Buenos Aires, ah we love you

We made it to the airport on time from San Blas. We found the COPA lounge and they had showers! How great was that to get the salt water off and shave. Awesome. We both managed to sleep on the plane though they still were planning on giving us dinner at like 11:30 at night. We passed on dinner but ordered a bourbon and were off to sleep. We woke up to the now usual water carton that was left with us just before landing. We had a long drive in from EZE airport as there was much traffic. When we went thru our last toll booth on the highway, the police were pulling over every motorcycle. Apparently many hide their license plates to avoid toll so they were confiscating bikes. I saw at least 10 bikes up on trucks to be taken away. Our hotel had a room open at 9:30am so we moved in then walked down to Playo de Mayo and Casa Rosado. The latter is said to be pink from cows blood mixed in with the paint. The Casa is where the President of Argentina lives. The Mothers of Plaza Mayo still protest on the plaza every Thursday evening. They protest for lost ones during the last military dictatorship in the 70’s-80’s. Thousands were disappeared.

Walked down to San Telmo district with its cobblestone streets. We toured the indoor market there with its crafts, wine shops and food court. We stopped and shared fried cheese and chorizo with chimichurri, green Provençal, and salsa dips, and of course some wine and beer. Walked back to the hotel then later had dinner along the water at La Cabana, rib eye and top sirloin each about $45, many wines to choose from but most over $200, meal was $250.

We walked to Recoletta cemetery the following morning. The Recoletta district is kinda 60’s -70’s architecture. The Cemetery had huge tombs dating back to the early 1800’s but also modern era ones. Duarte and Eva Peron are buried here but there tomb is not too wild and not on the main aisle.


We had to have a beer across the street from the cemetery at the Rooftop Bar per Alex’s winner suggestion. Great views and super beer, Patagonia 24.7. We managed an hour at the National Museum of Fine Arts. Some Rodin sculptures, various impressionist paintings from Pissarro to Monet to Van Gogh. We walked around Floralis Generica, which is a crazy water art sculpture in a pond but they were setting up for a weekend event so mostly it was closed off. The weekend event turned out to be some kind of Formula F1 ‘demonstration’. Many roads are blocked off in the Recoletta with grand stands being erected. Stan, our food guide later that night said over 500,000 people were expected to watch the event so we will try to avoid that. We started walking back home but got a bit hungry so stopped for empanadas and G&T’s. $60 bucks later we were back walking. Haven’t found anything ‘cheap’ in this city except Uber and public transportation.

We got on a food tour in Palermo Soho that evening and met up with soon to be ‘Porteño’ Stan and a couple from Australia-Donna and Chris.


Fantastic tour of a really interesting neighborhood. Lots of interesting stores, restaurants, breweries, and street art. Stan introduced us to Argentina pizza, apparently more than 50% of the population was Italian in the late 1800’s. Also empanadas at our first restaurant, ‘Picsa’. We went on to 4 other stops and were truly stuffed by the end, from rib eye to churipan to several other local dishes. We sampled good white and red wine and ended up with 2 desserts, Dulce de Leche and Italian Ice Cream.  Great tour and so informative on the culture, the politics, and the arts.


On the Uber ride home we saw street lanes blocked off from cars and full of people. There were performers from musicians to clowns and just a lot of happy noise. Times Square like but for city blocks. Stuffed and in bed by 10pm.

The following day was a Saturday so we walked thru several markets. Many many craft booths around the parks and squares in the city. We ended up back in Palermo for lunch which was a bust as the breweries there hadn’t opened yet as it was only 2 o’clock. We ended the day early trying to get some rest for our evening event

FUTBOL! Katie got us tickets to the River Plates futbol match on Saturday evening. Game time 9:30! The process was onerous. To get a validated ticket required passport scanning and facial recognition apps. We were finally approved and went off to the stadium by subway, then train, and then shoes. Oh, we did buy River Plate jerseys before the game as we heard that they were  important for safety reasons.

I read the stadium guidelines and left my belt at home (apparently a safety issue as well). Quite the waddle to the park for me! We followed a pack to the stadium, being redirected several times by police and volunteers to get us to the right gate as once inside,  the 80,000 fans in the stadium can’t just move around. There are barriers in place. On the way we ran into a gauntlet of police barricading the street.

They had large guns and held shields in their arms. What? Turns out the visiting team’s bus was crossing an intersection down the road and they didn’t want anyone close. Man these people have some history. We did get in using facial recognition and feigning ignorance multiple times. Well maybe not feigning at all. We were several hours early, as instructed . At 2 hours before game time, the stands were not occupied much except behind the goal where flags and umbrellas were dancing, drums were playing, and lots of singing. That continues throughout the game including halftime. The stadium gets packed!

The game was a blast to watch. Everyone had a great time, no fights, just hugging and singing. Luckily, the home team won. We left a few minutes early and caught a cab back to the hotel pretty easily. Some additional notes. Beer hasn’t been sold in the stadium for 28 years until this year and the process of buying and drinking is onerous and limited. Katie and I had a beer but we were some of the very few. Now mind you on the way to the stadium, numerous people were offering rum and cokes, beer, and shots. Plenty of people were pregame hammered. They just could not continue once in the stadium. We have noticed a high incidence of smoking in BA and though you can’t smoke in the stadium it was in reality everywhere. The security guards were probably smoking or lighting the cigarettes of the fans around them. They say America now has a less than 10% incidence of smoking and Argentina is at 22%. I think for Argentina they are measuring the incidence at any one time, as it seems everyone smokes.Another observation was how comfortable men were showing emotion to other men. This was in their greetings and their conversations. Just always close, hugging and greeting. Last observation, Argentina employs a lot of police. They are everywhere.

Slept in then walked to the Sunday craft fair in San Telmo. Good thing we used the ATM the day before as so many cool little things to buy. We had to buy little things as our bags are jammed and we still have quite a few weeks to go.

Visited Caminito street which is an artist haven with many painted buildings.


We slept in a bit the following morning then off to El Ateneo Grand Splendid, a converted theater. Now a bookstore. Fabulous interior but we were a little cold so we sat down to have a coffee. So happens a YouTuber was filming a ‘spontaneous’ performance of Cold Play’s Fix You. They had cameras all over, a choral group, multiple singers and guitar players pop up and there we were 10 feet from the guy, Joe Jenkins, who was playing the piano. Apparently some 4 million followers, well 4 million and 2.


We visited Palermo Hollywood but honestly not much to see. We visited SoHo again but very quiet as most places are closed on Mondays. We heard of a street with many leather shops so took off for there. Didn’t think I needed a leather jacket, but now I do. They definitely don’t like credit cards here as many places will give you 40% off for cash payments.

Yesterday we took a ferry over to Colonia de Sacramento, Uruguay. We walked thru the old town, down the allies and into a few of the open art shops but in general very quiet.

They do love old cars and trucks here.


We read books in a park waiting for our return ferry which turned out to be 1 1/2 hours late. We were going to go back to the hotel and freshen up but not enough time. In fact, we arrived about 10 minutes late to a food and wine pairing in Palermo Soho. No worries others arrived behind us! It’s hard to be late here.

We had an incredible ‘meal’. Eggplant with ricotta and peanuts, provoleta, blood sausages, pork, short ribs and rib eye steaks all paired with wonderful wines. Fantastic!

we are flying to Iguazu to see the falls. More to come.

Panama Three- and Adios

We arrived in Boca via shuttle and boat. Pretty bad all around. They picked us up at our hotel, a little late but fine. it was a little van that filled up as it circled Boquete. We stopped downtown and transferred to a modest sized bus with less leg room than economy airline seats. After an hour of dicking around, picking up people, putting luggage on the roof with tarps to cover, we finally leave Boquete. We’ve spent over an hour in our cramped seats and haven’t made it out of town! We bounce along, stopping for a passport check, a stop at a convenience store so the driver could get chips and a soda, then lunch at what is basically a truck stop. We finally get to Almirante where the boat awaits but it is typical mayhem with no one directing. Some locals aggressively grabbed your bags and took them to a boat but on the way telling me I had to give him a tip. Here’s a tip, don’t grab my fucking bag again. The boy putting the bags on the boat then went up and down the rows telling us we needed to give him a tip as well. We told him we already gave. Finally motored over to Isla Colon and found our hotel a short distance away.

Econo-bus from hell

Beautiful room with a deck overlooking the busy waterway.

Boca Paradise Hotel, we stayed in the upper left room of that pink and blue building

We lunched down the street from our hotel, on the water. The town is full of 20-30 year olds and our lunch restaurant was in a hostel. There are many hostels here. Here is one across the waterway from us. Pretty nice. I don’t remember those when I was younger and traveling!

Youth Hostel ‘Aqua’

A walk about town led us to a lovely tap house with a local IPA. We found a boat captain that would take us on a private outing the following day, and a grocery store for ice and other essentials. We are easing in to it.

We woke up with coffee on our balcony then down to the boat. Captain David took us out after a bit of discussion, to Cayo Zapatillo, two islands with reportedly good snorkeling on the edge of the open Caribbean Sea. David was typical of our encounters with Panamanians. They are generally flat of affect and you often feel like you offended them in some way. There is quite a bit of animosity now with our countries current direction but I also think it stems from a long history of American arrogance in this region. He did let us snorkel as long as we wanted there which was pretty good. We saw a large Baracuda tracking us for a while and then many of the usual suspects in Caribbean. The water temp must have been mid 80’s as Katie did not get cold. David motored us over to a spot off of Coral gardens which was also good snorkeling but a totally different environment with grasses, soft corals, and sea fans.  We loved following a family of squid, maybe 10 of them. They would stop, tilt, change colors and move along. All of a sudden the wind picked up to 30-40 knots with incumbent waves. We clambered aboard the spinning boat and headed for a lee shore restaurant to wait out the storm.

Lunch time

After lunch on the pier we headed out to official Coral Gardens in calmer seas. We found another environment here with a mix of coral and very colorful sponges, from green to red, including yellows and purples, and oranges. We picked out a ‘Fireworm’ maybe a foot long or so. Didn’t touch. Katie found a swim ladder and returned it to a boat we think it belonged to. Our last stop was a shallow swim with sea grass, rocks and some coral. Katie picked out a small octopus right after getting in the water. She also found a tiny shrimp on a small carpet anenome. Probably a cleaner shrimp. We picked out another foot long fireworm but a little different than the first. Many feather dusters and a few Giant sea anenomes and a small striped eel, the first eel we’ve seen which is a little bit of a surprise as there so many good homes for them here in the coral. We made it back to our balcony just in time for a Gin and Tonic and eventually went out for….Pizza!

The sun rises at the foot of our bed so we were up before 7. Coffee on the balcony, reading the paper then booked a water taxi to red frog beach. Captain Adrian was a mirror of David, flat affect, no talk, no smiling. Red frog beach has several modest resorts to stay at but we walked on past looking for Playa Polo as we were told the snorkeling was better. We took some shortcuts I admit and missed the actual Playa Polo but we did find a lovely spot under some palms.

Close to Playa Polo

We tried snorkeling with our just purchased $15 mask and snorkel but really just sea grass and after 15 minutes swimming around we both asked, ‘Have you seen any fish?’. I swam away in search of Playa Polo. I had several moments of ‘What the hell were you thinking’ as visibility was zero, waves were crashing on the shallow rocks and I was a ways from shore. I finally managed a beach landing and walked along a pretty well defined trail with signs to Playa Polo. Not sure how we missed these but definitely took the road less traveled to get here. Playa Polo was a bust for me, much more wind and thus chop. I tried snorkeling some but it was as bad as where I came from. I hiked overland back to Katie who was touchingly worried about me. Or she said something about not having any of our future itinerary or tickets which bothered her. With her sense of humor, I took it for love. After several hours reading books, eating peanuts and pretzels, and having a few hand carried IPA’s, we walked back to the Red Frog beach where we ate some lunch and laid out on some loungers until out water taxi was to return. Vacations are tough. You have to work everyday on your stamina. G&T’s on the balcony are working again :-).

Katie had heard from her girlfriend, ChatGPT, that La Piscina beach was killer for snorkeling. Problem is it is beyond the end of the gravel road on our Island. We ended up renting a motorcycle! The man said the scooter was too low for the water crossings. What?. We set off, a bit shaky on the shifts but nobody got hurt.

Kind of a Gang

Stopped for a view of a two toed sloth close to the road. Good luck sign I suspect. We motored on over gravel, then dirt, then mud holes into the jungle. We did spin out once but totally my bad with my choosing of the path thru the mud. Pushed past a gate at urging of a local and then single track, crossing creeks and dodging mud holes. Ended up just a 100 yards from the beach and it was gorgeous and isolated.

La Piscina Beach

We snorkeled but honestly not very good and poor visibility this day.  We laid out reading our books and eventually drove back to a restaurant along the gravel road.  Again beautiful views and quiet with a nice sandy beach. Probably better to stay on this part of the island and take a short taxi, or motorcycle!, into town. 

I haven’t mentioned our lodging which is spectacular with its balcony and view of the busy harbor. The problem started our third night. There is a dance bar located just 2 doors down and it fires up around 10 pm playing extremely loud EDM. This goes until 2 am when it is abruptly shut off. Now I tried ear plugs with the pillow over my head but no help. Later, I have a white noise track playing in one ear with the other ear plugged on the pillow. This works somewhat but you can still feel the music, that’s how loud it is. I spoke with the front desk and they said they talked to the police but the local government has weighed in and said it was ok. Sounds like gangsta stuff to me. I would never stay in the downtown Boca area again. The reports were it was a calypso vibe but reality is it is EDM at a 100dB and a pretty shady clientele.

We rented a boat captain the following day and had a 4 hour snorkeling adventure. We saw some new stuff like sting rays, eels, and schools of fish, but the best was a curious squid that would get very close waving its front tentacles at us as if in greeting. We enjoyed several visits  from the squid and just had fun on our own schedule, staying out as long as we wanted. Following the half day tour, Katie wanted fish for lunch. She chatted up her girlfriend again and this time, success. We taxied across the harbor to The Big Fish for a fillet sandwich and some fish tacos.

The Big Fish also has Leaf Eater for vegetarians

Totally great vibe there and stuck out our thumb on their dock for a quick water taxi back to our place. Perfecto. We had dinner in Boca over the water and in bed by 8. Ear buds, white noise from YouTube and asleep until 12:30 or so. Read some and then 2 o’clock quiet time and more sleep.

Travel day but fit in a 2 hour private snorkel tour back to Cayo Coral. Clearer water this time and some new fish. Saw an Eagle Ray on the way back to town. Late checkout then water taxi over to The Big Fish again for their Classic fish sandwiches.Beautiful blue ski day.

back at the Big Fish for their awesome fish fillet sandwiches

stuck out our thumb and caught a taxi back to our hotel in about 2 minutes. Not bad for a buck

taxi pickup

Traveled out to Guna Yala or San Blas for a couple night stay on Yani Island. Interesting that Guna Yala is its own country. They do not follow any Panamanian law and when you enter their province you go through border control. The province is very green but poor, poor, poor. We were a bit shocked at the room offered on arrival to our island. The island is only about 500o feet square in total. The room offered would be one of eight in a cabin with open ceilings to all rooms and simple boards between rooms. I booked a private cabin. They first said this is a private cabin, then they said no you booked a private room. Like as opposed to what a dormitory!

After some fuss and saying they were full they put us in a private cabin over the water which certainly was better than the 8 room cabin.

We had some difficulties from then on with the staff but overall enjoyed the beautiful island setting.



We had a good day of snorkeling our second day with an actual coral reef and later some nurse sharks, but the staff tended to think people wanted a boat ride out to a sandbar so they could swim. No fish to be seen but 1-2 feet of water to swim around in. We did that twice. They also thought the boat excursions would be great by taking you to a nearby island, just like the one we just left and relax on that island for a couple hours. All in all a disappointment and I would not recommend going there. We did hear some great snorkeling stories for Coimba, so I would do that over San Blas.

On to Buenos Aires

Panama Two

We did a few educational activities while in Panama City. We visited the Canal Museum which was pretty informative about the complex history of it being built. Katie managed a good solid hour there. The Mola museum was about the Guna Yala tribe’s ‘embroidered’ cloths which I lasted about one hour. We had some dinners out though approaching $150 for dinners when you had the wine. We did try an authentic Panamanian restaurant but we had to leave before ordering as every dish included Culantro which is very similar to Cilantro but stronger in smell and taste. Katie as we all well know can’t stand Cilantro so we were out of there after many apologies.

We were up early one morning to be picked up by our bird guide ‘Mario’ for a trip out to Soberania National Park and the Pipeline Road. Mario was fantastic with spotting birds and other wildlife. There were so many different birds. I think it ended up being something like 50 different species. Colorful Toucans and Trogons, Antshrikes, Warblers, and Herons. So many birds!

Trogon

We also were treated to a mother Anteater who was carrying a huge baby on her back. Probably a lazy teenager my guess.

He also led us to a sloth moving thru the treetop and the prevalent Agouti on the ground. A great walking tour though very hot and humid, probably mid 90’s for both.

One morning we waited outside to be picked up for a boat tour thru the Panama Canal. Finally calling the office they said we don’t see you on our list and there is no tour today. So they refunded the money and Katie and I visited Miraflores locks where we caught a modest sized container ship go thru. We walked out on the Amador walkway but that was mostly a bust and just hot hot hot. Did manage to Uber downtown to a brewpub (of course) where we had one of our favorites, Chivo Perro IPA.

Up early on our last day in Panama City, we hiked in Metropolitan Park, Too early, I guess, because we had to wait for it to open. This was a couple hour hike with some big views of both downtown as well as the canal. We saw 2 different Trogons (birds), saw a snake, a family of Howler Monkeys and lots of Turtles.

Howler Family

Back to the hotel for showers and packing then Uber to the airport. I have to say we used Uber maybe 10 times while in the City. The car always arrived within 2-3 minutes, sometimes less. Almost always the 20 min drives were $5-7 and the long ones to the airport were $25. Never used a taxi though they were everywhere. We were told they are used mainly by the kids going to the schools.

We flew to David and then Ubered 40 minutes to Boquete in the rainforest, again like $25. We stayed at the Garden Inn and it was really a garden! Beautiful room with a balcony overlooking the gardens and the rainforest as a backdrop.

Ended our first day walking down to ‘The Rock’ where we had a great dinner. The following day, pouring rain.  We parked ourselves on the balcony of our room waiting for the rains to stop. Many birds to watch but we cancelled our hiking plans. We walked into town, about a 20 minute walk, but not a lot to see there.  Walked back to the Inn for some hot tub then taxied down to an Italian restaurant in town. Great food and an easy commute. We were picked up after breakfast at the Inn the following day by Daniel who was our chauffeur and guide at a local coffee Finca, Gran del Val. So happens his dad was the manager of this Finca before he died from Covid. Daniel was a wealth of information. So much that I think I lost 90% even before leaving.

The life of a coffee bean

Barrista extraordinaire


We did learn a lot of new info about coffee and we were stunned to learn of some of the high prices paid for coffee. Apparently, the people in Dubai pay $1000 for a cup of Geisha coffee. We got to try some but honestly I am used to Peet’s, not a light roasted aromatic tea like coffee such as Geisha. Fun facts, dark roasted coffee has less caffeine than medium or light roast. Coffee has Cortisol in it! In making coffee, it was a recipe of weight to water poured over intervals in a certain direction, over specific time periods. So much to it, you would miss breakfast just making the coffee!

Daniel later dropped Katie and I off at the Pipeline Trail. We hiked for 3 miles along the trail looking for the famous Quetzal bird but in the end just looking for anything moving in the rain. No luck on the Quetzals.

We rode the local bus back to town which ended up being a terrific view of the countryside in the upper mountains. We stopped at a local brewpub(of course) after being dropped off and then stayed around to watch a once a year Cowboy/Horse parade. It was supposed to start at 2, we had beers at 3. Waited over an hour on the street after that, but then I would guess a thousand locals on beautiful horses dancing and prancing down the street with intermittent trucks full of musicians providing music. Quite the sight!

annual Horse Parade part drink fest

We are on to Boca del Toro tomorrow so expect a more Caribbean vibe from there.

panama

Barting it

This is our first big trip of the year with no disrespect meant for Scottsdale and the Savana Banana baseball tour! We, like others were ready for trouble at the TSA crossing but honestly it took literally 5 minutes. It helps that Katie did not have her Swiss Army knife with her this time but still 5 minutes! Paying people may be overrated.

We were denied access to the Polaris Club despite the COPA Airlines website saying we were entitled. I mean we are not entitled but we were supposed to be able to get in. We found a United Club that did let us in and we ended up with a very relaxed wait. The business class seats were great lie-flat things but service was pretty suspect. We were offered water after the first 2 hours and the dinner at around 10:30 that night, several hours into the flight. I watched a couple shows on my iPad and promptly fell asleep. I woke up close to arrival. They had left some water and some vegetable chips for breakfast! No coffee.

A driver picked us up from the airport and drove us into old town, quizzing us about Trump on the way and telling us about Panamanian feelings. Yikes, I hope that doesn’t keep up the whole way. We left our bags at the apartment and walked over to a much needed coffee shop. Set out walking up and down the streets of old town, looking in art shops and reading the menus of the restaurants we passed. We decided to hike up to the top of Mt Ancon for views of the city. Google says 30 min. Reality says hour and a half. You can’t walk the way google says. A policeman at one point asked to help and suggested we not go thru a certain area so we detoured a little. Saw a deer after entering the park (you don’t see that everyday, no wait a minute you do). A sloth sighting farther up the trail made a wonderful welcome. 

The views at the top were good but my shirt was completely soaked with sweat. Not that it was a hard walk, just 89 degrees and probably the same in humidity. We hiked back down hungry and thirsty and found ‘Bruma’ in old town where we split fish and chips and had a couple IPA’s (no sharing).

We checked in to our place where we promptly fell asleep for 2 hours. We read a little then out for a spicy margarita at a rooftop bar, SAMA Sky Lounge. Great views of old and new Panama City. We walked around a bit more then found a tapas restaurant for of course potatoes bravas. We also had croquets, Portuguese sausage on a croquet covered with chickpeas aka hummus. We did get an eggplant thing which, as usual for me, did not fail to disappoint.

We were picked up today for a boat ride out on Lake Gatun to several monkey islands. The first had capuchin monkeys (white faced). They came on the boat and promptly grabbed this guys money and ID out his backpack and ran for shore. Luckily with a little fright he dropped it before exiting the boat.

The next island had Titi monkeys, small beautiful monkeys both Katie and I had never seen before. There were also very large iguanas in the bushes.

Another island was home to some Howler monkeys. We pulled up to a tree with very small bats all lined up on the trunk and there were several hawks about.

Finally we saw up close a large container ship that was traversing the canal as Lake Gatun makes up a large portion of the canal. Back home for a small plate of empanadas and now relaxing in America Hotel sipping a Seco/Tonic and a Rum/Coke. Tradition.

Campatime 2 and Bye from Brisbane

I missed writing about a small adventure we did while in Hervey Bay. We drove down to catch a boat to K’gari Island. We saw warnings about Dingos on the Island. We traveled 50 minutes to the island in the rain on a boat. A nice looking resort there but, it is raining. We grabbed the recommended sticks on leaving the compound in case we ran into Dingos and hiked 5 miles along the coast round trip in the rain with no Dingos.

Really no animals at all. A fairly monotonous eucalyptus forest. We made it back to the port in time to catch the boat back and that was probably the highlight. 

Up at Moore Park Beach we hiked around Baldwin Swamp in Bundy. Saw many different birds and turtles. Headed out to Coral Cove looking for a snorkel spot but the ocean was very muddy from all the rain runoff. We went into town for lunch but many places closed. Ended up at a Mexican chain restaurant. Burritos were actually pretty good but the margaritas were the frozen variety from a machine. Visited the Bundaberg Rum Distillery for some tastes. Apparently it is famous for rum and the setting and gift shop made me think it is a big tourist stop. The rums were only good with cola!  I guess we are not big rum drinkers. That night we walked a mile into the small town of Moore Park Beach. We saw several Kangas in the fields on the way. Our only goals up north here are to sit on the beach in the sun and good snorkeling. There was a 2 1/2 hr one way boat trip to Lady Musgrave for snorkeling but that was too much time traveling. We ended up flying on a small plane from Bundaberg to Lady Elliott Island.

Lady Elliott Island

The island is part of the southern most extension of the Great Barrier Reef. The island has an Eco Resort for people to stay for a few days but they do have a few day trippers and that was us. We sat through a briefing about how to snorkel and where and then we were off. We spent and hour and a half on our first snorkel. Cloudy water at first then gorgeous! Huge Green Sea Turtles, Squid, Black-tipped Reef Shark and numerous, new to us, colorful fish. I can’t wait to put the video together for this. By the end I was shivering though as I didn’t wear a wet suit. We laid in the sun, had lunch at the resort and I checked out a short wet suit. Then we had a great second snorkel. Flew back home. Walked into town for a modest dinner at the resort/sports bar/ casino/ restaurant. No kangas spotted one the way there this time. We spent Friday at our beach. We have a billabong on the property which is flush with Plumed Whistling Ducks and Australian Ibis.

Billabong

We’ve walked miles up and down the beach and we’ve sat in our camp chairs reading our books. This is what we were hoping for on the East Coast. We had to innovate for our dinner that night as the propane had run out. We ended up with probably our best dinner with pasta carbonara with peas and bacon along with a beet and cauliflower salad. Great use of the microwave and the electric water heater pot!

We had a relaxing morning with some sun and a short walk then a 4 hour drive to Brisbane. Dropping off the van was super easy we had enough insurance coverage that they didn’t seem to care what the van was like on return. We have now spent our last few days in Australia in Queensland’s capital city Brisbane, a gorgeous river city.

Riverwalk in Brisbane

Brisbane from South Park

Very vibrant with excellent restaurants and probably the cheapest city wide transportation system anywhere. We had a great Asian tapas meal yesterday and spent a bit of time riding the City Cats up and down the river. Turns out, you can go anywhere on the system including buses, trains, and ferries for 50 cents Australian a trip. That’s like 30 cents American. We walked 9 miles today. Sunny at times. Pouring rain at times. Kinda the usual for our past two weeks. That doesn’t detract from the beautiful city of Brisbane. They have laid out a spectacular riverfront that is so accessible and loaded with scenic restaurants and bars. Love it.

Now in the lounge waiting to board our plane home. Hopefully sunny today in the Bay Area or I guess I mean tomorrow though it will still be Tuesday!

Campatime

Picked up a 7 month old Mercedes extended van without too much issue. It was good we have some experience with our camper as that led to pertinent questions during the very brief to non-existent checkout. Some of the items they advertised were not included like the outdoor grill and fly screens on the windows but they did find a French press for us. Yea! Anyways, off to the store for some food and van supplies like beach towels and kitchen towels. Drove into a mega mall that had a Target, a Woolworth’s and a K-mart apparently we arrived at the busiest time possible. Lines of cars going in and out and the car lanes were made for a Mini-Cooper not a 7 meter long van! I chose the wrong lane and a vertical height board slapped our air conditioner on top of our van. I’m now stuck in a narrow lane with 10 cars behind me. I luckily stopped just after the lanes split for parking garage vs open air parking. Now I needed to back this bad boy up against all this traffic. Katie got out and sweet talked the guy behind us to back up and eventually there was enough room to get to the open air parking lot.  Notably, nobody honked. It may be against the law. I don’t know. Don’t think any damage was done to the AC. Just embarrassing! We drove for a couple hours to Newcastle which is 2 hours north of Sydney. Now I put the directions into google maps but I didn’t preview where Google was taking us. I presumed out to a peripheral freeway and on to Newcastle. Well. No. We drove the narrow crowded streets right through the heart of downtown Sydney. In fact, we passed the street the hotel we had stayed at was on. Somehow we made it to the north side of the harbor. I think we took a tunnel under the water but we could have been on the Sydney Harbor Bridge for all I know. My hands were white gripping the wheel hoping another vertical warning sign didn’t suddenly appear on the highway. Yeh! We are free and clear of the city and cruising our way north. I’m not that much into weather numbers and records and such but that Sunday as we drove north, 5 inches of rain fell. Yep. Pretty much couldn’t see the lanes and occasionally hit a lake at the bottom of a low point on the highway. We finally made it to our destination in Newcastle. Gin and Tonic time. A nice caravan park with side by side by side pads for the holiday makers to park. The sun briefly made an appearance and all was good.

Luckily there was minimal late night noise. They don’t allow generators in most places and no budding DJ’s in our park. We haven’t used hookups much in our van at home but it was nice to have it here. We had the AC running on low mainly to dehumidify and to keep a nice breeze overnight. Again we don’t have any screens on the windows. We walked on to a ferry in the am to downtown Newcastle a former steel town now big on shipping out fertilizer. Nothing much in the town but flocks of Little Corellas and Sulfer-crested Cockatoos. Huge racket. Inundated the trees. We headed out for Hunter Valley wines. We stopped at Audrey Wilkinson winery which turned out to be a km down a gravel road. Van did pretty well but I wish the map services knew the type of roads they are leading you on. Gorgeous views and ok wines. We drove out to a public picnic area for lunch and views, then on to Tulluch wines which were good. They had a nice tasting for kids there! Chocolate milk, Cranberry juice, Apple juice and Lemonade. They also got to try it with assorted foods like pretzels, gummy bears, strawberries, and grapes. Start them young! We went off to our caravan park which was minutes away. Nice enough with power. Not too crowded. Walked to a local brewpub which was disappointing. In the am we were off to a slow start, outside in our chairs having coffee and reading the news. The sun was out. We drove out to a cheese maker and picked up some local cheese. On to Tyrell cellar door. May have been one of the best tastings we’ve had in Australia. Our server. Scott, had worked in France and California and had been at this winery since the 80’s. He started off recommending a shared flight as someone had to drive but after tasting multiple wines each with generous pours we understood. We learned a lot and tasted some terrific wines. I offered him a modest tip which he initially refused but eventually accepted. They don’t seem to like tips here! He then gave us multiple tips on where to go, stay, and eat as we made our way up the coast. Tyrell has a beautiful property and they allowed us to have our picnic lunch at one of their outdoor tables..

Lunch at Tyrell with a view

We visited Brokenwood cellar door after that which had a few nice wines but nothing we felt the urge to buy. A local girl was serving us and as we have commonly found, she had never seen a wombat or a platypus. She did not know what a pademelon is. She had traveled in her immediate area but had never been to Sydney or other states. Probably typical around us at home but it makes you think when you travel so far to see these things. We decided to head for a small campground by Seal Rock. A couple hours drive led us to a pitted gravel road leading to the campsite. After several km we pulled into a fairly primitive campsite but close to the ocean. Found out what a Billabong was here. A billabong is a large pond formed when the river changes course from high flows.

Billabong

We had drizzles in the am so opted for breakfast at the beach at Seal Rock. Part way into breakfast, a major downpour. Getting to be typical. Sunny then light rain for a minute with shadows still about. Then downpour! We drove north to Port Macquarie. Stopped in at a Koala Hospital which was good on them but little to see except…

recovering Koala

We hiked out to the light house, then drove on to Hat Head Beach. Another caravan park with hookups. Tremendous bird population with Rainbow Lorikeets and beautiful Eastern Rosellas all foraging for food around the campsite.

Rainbow Lorikeets

Eastern Rosella

Masked Lapwings were there and they tended to chase after any dogs that went by. I had downloaded an Australian bird app but no matter who was singing, it came back Noisy Miner! Katie went out at dusk and found 2 kangaroos. I managed 2 gin and tonics. We drove further north to Bellingen the following day and began the Waterfalls Highway which headed East. Griffith Lookout provided great views over the local mountains and then on to Dorrigo National Park.

Griffith Lookout

We walked out on the Skywalk for views and then down to Crystal Falls.

Crystal Falls

We were hoping to see Lyre Birds which are frequently seen there, but no luck. We did catch a Pademelon in the picnic area though.

Pademelon with a huge fan.

We drove on to Dangar Falls but it was getting late so we backtracked to a small free RV site just off the highway. Worked out great. Got there just in time to secure a good spot. Others campers ended up piling in close to each other as the night wore on. Misty in the am on our drive to Coffs Harbor. Clear enough when we got there to hike out to Muttonbird (Sheerwaters) Island. Beautiful views of the marina but no Muttonbirds. While leaving to continue our drive north, Katie yells ‘Stop’ as she frequently does. This time it was a huge Black Stork. After a short while, the stork took off into the air. That did not seem possible given the size of this bird!

Black Neck Stork

We drove on to Byron Bay which was busy. It was Friday. Many campgrounds were full or had a two or three night minimum. We found a nice place though and we were able to walk into town from there. Despite the intermittent downpours, we made it to ‘Chihuahua’. That turned out to be a masterful find of a Mexican restaurant. Great Mezcal margaritas and fish and pork tacos. All is well. On the way home stopped at a popular local bar where a guitarist and drummer were playing the blues. Nice. In the am. walked into town for a long black coffee and an almond croissant. Yes it poured two or three times while we were there. We were going to hike around Byron Bay but the rain is getting to us so we are heading north, hoping for sun. We stopped in Mooloolaga for a picnic on the beachfront. Started pouring rain with wind gusts. Walked along the ocean front which is beautifully done but started pouring rain. Headed north to Noosa Head looking for camping but all is full on this Saturday. We drove up into the hills east of town and found a quiet campervan park to stay at. Steaks and Caesar salad for dinner along with some Shiraz. Yum! We were all excited as the weekend was coming to a close and camping sites should open up. But…., it’s a 3 day weekend. Turns out it is Australia’s Labor Day this Monday. The whole weekend has been part of a three day weekend. The campers aren’t going anywhere. We drove north to Hervey Bay. This is a small low key oceanfront town. We found an opening at a beachfront campsite but didn’t go out much that night because of the rain. We woke up to intermittent sun so we walked a couple miles along Shelly Beach. I may have said this before, but the Australians tend to name things in a very straight forward manner. They don’t add fluff or deep ponderous thoughts to things they name. Shelly beach was covered in shells. Pretty straight forward. Very calm lake-like waters though it is the Pacific Ocean.

Shelley Beach

We drove north (getting to be a theme!). Very sunny while on the road. Stopped at the visitor Centre in Bundaberg which led us to a lookout on the tallest hill in the area. At least 100 meters above sea level! Good views but windy. The lady at the visitor centre told us about a snorkeling site at Coral Cove which we went to. Rocky shore with no clear access to the water. The shore was actually experiencing 2-3 foot waves that pounded the rocky shore. We looked around a bit but a monsoon came through and we hightailed it back to the van soaking wet. We moved on to downtown Bangara just 3 km away looking for a boat tour shop that would take us snorkeling to Lady Musgrave Island. Well the address they gave was closed up. We looked for a restaurant to chill for lunch and make our plans but it turns out Labor Day is a big holiday and almost everything is closed. This included restaurants, bars, grocery stores etc. we found a hotel with a pub and casino that was open and went there for Parmi (chicken breast covered in a variety of choices) and fish and chips. We had heard about a camper site on the beach maybe 20km out of town so we drove there. Picked up a spot that we could back up to the beach and what! The sun stayed out for the first hour or two of our afternoon here! We are so happy.

Moore Park Beach

We don’t plan on going too much farther north and we hear the weather could turn sunny in a few days so we might hunker down here.

Coming Soon!

Campatime2 and the Final City

Sydney

We arrived in the am from Hobart and got lucky with an early checkin at our Airbnb. Walked down to the water, around several harbors and through the botanical gardens. Snuck up on the Opera House from the back and explored around the outside. I didn’t realize it is several venues in several connected buildings. Walked down to Central Quay, snapping photos and admiring the constant in and out of the ferries. We explored a little in The Rocks district. This once was the derelict area of the city where the first exported criminals from Britain came. Now it is a hip and happening old section of town with a lot of character. That night we walked around The Rocks on an historic pub tour. Our guide, originally from Georgia, gave us tons of info on the history and culture of young Australia. We walked around the city exploring the next day. Generally averaging around 20,000 steps a day! Walked across the Sydney Harbor Bridge for the views. Not at the top as some do.

That night dinner at Mr Wongs a rather famous Chinese restaurant buried in an ally downtown. The 7 course meal was delicious (except for the calamari-still chewy to me). We rode up on the train to the Blue Mountains, hopping off at Kaluumba. Unbelievable how popular Scenic World is there. Bus after bus. It is kind of a touristy adventure park. It has many activities you could do and a large tram that went across a gorge in front of Kaluumba Falls. We opted to walk the cliff trail to the many lookouts along the way. Gorgeous views but until you pass Echo Point, the most popular lookout, the crowds are thick.

The Blue Mountains

Kaluumba Falls

The Three Sisters

Again it is still Holiday here. Who knows when that actually ends but everyone is out traveling. We stopped in Leura for a late lunch but everything in the town was closing. It was 2:30! We grabbed some food from a deli and sat at the train station outside having lunch, watching the cockatoos. The next day is ANZAC Day. Many people apparently get up for 4:20 services. We made it out by 10am to watch the parade downtown. Both Katie and I got a little teary watching the proud service people marching, playing drums or bagpipes at times. Everything except restaurants and bars are closed on ANZAC Day. The bars were spilling out in the streets by 10am, servicemen and women in their uniforms and friends and family gathered about. We had some time before lunch so caught a ferry to Neutral Harbor, a quick 15 minute circle tour across Sydney Harbor to catch the views of the bridge and the Opera House from the water. , We managed to get a lunch reservation back at Mr Wong’s as Katie wanted more from their extensive Dim Sum menu. We actually went back early to our apartment as we really needed to pick a campervan and plan a little for our trip north. The weather was misty and cloudy the next day but not actually raining so we took a ferry out to Manly Beach. A lovely small town on the edge of the ocean. The inner Sydney harbor is unbelievable how extensive the inlets are throughout, all with their own small towns and marinas. Even out at the ocean it only takes 20 minutes on the ferry to get right downtown. I can see why they have so many great sailors. We walked the Coastal Scenic Walk from Manly to Spit Bridge. Six plus miles of varying terrain from rain forest to Red Gum forests to dry dry bush.

Red Gum Forest

We saw an Australian Bush Turkey (the new built in intelligence with the iPhone camera is amazing!), Rainbow Lorikeets, and several Water Dragons sunning themselves on the rocks.

Water Dragon

Beautiful houses along the way. Very upscale.

Swimming Pool built into the harbor

Took a bus back to Manly after a beer at the marina in Spit Harbor. Then the ferry back to Sydney. The ferries are fast and frequent. I still don’t know what we pay for them though. You tap on with your phone then tap off when you get off. My charge card shows 64 cents for each trip and nothing for the busses yet. That is also true for the 2 hour train ride out to the Blue Mountains. Moving Day again. Out to pick up our van. Unfortunately my iPad decided to quit charging in Sydney. I am now writing on my phone. My eyes hurt.

Katie, the ‘Influencer’ We see so many want to be’s

Tasi !

Flew from Melbourne to Tasmania last week. Again, Qantas was terrific both in getting us on board, on time, in flight service, etc. they serve lunch or dinner depending on the time and drinks are included whether that is soda, wine, beer, or cocktails. Rented another Toyota Corolla in Hobart though not a hybrid this time. After driving around the country for a week, we’ve spent about 150 AUS which currently is less than $100 in gas. We probably saw an off the grid part of Hobart mostly. Kind of young fringe players and rather worn shops. We went out for a cocktail and ended up in the middle of a poker tournament amongst a very eclectic group of people. We really didn’t explore Hobart much. We noticed more political activism there via signs etc mostly geared towards the environment. We drove up Mount Wellington which overlooks the city but at the top the wind was blowing 20-30mph and the temp was 2 degrees C. The clouds surrounded us so we really couldn’t see the city. We drove down for a hike on the hill and that was fantastic. We were protected from the wind as we hiked up a watery gully and saw our first Pademelons. What are those? Look them up but locals call them wallababies. To me they were huge plump rats that hopped.

Pademelon

Gorgeous small waterfalls along the way and carpets of moss and ferns. We ended our hike where we started, the Cascade Brewery. A lovely, large regional beer maker. Not Budweiser size. More like an Anchor Steam. We drove around the peninsula there a little bit killing time. Rolling hills with sheep and cattle and an occasional vineyard. We ended up at Bonorong, a wildlife sanctuary. Katie had booked a special night tour there. We walked around in the last hour of daylight, feeding the many Kangaroos, seeing Wombats again, many cockatoos, the Tasmanian Devil and many other things. Nighttime comes and it is a whole new show. Many animals are now active. We were introduced to a variety of birds that for various reasons could not be released into the wild. Red-tailed Black Cockatoos, an albino (yellow) Black Cockatoo, a Little Corella, a pink Gulah, and the queen of the enclosure, a Sulfur-crested Cockatoo. The latter we have heard pretty much throughout Australia, an extremely loud screech. We went into the enclosures for both a Ring-tailed Possum and a Brush-tailed Possum. BTW, multiple Brush-tailed possums were visitors that night, climbing all over the trees around us.

Brushed-tailed Possum, mostly seen on the road 🙁

We went into the enclosure with 3 Tawny Frog-Mouths. These birds blend in with the branches and trees so well, I’m sure we pass a million of them without knowing it. We fed Wallaby meat to the Spotted-tailed Quoll. Now the Quoll is about 1-2 kg. I asked, why are you feeding this little guy Wallaby meat. Well they are ferocious hunters and take down prey much larger then them all by themselves. There is another type of quoll called the Eastern Quoll. Smaller than the spotted tail and though they have spots, they are not on the tail. They are still big meat eaters. We went into the cage in the dark to feed them meat! Yep, we are tourists. We will do anything.

Eastern Quoll, looks nice, don’t pet!

We finalized our time with an 11 month old Wombat. OMG! So cute. Soft fur at this point but apparently gets much coarser. They stand on 4 short legs and are a big old round thing that eats grass. They tell me he can run 25km/hr though and has minimal fat. I’m thinking spirit animal though Katie is fighting for that as well. I think it is my marsupial spirit animal.

We drove home at 10 km/hr trying not to hit any Wombats or Wallabies. Began our roadtrip with a short drive out to Mt. Field National Park. Again a beautiful drive with rolling hills, eucalyptus, sheep and cows. The park has two levels. A lower rainforest and an alpine area. We hiked them both that day. Our first hike took us out to Russell Falls along a gorgeous track.

Russell Falls! Named after one of our grandsons I guess.

Following that was Horsetail Falls. Again the tracks are amazing both the plants but also the construction with staircases and excellent markings. We included a side trip thru the tall trees. These are Eucalyptus that are 250’ tall. Last on this trail was another falls, Lady Barron Falls. We lunched in the park cafe as there is nothing else around in the area. We drove up to an alpine lake, Lake Dobson. The road was a windy gravel road, maybe 1 1/2 cars wide. The sides down low were covered in overhanging ferns making visibility a challenge. The hike around Lake Dobson reminded me of many alpine lake hikes in the Sierras except the trees were mostly eucalyptus. Just as a note, the eucalyptus trees here come in many many varieties. They take on features of Oak trees, Birch Trees, bushes like Manzanita, etc. the trunks of many of the trees are artwork.

Art? Real Art!

Sometimes the views of the hills takes on a view of the Acacia trees in Africa and for sure you often feel like this is Jurassic Park. We did a long hike up the track for some views of Seal Lake. We passed some ski club buildings at the top and some archaic rope tows headed up the hills.

Alpine track in Mt. Field Nat’l Park

After the hike, we found a small all-in-one grocery store/post office/home/liquor store where we got canned Minestrone and a loaf of sliced sour dough. Yum! On our walk to Russell Falls earlier that day we saw signs for a glow worm grotto, so with flashlights in hand we drove back to the park very slowly that night. First off, millions of Pademelons on the lawn by the visitor center. Well more than 10. We hiked up to the glow worms and if you turned your head certain ways you could see the faints glows. A bit underwhelming. On the trail, many possum. One walked right up to me as I shined my light on him. He came within a foot. Saw I was there. Gave a little start and went around. Drove to Queenstown the following day and stopped at St Clare Lake which is a lower elevation part of the Cradle Mountain National Park. We had a great hike out around Lake St Clare, mainly looking for Platypus but none found. We stopped again at several points along the way. Had lunch along an elevated rainforest walkway and managed some pics at Nelson Falls.

Lunch

Queenston or ‘town’ is remarkable as it is an old mining town and still bears the scars. Hills are devoid of trees. The creeks run a copper color and the downtown is stuck in the past. We had dinner at the oldest hotel in town. It was what you would see in an old western. We got up early to get to Cradle Mountain. It’s an hour and a half away but rumor is, there are Platypus (platypuses?, Platypi?) in a pond by the main lodge. Drove at dawn which is a no no as all the Wombats and Wallabies are out. Very tense drive, going slow, two hands on the wheel. Roadkill every 100 yards or so in places. Made it to the lodge and the pond without hitting anything and sure enough a platypus is diving for food in the pond. He goes down for 20 seconds then back up to the surface for 5-10 seconds, then repeats. I went to the lodge for coffee and Katie didn’t even notice. After  a long viewing, I pulled Katie away and we walked the Enchanted Walk by the lodge. Just gorgeous scenery along the creek. Ferns, trees and ground covered in moss. Wallabies along the trail. Beautiful start to the day.

Enchanted Walk at Cradle Mountain

To access the main park you need to ride on a shuttle bus. We got off fairly early and walked on an elevated wooden walkway through the hills. Eucalyptus forests, button grass fields and great views.

Cradle Mountain track. Button Grass and Eucalyptus forests

From there we continued on up to Crater Lake, Wombat Pool and Dove Lake. An uphill climb most of the way with Wombats in the meadows mowing the lawn, waterfalls along the creeks, and cloud laden alpine lakes. Cradle Mountain itself was never visible as the clouds were too low. I am sure the views would be spectacular here. Even so, we had a great hike, probably about 8 miles total. We stopped in some fields near the lodge on the way back to the car and got some up close experiences with the Wombats. We sat on a walkway in a meadow and had one adult wombat come up to us chomping on the grass. Katie did not feed or pet it which was a huge surprise.

Wombat, up close!

We walked out to Knivet Falls a short tromp through rainforest vegetation. After a quick stop at the pond to check on the Platypus we were off for Mole town where are lodging, the Wandering Trout, was. After an hour drive we arrived at our 1900’s hotel. The hotel featured a respected restaurant though it was closed for Good Friday and not a soul was to be found around the property. Goof Friday is one of two major holidays in Australia where everything shuts down. The other being Christmas. We find many of these small towns give you the feeling of mid 1900’s in their storefronts, houses, fences and yards. Still sheep and cow country. Just a note, all the roads in rural Australia are narrow. We are driving a Corolla and I can’t imagine driving one of the trucks we see on the roads. The speed limit is typically 100km/hr and there is no way I can drive that fast and stay on the road. Most Australians don’t drive that fast either, but occasionally a true wanker will come up on the rear end pushing for more speed thru the turns. I’ll also note the roads are almost uniformly rough. I don’t mean potholes and such, just the texture which makes the wheels howl. Once in a while you get a smooth patch and you go whoa I can hear the music that’s been playing. Katie is pretty tired of me saying ‘What?’ when she talks. On to Freycinet Natl Park. Along the Eastern Coast the park is home to Wineglass Bay and the Hazards Mountains.

The Hazards from wine country


Wineglass Bay for lunch

Also supposed to be home to Echenids and Wombats. A couple of short hikes out to the lighthouse and down to the water got us warmed up for our hike up to Wineglass Lookout. Many stairs but Wallabies on the way and this time Katie fed them carrots.

Wallaby eating their usual food

We stayed that night in Swansea. Right on the bay. Good dinner at Saltshaker one of the few restaurants open in town. Coffee from across the street on Easter Sunday as there never is reasonable coffee in the rooms. Then back to Freycinet for a loop hike to Hazards Beach then Wine glass Beach then up over the mountain pass back to the car. The skies were cloudy again a very small amount of drizzle. We had our typical beer, cheese, salami, and crackers at Wineglass sitting on rocks watching the waves crash in. Too cold for swimming.

Beautiful beach, part of Hazards Bay

We had pizza for Easter dinner back at the saltshaker and woke to a brilliant sunrise and blue skies. Drove down to the ferry and rode over to Maria Island where there are supposed to be oodles of Echenids and Wombats. We’ve seen quite a few Wombats but no Echenids yet. We had a smooth ferry ride over and hiked about the Island visit the Painted Cliffs and the Fossil Cliffs. Lunch high up on the cliffs looking way down at the ocean and many Wombats including a mon and a baby.

Wombat family


Baby Wombat! You just want to cuddle that baby

No Echenids! A ranger there said she saw one in the 2 years she worked there five days a week. Ouch, the guidebooks are a little off on oodles. We drove down to the airport hotel in Hobart and are now on a flight to Sydney for another part of the journey. Loved Tasmania!

Here are a couple of curiosities.

The country offers free calling in many large and small cities. The idea is for those people in trouble to have easy access to help. I love it!

Free Calls

Not a political statement or anything but here is the take on animals on the road.

Roobars

We have 5 days in Sydney then off on our campervan escapes up the East Coast. I will keep you posted 🙂

Adelaide to Melbourne

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.

Adelaide from our apartment

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.

Torren River

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.

Grey Headed Flying Foxes

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!

The Foxes are Flying

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.

Swamp Wallabies


K.I. Kangaroos

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.

Wombat
Echidna

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.

d’Arenberg Winery

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.

Our first Koala

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.

Admiral Arch

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.

Indian Ocean? Southern Ocean?

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

K.I. Kangaroos

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.

Rainbow Lorikeet

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.

Belnaves Winery

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.

Bay of Islands


12 Apostles. Well some of them

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.

Yarra River and downtown Melbourne

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.

Australia, the first 10 days

Perth

We arrived in Perth and quickly ‘Ubered’ to our place of stay in Fremantle. What a great seaside town! Our hotel was right in the middle of things and an easy walk to ferries and trains. We caught one of those trains to downtown Perth the next day. Now I don’t want to slight our fine workers at BART that won’t come out of their little office to answer a question, but the staff here we’re all about helping you get on the right trains and purchasing the right ticket. So friendly and cheaper than BART. Downtown Perth is pretty but pretty much a business center with many modern tall buildings and condos. They do have a great riverside park system along the Swan River. You could walk or ride a bike for miles along here. We explored for miles, stopped for lunch on a little touristy island downtown and then walked for miles thru a huge grand park called King’s Park which is right downtown.

We caught the morning ferry the following day to Rottnest Island, land of beaches and the world’s happiest mammal.

Ferry to Rottnest Island

Beautiful weather and an easy ride. We met the Quokkas soon after landing and Katie was fulfilled, a Harry met Sally kind of thing.

Playing with Quokkas

We got tickets for the hop on hop off bus to explore the island and hit our first beach within a half hour, Parker Point. Very slim sandy beach and a shallow snorkel thru sea grass for most of our explorations. Beautiful schools of fish for an excellent start. We walked from there to Little Salmon beach, being passed by the hop on hop off bus on the way, but it was only a 15 minute walk so easy peasy. I snorkeled here and thought the fish variety was better than Parker Point. There were some waves pushing you towards the rocky shore but overall very good. The beach was small and a little crowded so we caught the bus to Little Parakeet Beach on the other side of the Island. This was a gorgeous beach and the snorkeling was fantastic. There were large coral and rock formations with large valleys between. Many fish.


Little Parakeet Bay

We caught the bus back to town for more Quokka love then the ferry home. We had dinner out at an Italian place along the main drag of Fremantle. Very happening downtown with many people strolling and cruisers driving by. After dinner we went to the Metropolis, a fun music venue down the street to hear Lake Street Dive. The lead singer turns out to have been born in Sydney but the group formed in Boston and are somewhat jazzy in style. We saw them at the Greek in Berkeley last summer. We had GA tickets but sat in the balcony center with a great closeup view of the stage. Great show and the Aussie audience was totally in to it. What a great day!

Lake Street Dive

We had a low key day the following day with cappuccino and latte in the am and almond croissants. We read the East Bay Times and caught up up on emails and texts. We cruised around the city visiting a couple of markets where we bought some fresh fruit and surveyed the local artist wares. We stopped in at Gage Roads Brewery on the water for a beer then read our kindles in a beach side park for awhile. Dinner that night was back on Capacinno Lane but this time it was great Asian food at Tonic and Gingers. The lovely bartender whispered to us about a secret bar downstairs so after dinner headed down to the bar behind the bookcase for Old Fashions.


What a great small town Fremantle is. Such a great vibe.

We Ubered to the airport to pick up a car the following day and headed south. We stopped for a short hike at Lesmurdle Falls. Katie got an aura of an oncoming migraine so I did an abbreviated hike here. Very dry all around and the falls were a trickle. Katie didn’t miss much at all except the heat. We continued south stopping at Serpentine Falls National Park. We saw our first grey kangaroo here. Very friendly! Katie’s headache was a memory.

First Kangaroo

The falls were small but beautiful with two lovely swimming holes attached. Spotted some beautiful ring necked parrots here along with the pink breasted Gulahs which I think are in the Cockatoo family. We had lunch at Mojo’s in Busselton which apparently has won ‘best wine list’ several years running. The lunch was good but I had a hard time deciding on what wine to drink (56 pages). We continued on to Vasse Felix winery, one of the oldest and fairly well known wineries in Margaret River. A lovely tasting at their cellar door. We even purchased their Champagne to take with us.

Vasse Felix

We checked in at our apartment in Margaret River. We were upgraded to a 1 bedroom with a full kitchen which we never used except for the French press. Great location right downtown with a grocery store a very short distance away. We explored the region over the next several days doing some hikes along the Cape to Cape trail at the ocean, hikes in the Karri tree forests, exploring Jewel Cave near the southern end of the region, and visiting quite a few cellar doors after a modest amount of exercise. Leuwin Estate was beautiful. It is one of the original wineries in the area. Close by was Voyager Winery which was ok not great. On our way back to our apartment we stopped in a nice boutique winery called Stella Bella. Wonderful wines and ring necked parrots or ‘twenty eights’ because of the sounds they make were in their vineyards. We were told kangaroos are often seen near dusk around Kevill Road so we drove there. Sure enough, many grey kangaroos. Katie got up close to a few, even a mom with a Joey in the pouch.


After a loop hike around Margaret River in the morning, we visited Cape Mentelle winery, another original vineyard from the 70’s. Beautiful setting and the wines were good. Xanadu which was close by was not very impressive. We asked about good lunches and ended up at the Margaret River Brewing Company. Again the IPA’s are just not like those in the States, more malty, less hoppy. Food was good though and a great atmosphere. We went on to visit Windance, another boutique cellar. We had good wines and a particularly good tasting experience with many birds in the vineyards. We’d been trying to catch sight of the Black Cockatoos and here we were in luck as a flock of thirty or so flew around the vineyards and over our heads. There were also Guinea Fowl and many Gulahs about. We drove from there up to Sugarloaf rock at dusk as we had read that the Tropic Birds frequent here. Apparently that was in the past. A sign there says they are down to a pair returning once in a while. Katie had her heart set on seeing ring-tailed possums which are nocturnal so we hiked a loop along the Margaret River with our flashlights up in the Peppermint Trees having been assured there were numerous of them there. After an hour and a half and my neck crying in pain we abandoned the walk with no sightings. On our way out of Margaret River we drove along Kevill Road and again saw numerous Grey Kangaroos. Great start to the day. We stopped at Woodlands winery for their Chardonnay that was supposed to be like Rombauer. No. Stopped at Cave House Gardens for lunch. Beautiful and extensive gardens with many birds. Moved on to a hotel close to Perth airport as our flight out was at 7 the following morning. Interestingly, at the airport, there were hundreds of men and women in yellow work uniforms. I asked one what was up. They work for the mines. Typically the company flies them to their worksite for a two week shift then they fly home for two weeks off. They are flown all over the place. We had some on our flight to Exmouth.

We arrived in Exmouth quickly and the change in temp was very noticeable. Easily over 100 here. Our hotel had a room ready at 10 am which even the clerk was surprised by. Beautiful grounds, expensive restaurant. We borrowed a sun shelter, some chairs and an ice chest and we were off to Lakeside Beach. We had to hike a ways from the parking lot at the beach but set everything up and plunged into the water. Lots and lots of fish and coral not far from the beach. Unfortunately the water was hot. Probably 90’s and quite a bit of the coral was bleached. We still were enthralled with the variety of fish about the reef.

Lakeside Beach

We tried Oyster Stacks the following morning and it was even better. Water not so hot and a huge variety of fish we really haven’t seen before. Swam with a Green Sea Turtle, saw a Snake Eel about 3-4’ long, a Blue Ring Sting Ray and tons of other fish. There is no real beach here and in fact it is a rocky entry that you are only supposed to do at high tide. After our initial snorkel we met up with Yardie Creek Cruise for a 1 hour boat ride up Yardie Creek. Yardie means ‘creek’ so it’s kind of a weird name. Our goal was wallabies and our guide found quite a few in the crevices of the rock walls. They are smaller than kangaroos and have black flanks thus they are called ‘Black Flanked Rock Wallabies’.

Black Flanked Rock Wallaby

We also spotted Osprey with their huge nests, Kestrels, and very noisy Fruit Bats in the Mangroves. A very informative tour. We moved on to Turquoise Bay. Here you hike down the beach a little ways, swim out, then let the current carry you over the coral Boomies. Again tons of fish. A large variety of hard coral. We haven’t seen any soft coral or anemones yet though there are some Anemone fish that hang out on the plate corals. We swam with turtles again, a white tipped reef shark came by, and we saw a large sting ray that I swam over (made me think of Steve Irwin!). We got out just in time as the current turns and takes you out to sea. We had to climb up a wall of sand. A full day in the sun. Dinner that night was at Exhale which turns out to be probably the best restaurant in Exmouth. Excellent flavors in tapas style dishes. Close by was a brewpub called Froth’s. They had a lone guitarist noodling on an electric guitar with a looper. Not quite Ed Sheeran but interesting. The visibility in the water has been about 20 feet so we thought we would try Turquoise Bay again but in the early am. Really no change in visibility. Some say it is the wind direction. I don’t know. It certainly isn’t the rain. People in town, books, etc all say Emu’s are everywhere. Not the case. We have asked locals for their hot spots. Driven all over town. No Emu’s. No Dingo’s. Well coming back from Turquoise Bay we spot 2 dark shapes along the road. Mind you, nobody is stopping. No scene. But, there are 2 Emu’s walking along the road. Katie, of course, is out of the car. Luckily, I had slowed down some. We tracked them for a short while then high fived each other.

Emu

We tried the other brewpub in town that night, called Whalebone. Pretty good pizza but the beer is pretty much like everywhere else. Malty, not hoppy. Dive Ningaloo took us out to the Muiron Islands the next day for two dives there. Katie and I were both a little anxious having not dived for 3-4 years. After the first dive much more comfortable. The water was warm enough that I just had a swimsuit and swim shirt on. Water visibility still about 20 feet. We didn’t see much new but it was really nice to be able to stop and observe the fish rather than down and up with snorkeling. The video should provoke less dizziness as well. We saw several different Nudibranch’s and a black tipped reef shark. All in all, good to get back to diving. I did get some skin pain again on my abdomen which represents skin bends. I really will be stuck only diving with Nitrox in the future.

Dive boat to Muiron Islands

Yesterday we caught sight of another Emu. This time next to our regular coffee shop in downtown Exmouth. We stopped at Oyster Stacks again for a high tide snorkel which again was great, then on to Turquoise Bay one last time. Less heat today but less wind so still felt pretty hot. We managed until about 2 then headed back to the hotel. We did see an Australian Bustard along the road which was unexpected. After a Gin and Tonic and a glass of wine we went downtown to pickup tacos for home. Yes tacos! On the way the police , one of a handful of times I have ever even seen them on the road in Australia, we’re stopping every car for a breathalyzer test. I have no idea what my alcohol level is. I don’t feel drunk but who knows. The legal limit is 0.05 so I could be close. I blew, smiled and was told I was close to the limit and should not have another drink if I was going to drive! Oh my god! That would have been disastrous and all for a taco.

Today is moving day with several flights in our future to end up in Adelaide. Western Australia has been fantastic.

Ningaloo Reef beaches