The art was terrible but we did see some new birds. We tasted wine at Shaw + Smith. They had some very good Shiraz. We had lunch of cheese, meats, olives and wine in a local park. The wine tasting at Bird in the Hand was eclectic. Back to the hotel to watch the Warriors beat Denver. Moving day led to a drive to McClaren Vale. We stopped at D’Arenberg. Very artsy. The cube a 4 story wild architectural building with Dali sculptures outside. The wines were great. Loved the Polly champagne and the Dead Arm Shiraz. Very much a carnival like atmosphere. We had a lunch of cheese and crackers outside there then on to Hugh Hamilton, apparently known as the black sheep. The wines were ok there but not great.

We drove on and stopped for dinner at the “Smiling Samoyed’ Pizza and which had pretty good beer and pizza. I bought a 6 pack of tinnies (actually they were in bottles but the locals call them tinnies after the can)! They shorten many words. Things like ‘breakie’ for breakfast, ‘chockie’ for chocolate, ‘wooly’ for woolworths, ‘footy’ for football, and many others. You don’t want to be a wanker or a tosser. Walked amongst some Grey Kangaroos outside of the brewery then on to the ferry at Cape Jarvis, on our way to Kangaroo Island. The ferry was able to take us early as a standby but I still had an hour of driving after dark to our hotel. Amazing amount of roadkill on the highway. I was driving much slower than the posted speed limit because it was so hard to see or anticipate something along the road. Our car rental company found out we were going to the Island and weren’t happy. Told us there would be no insurance for us there. Ended up at a lovely place in Kingscote for two nights. Drove down to the west end to Flinders Nat’l Park. Immediately found a koala in a tree by the bathrooms.

Embarked on a 3 mile hike along the coast with great scenery. Saw our first Crimson Rosellas, a parrot of brilliant reds and blues. Came upon several monitor lizards on our trail. Both about 3 feet long. The whole area and in fact the whole Island is recovering from a massive fire in 2020 that wiped out many trees and many animals. Now, the eucalyptus show signs of regeneration and the animals are coming back. We drove out to Admiral Arch which was much more striking then I anticipated. The sea was in turmoil and the coastline harsh.

Along the edges were 3 types of seals, many had little ones still nursing by them. We visited the Remarkable Rocks which aren’t so remarkable but we did have lunch on a nice park bench looking out at the rocks. A short trip back to look at our Koala above the bathroom and we were then on our way. We stopped at the jetty at Vivonne as wallabies were reported to be there. Nope. We visited the campground there and a Koala was there. Close to the bathroom! What. We ended up back in Kingscote for a dinner at Zone Restaurant which was basically the only place open in town. As usual we had two servers one from France and the other Ireland. There are so many foreign service workers working in Australia on special visas. We woke up and were off before coffee (argh) to see Duck Lagoon. Down a gravel road and minimal water, but a Koala in a tree by the lagoon. And a Koala in a tree by the bathroom! What. We found some coffee in Cygnet River than across the Island to Stokes Beach. What a beautiful beach, kinda hidden in that you have to walk thru a tunnel in the rocks to get there. But, put our feet in the Southern Ocean or maybe it was the Indian Ocean. It’s confusing. Too cold for me to swim.

Around the campground there, Katie found two KI kangaroos that happened to like red Apple there. She was in heaven.

We found another Koala in a tree and not by a bathroom. There were also quite a few Wallabies in the bushes but very shy and apparently not a fan of red apple. We headed towards American River which was close to our ferry departure and good old Google Maps had me on a gravel road for 50 km. Google thinks it is the fastest way and yes the posted speed limit is 110km/hr but really it is a gravel road with potholes and I averaged probably 50 km/hr. Oh well, we did see a beautiful monitor lizard slowly amble off the road. In American River, the word was Wallabies and Black Cockatoos. We walked up and down the coast trail not seeing either. We had a nice lunch overlooking the inlet. The Aussies provide many rest areas, picnic areas along their roads. Really nice. There were quite a few huge pelicans here. Really amazing their size. Finally we moved on to Penneshaw, the town our ferry would leave from. We stopped at a sculpture park along the water and up the canyon. Really nice and by the way, a huge flock of black cockatoos flew overhead and we must have seen more than 20 Wallabies. Unfortunately they were not interested in red apple either. We caught an early ferry and drove to Victor Harbor for the evening. On the drive to Coonawarra the following day there was much less road kill. We did see a huge Wedge-tailed Eagle on a fence post but Katie and I both failed at getting a photo. We had lunch at Di Georgio winery after sampling some ok wines then on to basically next door which was Wynn Vineyards one of the early and well recognized vintners. Very good wines and luckily we were able to book a stay just 3 minutes away. We drove a ways back up the road the next day to Naracoorte to hike in a local park. Saw some Rainbow Lorikeets but no Koala’s as hoped.

We drove back down to Coonawarra where we had a nice wine tasting at Belnaves sitting on a deck over a pond. Wine was ok but the girl serving us recommended Otelia for lunch which turned out great.

We went on our way to the coast stopping at Hollick Hines near Penola. Again ok wines but the server knew nothing about their wines. The drive to Warrnambool on the coast was a zig zag through pastures with some roads being single lanes. Adding some anxiety to the drive was constantly passing Kangaroo roadkill. Warrambool is right on the coast and a quaint small town with a beautiful park down at the water. Took off in the am eventually getting to the Great Ocean Road. Bay of Islands along the way was gorgeous. The sandstone cliffs along the coast are eroded into pillars and arches. This held true at The Grotto and the 12 Apostles. The latter was particularly pretty but clearly built for bus loads of people including helicopter rides.


We were looking for a quick lunch along the way but all the towns seemed jammed with people on this Friday. Eventually figured out we are traveling in the middle of a big 2-3 week school break for upcoming Easter. Everyone was out touring. Made it to Melbourne airport to drop off the car but couldn’t happen without some turmoil trying to find and get to a gas station. Of course the airport was undergoing major construction and google maps and even the posted signs were not correct at times. I always seem to have trouble returning cars at the airport. Nobody got hurt and Ubered to our lovely hotel room in downtown Melbourne. We embarked on a sightseeing walk in the am. Covered about 9 1/2 miles. Beautiful city with a great mix of old and new buildings, lots of parks. A great promenade along the Yarra River.

Walked over to Fitzroy which is described as a Bohemian district that’s become quite trendy. Stopped at a corner pub for a tasty hazy IPA and then lunch at a rooftop restaurant down the street. Picked up some Greek food as takeout later and retired to the hotel.