Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Blog 7-Adelaide 26 February 2019



Our second stop in Australia is Adelaide, the capital of the South Australia state.  Adelaide is in a great location sandwiched between the Lofty Mountains and the Southern Ocean.  The city has wonderful views enhanced by its setting between green hills and the waters of the Gulf of St. Vincent.  Named for Queen Adelaide, the wife of the British King William IV, the city (to include the South Australia state) was settled around 1836 by free people and is the only city/state not founded as a penal colony.  Adelaide was one of the first planned cities of the time, designed by Colonel William Light in a neat grid pattern interspersed with town squares.  That grid pattern still holds, making the streets of Adelaide’s central district well-defined and easy to navigate.

Today Adelaide is a charming, laid-back, but mostly overlooked city in Australia.  It is located far from the other major cities of Australia (its closest neighbor is Melbourne which is 450 miles away).  And all it has around it are the mountains, the outback desert and the sea to Antarctica.

Up through the 1950s, Australia was a very conservative country.  Hundreds of books like Catcher in the Rye, A Farewell to Arms, Animal House, were banned.  Even the book Childbirth Without Pain was considered too risqué for Australian citizens.  But in 1968, Adelaide changed all that (for a while at least), when they elected a young, progressive premier.  Banished books were now available, nude bathing was permitted on beaches, homosexuality was legalized, and Adelaide became the hippest city in Australia.  Unfortunately, after the premier’s wife died, he retired from politics and Adelaide slowly reverted to its former, uninteresting, obscure existence.

Today, Adelaide has over 1800 acres of parkland, more than most other cities.  This reflects the desire of the early settlers to create a landscape close to the ones they had in England (a sort of cure for homesickness).  Looking at Adelaide’s parks, you would never guess that Adelaide is the driest city, in the driest state, in the driest country.

We left our hotel in Melbourne for the short walk to the Southern Cross Train Station to catch the Skybus back to the Melbourne Airport.  We were flying on Virgin Australia.  Once at the terminal, we checked in – everything is down by kiosk – baggage weight, baggage tags, and boarding passes.  Once we figured it out, it was very quick and easy and after depositing our bags at the bag check, we quickly passed through security and were on our way.  We had about a 2 hour wait for our flight, but the Virgin Australia domestic terminal is very modern (with free wi-fi) and very efficient.  Boarding was very efficient and at 12:10 we were on our way for the short (1 hour) flight to Adelaide (Adelaide is 450 miles from Melbourne).  The flight was uneventful, except for the pilot’s pretty hard landing (we think he may have been former Navy or else he wanted to wake everyone up).  We gained a ½ hour (Adelaide is only 17 ½ hours ahead of Denver) – thank goodness the computers are able to keep up with these time changes!  After collecting our luggage, we found the tourist booth where we got the City Shuttle and in 10 minutes we were on our way out of the airport.  The shuttle cost $10 AUS/person, but it delivers you straight to your hotel.

We are staying at the Adelaide Riviera Hotel on North Terrace St, considered the grandest street in Adelaide.  It is a very nice hotel, but it does not have a bar or restaurant – it does have a mini bar in the room with small bottles of wine for purchase.  The weather in Adelaide is very sunny and hot, although today there was a gentle breeze.  We walked down North Terrace St. to the Swarthmore Hotel that our hotel had recommended for dinner.  They were having happy hour in their bar so we enjoyed a couple glasses of beer and wine while watching a woman’s rugby game.  Now that is another game I can’t really understand.  The ball is like trying to capture a hot potato and doing something with it – kick it, punch it, toss it, tackle it, grapple with it and hope that somehow you get it across the goal line!  For dinner I had a beef schnitzel with a prawn and garlic cream sauce and Bill had lamb that he cooked on a hot stone at the table.  Both were very good, but very large.  And of course they came with chips (French fries).

Wednesday was very hot (at least to my thinking).  We started our day at a little outdoor café called the Peter Rabbit.  You sat at wooden picnic tables and ordered your meal at the front counter.  I had the scrambled eggs and sourdough toast while Bill had poached eggs and toast.  I have learned that Australian coffee is very strong and thick so I have switched to tea.  I think Bill may be switching as well.  He said today’s coffee was very bitter.

We then started our walking tour.  Most everything to see in Adelaide is off of North Terrace Street.  We stopped first at the Holy Trinity Church, Adelaide’s first church and the largest Anglican church in South Australia.  The foundation for the original church was laid in 1838 and the church quickly became a landmark with its ‘peaked cap’ top tower and the Vulliamy Clock.

Holy Trinity Church

Inside the Trinity Church















Inside the Adelaide Railway Station
From there we walked across the street to the Adelaide Railway Station which opened for business in 1856.  It was the first government-owned and operated steam railway in the British Empire.  Today it is the central point for the metropolitan train network and nearly 40,000 people use the station each day.  This is not the station that the Ghan uses for its trip across the outback.  That station is on a freight line in the southern part of the city.

There are two major universities on North Terrace Street – the University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia.  This week is orientation week for the upcoming semester so the area is teeming with college students.

From the Train Station we walked passed the Old Parliament Building which was not opened as Parliament was in session.  The security officer told us we could go to the Adelaide Parliament House (right next to the Old Parliament Building) and we would be able to go into the public viewing area and watch some of the proceedings from the House of the Assembly that was due to start at 1030.  We decided to see how another country’s government functions.  They ring a bell for about 5-10 minutes prior to the start time so all the members can assemble in the room.  They sit at desks on either side of the room while the President of the Assembly sits on a high desk in the middle of the back wall.  When it is time to start the proceedings, the doors are closed and everyone stands up.  Then a woman came in carrying what appeared to be a large gold scepter that she placed on the desk in front of the President.  Then the President said a prayer and the proceedings started.  They were discussing an amendment about domestic abuse and we listened while one Assembly member spoke against it as not being fully vetted, while another spoke for it.  Each person had 10 minutes to speak.  We left at this time so we don’t know if there was any official outcome from this discussion.

Old Parliament Building

Parliament Building










National War Memorial

Just across the street from the Parliament and next to the Government House was the National War Memorial commemorating those who served in WWI.  The Memorial was funded by the government of South Australia, making it the first Australian state war memorial to be confirmed after the war.  We then went to the Migration Museum which traces the history of the early European migration and colonization of Australia.  There was also a section on the devastating effect this migration had on the Aborigines.  It seems unfortunate to me that these actions in the name of colonization, expansion, empire building and religion resulted in the destruction of so many native cultures.

By this time the temperature had risen so we decided to take the tram to the Botanical Gardens where we were going to visit the National Wine Making Center.  Like Melbourne, the trams that run along the Central Business District are free.  At the center they had displays and exhibits on the history of winemaking in Australia and the types of grapes that are grown here and the various wines that are produced in each wine making district.  They also have an open cellar that is one of the largest in the Southern Hemisphere with about 38,000 bottles of wine.  Now that is big wine cellar!  There is also a room for wine tasting.  The first evidence of grape vines in South Australia was in 1837 when Richard Hamilton brought some cuttings over from Cape Town, Africa.  He planted them in Gleneig just 6 months after the Governor had proclaimed this area a new colony.  We did not do any wine tasting as we have a wine tasting tour on Saturday to the Barossa wine valley.

Barossa Valley Wines

Wine Cellar










By now we were hot and hungry so we took the free tram back to our hotel and walked to the street behind the hotel to look for a restaurant.  We found a little Italian café where Bill had a pizza and I had a chicken chef’s salad.  Then it was back to the hotel to rest and shower before dinner.  We will finish our walking tour on Friday.  Tomorrow is an all-day tour to Kangaroo Island.

Tonight we walked down the street to an Argentinian restaurant – La Boca Bar and Grill.  We had a lovely steak dinner.  Bill had bread with his and I had a delicious butternut and sage puree.  Not quite as good as in Buenos Aires, but very close.


Monday, February 25, 2019

Blog 6 Our Last Two Days in Melbourne



We spent our last two days in Melbourne (at least for this part of our trip – we will be back again in March) resting and walking around the Central Business District and the waterfront.  On Sunday, the first really hot day we have had here, we traveled across the Yarra River (that runs through Melbourne) and walked along the promenade.  There is a huge building – the Crown Casino and Entertainment Center – that takes up about 3 blocks of the waterfront.  There are many little cafes and restaurants located in this building.  We stopped at the Spice Temple for lunch; it is a very upscale Chinese restaurant.  I really don’t know how the residents of Melbourne can afford to eat out very often.  The buffet breakfast in our hotel is $25/person.  Now granted that it is Australian dollars and we in the US get a good deal on the exchange rate ($.70 US to 1 Australian dollar).  Our lunch at the Spice Temple was $64 AUS and it only included 3 each small steamed shrimp and scallop dumplings and one bowl of house fried rice with nothing but water to drink!  It was tasty but certainly not worth the money.  I guess because it fronted on the river is was more expensive, but because we did not have a reservation, we ate on the basement level where there was no view.

After lunch we walked over to the Eureka Sky Deck.  I did manage to get Bill to the 88th floor, but I couldn’t get him to go out on the terrace with me.  He did walk around the floor enjoying a 360 degree view of the city.  The building where the Sky Deck is located is 975’ tall and is the world’s tallest residential building and the highest viewing platform in the southern Hemisphere.  For you athletic enthusiasts it is 3,680 steps to the top.  For most of us, the elevator takes only 38 seconds to reach the 88th floor.  On a windy day the top of the building can sway as much as two feet.
View of Melbourne from 88th floor of Sky Deck

Yarra River










We finally went out and had a good dinner in the evening.  We started with a couple glasses of wine at our hotel’s happy hour and then walked over to the Mitre Tavern, located about 3 blocks from our hotel.  It is supposedly the oldest building in Melbourne.  Originally built as a private restaurant, its first liquor license was issued in 1868.  Today it is a steakhouse and beer garden.  We each had a ribeye steak and salad which was very good.

Today, our last day in Melbourne, we started off 0 for 2 in our walking tour.  We took the tram from our hotel up to the Queen Victoria Market, an outdoor market that has been in operation since 1878.  It now covers two full city blocks.  Unfortunately, it was closed on Monday so when we return here on the 7th of March, hopefully we will get a chance to visit.  Our next stop was St. Mary Star of the Sea Catholic Church, described as the prettiest church in Melbourne with its colorfully decorated interior.  But alas, it was closed until April for a major heating system upgrade.

City Baths
We then walked down Victoria St. that borders the north end of the Central Business District until we came to the City Baths.  It was built in 1850 as a public bath facility, but today houses a swimming pool and fitness center.

We then walked to the Old Melbourne Gaol, which takes up an entire city block.  Built in 1842 and in operation until 1929, it housed many of Melbourne’s most dangerous criminals, including the infamous bushranger Ned Kelly.  Before he was caught, he tried to lead a revolution against the police, to making armor plating for himself and his gang, but his plans were thwarted and he was captured and eventually hung.
 

The gaol also housed petty criminals, debtors, wayward children, and the mentally ill.  The gallows where 135 people were hanged in the gaol are still in place.  We started our tour at the Watch House where you are brought in by an old Sergeant and processed as it you were being arrested.  You are then put in a dark cell for a few minutes before given time to wander around the holding cells in that building.  These holding cells usually had 3-4 prisoners in each cell.  You then walk over to the main entrance to the gaol/museum where you can go into the individual cells and read about the notorious criminals that were once housed there and many who were hanged there.  It was quite the experience.  Today most of the old gaol is now part of the RMIT University – only the Watch Tower (or old police holding area) and the old section of cells that now form the museum are open to the public.


Holding Cell in Watch Tower

Shower Facilities in Watch Tower

Oops, look who got caught!

But, honestly Sergeant, I was just along for the ride



















Hallway lined with cells that held notorious convicts

Legend of Ned Kelly
Armor used by Ned Kelly














Old Melbourne Gaol











From there we took a tram back down to Flinder’s Street (the southern boundary of the Central Business District and took a short walk to Hosier Lane.  Melbourne is famous for its laneways (or we would probably call them alleys) and for the amazing street art that adorns the sides of the buildings (again, we would probably call it graffiti).  But it is bright and sometimes psychedelic.


Flinders Street Train Station

Hosier Lane Art Work










As we leave Melbourne, some thoughts on the city.  It is a very cosmopolitan city with a skyline of skyscrapers just as you would find in New York City or Chicago.  There are numerous restaurants providing a wide variety of ethnic cuisine.  The people are very friendly and helpful, especially to tourists.  The best part of the city is the tram system.  It is very modern and convenient.  Trams run to every section of the city from the suburbs to the Central Business District (CBD).  The Central Business District is a rectangle in the middle of the city that is about 4 blocks wide and about 8 blocks long.  Most of the major tourist attractions are located within its boundaries.  And within the CBD, trams are free.  Melbourne is definitely not an old city, at least by European standards.  Most of the buildings date back to the mid 1800’s.  But it is a very vibrant, lively city, with many universities and trendy nightclubs and restaurants.

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Blog 5 Phillips Island





Today we traveled to Phillips Island to experience the wildlife at several of the Conservation Parks and to watch the Penguin Parade of Little Penguins.  Phillips Island is one of three islands off the coast of Melbourne.  It is reached via a bridge from the mainland.  The second island, which we also visited is Churchill Island and is connected to Phillips Island by a one lane bridge.  The third island is only reachable by boat or ferry.

Our first stop was the Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park where you could walk around and feed the kangaroos and wallabies or, if so inclined to pay extra, pet a koala.  We declined that option and just wandered around looking at the cute wallabies, which seemed to have the run of the place, and a very relaxed wombat sleeping on his back in his log. 

Wombat sleeping in his log

Wallaby










Our next stop was on Churchill Island where we got a glimpse of farm life in the late 1800’s.  The first demonstration was whip cracking.  Bill tried his hand at it and was quite good.  The “crack” comes from the fact that the tip of the whip, when spun around, breaks the sound barrier.  Next on the agenda was a demonstration of a working sheep dog named Billy.  To buy and train a sheep dog costs about $20,000.  But Billy was very good (and very fast) as he herded the sheep where his master wanted them to go.  Then we got a demonstration of sheep shearing.  Today they use mechanized shears but in the 1800’s they used large manual shears.  In 1892, a sheep shearer set a record (that still stands today) of manually shearing 321 sheep in seven hours and 40 minutes.  The fastest time for shearing a mature sheep (using mechanical shears) is 37.90 seconds.  We watched as the sheep-shearer manhandled a 200-pound sheep and sheared off its wool.   He passed around some wool for us to feel – it is very oily with lanolin.

Bill cracking the whip

Bill and Billy

Shearing the sheep

 Then it was off to the Koala Conservation Center where we were able to observe about 12 koalas that live in the trees on the center.  Most were sleeping, but a few were eating.  The word “koala” in the Indigenous language means “without water”.  The Koalas only get water from the eucalyptus leaves that they eat.  The eucalyptus leaves are poisonous.  They sleep 18 hours a day to conserve energy that is needed to expel the poison from their system.  The Indigenous people found the koala to be a useless animal – their fur was too oily and their meat was poisonous to humans.  The Australian government, on the other hand, find the “cute and cuddly” koala bears a boon to tourism.

Sleeping Koala

Eating eucalyptus leaves











Beach at Cowes
 Following a stop in Cowes, a resort town with a beautiful beach, for a dinner of fish and chips, we headed for the Nobbies Center.  The Nobbies (named because of its unique rock formations) is famous for its large colony of Australian fur seals that live on Seal Rocks off the coast.  Without binoculars they are almost impossible to see.  They have a boardwalk that runs along the cliff’s edge where, if you are lucky, you can spot a few of the Little Penguins that live in burrows on the hillside leading down to the water.    And we were lucky.  There were about 3 that we could see in their burrows and then as I was approaching the end of the boardwalk near the Visitor Center, one little penguin came out of his burrow and posed for us.


Little Penguin in its burrow

Little Penguin












As dusk approached, we drove to our last stop and highlight of the day – the Penguin Parade, when thousands of Little Penguins come ashore after a day of feeding at sea.  Little Penguins are the smallest species of penguins (only about 1 foot high) and the only species that is found in Australia.  They are sometimes called Little Blue Penguins because of their slate-blue plumage.  This event, which attracts millions from all over the world, begins at sunset when the first of the penguins start to come ashore in groups of 25-30 and make their way up the hill side to their burrows (or in some cases little wooden boxes that were built to encourage breeding).  The parade can last as long as 2-3 hours.  These little penguins have a keen sense of direction and very good eye sight, so even though they may have to travel over 1¼ miles to their burrows, they usually know where they are going.  On occasion, they do get disoriented and then you can hear them calling to their mates or chicks in the burrows.  Once back at their burrows they regurgitate the food and fed their mate and/or chicks.  Then at 4 am it is back down the hill into the water for another day of feeding.  According to the ranger, penguins sleep for four minutes at a time.  It was quite an experience watching them waddle up the shore in groups and then separate into smaller groups as they make their way up the hill.  Unfortunately, picture taking is not allowed as the light from the cameras disturbs the little guys so I will have to “borrow” a picture from the internet.

Little Penguins leaving the water

Little Penguins making the trek up the hill to their burrows










Leaving the Penguin Parade about 10 PM, our guide stopped the bus on a dark stretch of the coastline so we could see the stars.  It was a beautiful night for star-gazing.  She pointed out the Southern Cross (like our Big Dipper, it is used to help people orient their location), the constellation Orion (which appears upside-down in the southern hemisphere), and the very bright Milky Way.  What a glorious way to end another perfect day “down under.”  We arrived back at our hotel at midnight, tired but very glad we took this trip.


Friday, February 22, 2019

Blog 4 Great Ocean Road




Today we took a fabulous tour along the Great Ocean Road.  It was a long day (beginning at 7:30 am) but it was so worth every minute of it.  Anyone who is considering visiting Australia and Melbourne should definitely take this tour.  We actually did the reverse of the tour, starting at the 12 Apostles and then driving the highway back down to Melbourne.  This way we beat most of the other tourist buses and did not have to deal with a lot of people at each stop.




The Great Ocean Road is a scenic highway that follows the coastline west of Melbourne for 151 miles through Victoria (often compared to our Pacific Coast Highway).  It was started in 1919 as a project for returning WWI soldiers and took 13 years to complete.  It follows a challenging coastline with hairpin turns along the edge of sheer and crumbling cliffs of the Otway Ranges.  It is dedicated to the soldiers who did not return and is said to be the longest war memorial in the world.  Along the coastline are some prime surf beaches, with waves created from the Southern Ocean and Tasman Sea.  This area is famous for shipwrecks (about 1200) and surfing.  Known as the Surf Coast, its waves are whipped up across their 2,000 unobstructed mile journey from Antarctica.

The day started overcast with a very light drizzle.  But after our initial 3 hour drive through rolling hills and dairy and sheep farms, the sun came out as we reached the 12 apostles.  The name 12 Apostles is a misnomer.  The original name “Sow and Piglets” was considered not an appropriate name for such a majestic rock formation and not a name that would attract tourists.  So the Australian government made the change to 12 Apostles.  And secondly, there never were 12.  There are only 8 (#9 fell into the sea some time ago).  These stacks of limestone are about 15 stories tall and were etched out of the coast by the powerful surf in this area.  Known as Shipwreck Coast, this waterway in the 19th century was the only way to reach Melbourne from Europe.  With storm waves more than 50’high, 180 ships never made it to their destination.  But the view from the lookout stands is stunning.

12 Apostles

12 Apostles










Just a few minutes away is Loch Ard Gorge, an area where the waves funnel through a narrow short gorge before reaching a sandy beach.  Its true claim to fame is the story of the most famous wreck and one of Australia’s greatest rescue efforts.  On June 1, 1878, the clipper Loch Ard from England found itself besieged in a winter storm and crashed into the rocks of nearby Muttonbird Island.  Only one of the 54 on board –a 17-year old apprentice sailor – managed to reach shore in the gorge that now bears the name Loch Ard Gorge.  When he heard the cries of the only other survivor, a young girl of 19, he went back into the sea and saved her.  She had been traveling with 7 members of her wealthy family and somehow was able to cling to a piece of wood until she was rescued.  Australian would have loved it if the two young people had married – it would have been the perfect, romantic, ending to this tragedy.  But alas it was not to be.  Both returned to England and married other people.  When asked later in life why she did not marry her rescuer, she replied that she would never marry a lowly sailor!  So much for Australia’s love story!
Razorback Rock near Loch Ard Gorge

Loch Ard Gorge










From the Gorge we drove down the winding coastal road admiring the truly beautiful coastline.  The sea was many shades of blue, from deep blue to a creamy turquoise blue and several shades in between.  We stopped in the summer resort town of Apollo Bay for lunch and to admired the large stretch sandy beaches.
Apollo Bay

Scenic Coastline

Scenic Coastline

Our next stop was another highlight of the trip.  We drove to an area of eucalyptus trees where koala bears are known to frequent.  Our guide pointed us to a crowd of people and said that we would probably see the koalas there.  Unfortunately there were no koalas, but there were a treeful of King Parrots.  As I was trying to take a picture of one, another landed on my arm.  They were definitely not afraid of humans.  Then someone told us that they had seen two koalas up the road.  So off we went, huffing and puffing up a steep dirt road for about ½ mile.  But we were rewarded when we spied the two koalas asleep in the trees.

King Parrot

Koala Bear













We stopped at another resort town, Lorne, where we had tea and watched a large group of children, out of school for the day, taking swimming and surfing lessons in a beautiful bay area.   
School's out and Surf's up

Our last stop was another highlight.  We drove to a municipal golf course in a small town, and there among the golfers was a group of about 30 kangaroos.  I don’t know if the PGA has any procedures governing what happens if a kangaroo hops off with the ball, but the golfers just played through the kangaroos and the kangaroos just hopped and ate wherever they pleased.

Kangaroos

Golf and Kangaroos










Twelve hours after we started we were back in Melbourne.  This was one of the best tours we have taken.  Koalas, kangaroos, King parrots, sulfur-crested cockatoos (the bane of local farmers because they eat their crops), and stunning views of the ocean, shoreline, and sandstone cliffs and rock formations – what’s not to love.  And best of all – NO SNAKES!!!