Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Coweramup to Albany to Esperance - 15-17 February 2010

2010.02.15 at 14h08m53s - Manjimup  128 of 564 2010.02.15 at 17h12m06s - Nornalup Inlet from Rate Lookout  143 of 564From Coweramup we drove to Albany via various extremely beautiful back roads, passing through Manjimup where we visited the Manjimup Regional Timber park.

We stopped at a lookout to catch a glimpse of Nornalup Inlet.

The ground was covered with yellow kangaroo paws( an Australian native flower). Albany-1178 of 1481

Albany, Trish-1175 of 1481On the way we were passed by a Google map camera car so look out for us in Google Maps at some time in the future.

Albany [pronounced Al-bany not All-bany] was too crowded for a long stay, so after an excellent dinner at the Earl of Spencer Historic Inn we moved on to Esperance.

Esperance-1408 of 1481Esperance was named by Bruni D'Entrecasteaux after his ship L'Esperance [loosely translated as hope]. It is a very attractive town. 

 

Esperance-1389 of 1481We stayed in the Esperance Sea Front Caravan Park opposite the beach. It was a lovely swimming beach and like all beaches in Esperance is safe.

Animals, Esperance-1340 of 1481Esperance-1188 of 1481We took the MacKenzie Island cruise on the MV Seabreeze IV to Woody Island the only Island in the Recherche Archipelago open to humans, the rest being Class A Reserves. 

Esperance-1231 of 1481We saw sea lions, fur seals and were treated to two Sea Eagles retrieving fish thrown from the boat. At Woody Island we went on the glass bottomed boat Miss Woody, to see the underwater flora and fauna. 

At the end of the cruise we threw breadcrumbs and watched fish fight for every breadcrumb. They were blue streaks of hunger.

We then walked around the Island, enjoying some wonderful views. 

Birds, Esperance-1309 of 1481
 Esperance-1417 of 1481
Animals, Esperance-1426 of 1481There is a great walk along the beachfront in Esperance. Sammy the Sea Lion has taken up residence underneath the tanker jetty. He is a real ham for the camera and has generated a cottage industry as everyone walks to the jetty to say hello to Sammy, purchase a cup of excellent coffee from the Coffee Cat, sit on the chairs or in the shade of the rotunda and enjoy the coffee, sun and sea air. Esperance-1378 of 1481

We had hoped to camp in the Cape Le Grand National Park but a bushfire at Lucky Bay [see the smoke in the photo to the right] meant it was closed, so promising to return later we set off for Hopetoun.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Margaret River [Coweramup] - 13 & 14 February 2010

2010.02.14 at 05h58m05s - Taunton Farm Holiday Park  30 of 564Margaret River is a very highly regarded wine producing region, they also produce excellent cheese and chocolate. We stayed at the Taunton Farm Caravan Park at Coweramup (Cowtown). This is a very pretty park with views over a dam to distant paddocks. It is about 15 kilometers from Margaret River but well sited to explore the wineries.
2010.02.14 at 15h25m07s - Cape Mentelle  49 of 564The first evening we ate at Arc of Iris which is nice and a BYO so you can enjoy the days purchases.

For lunch the next day we ate at Must which is truly excellent. Both these Restaurants are located in Margaret River Township.

We visited three wineries, Cape Menthelle, Cullens and Vasse Felix (Holmes a'Court). They were very beautiful and we enjoyed this.
Trish's favourite cheese is Margaret River Cheddar and so we visited the cheese shop and purchased some cheese.

2010.02.14 at 12h42m36s - Cheese Company  37 of 564We explored the coast near Coweramup Point and Gracetown.
On our way home we saw a local picnic music night and so we stopped to listen to the local children perform and as it was Valentines Day we bought a Lovers Lamb Roll for dinner and a donation to a good cause.

2010.02.14 at 18h18m14s - Cowaramup  80 of 564

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Christmas – 3 December 2009 to 12 February 2010

Bondi - 04 December 2009 at 08h42m42s  2 of 6
San Francisco-198 of 1481On the 3rd of December we left Perth to visit our children for Christmas. We had a layover at Bondi an iconic Sydney surf beach and a great swim  before flying to San Francisco to visit Alex and Sophie. 

From there we flew to Los Angeles to visit a friend in Santa Monica and then connect with the Qantas flight to New York.  This was by far the best flight across the USA we have had in more than twenty years of flying the route.  Qantas certainly beats the US carriers by a long way on cabin cleanliness, service and comfort.  
09-12 Blizzard, Washington - 20 December 2009 at 16h51m30s  132 of 292In New York we visited more friends and saw the musical 'Wicked.'
Although New York was cold we were back in Virginia in time to enjoy “the Blizzard of 2009”, not really a blizzard but the press does hype things up. We enjoyed the blizzard thoroughly, feeling quite smug because we had done all our shopping.  We then spent a white Christmas with our daughters.   Chris, Monica and Jeremy came down for New Year. 
09-12 USA, New York-225 of 1481We left Washington on the 20th of January for the UK to visit relatives and friends. This meant we missed the two even larger snow storms in Washington, which the press, now struggling for  superlatives, named “Snowmageddon” and “Snowpocalypse”.
During this time John’s uncle died so our stay in the UK was extended.  We saw various abbeys [Tintern Abbey in Wales – shown left], churches and stately homes while we were  there. We also saw the SS Great Britain, a technological marvel for its day which subsequently transported a lot of migrants to Australia. Trish found two of her family names although we do not know if they were ancestors. 

10-01 UK, Tintern Abbey-345 of 618
We enjoyed Bristol in particular seeing how people live in a city where you can walk almost everywhere, a very pleasant way of living.  We returned to Perth on the 11th of February at 1.00a.m.
Our caravan was onsite courtesy of the staff at The Perth ITP and we fell asleep in clean sheets in our little pod.
We spent the next two days unpacking, washing and shopping before heading south to Margaret River.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Perth – 15 November to 2 December 2009

Cottesloe Beach - 22 November 2009 at 17h18m36s  469 of 611 Guilford, John, Trish - 27 November 2009 at 19h08m03s  484 of 611We arrived in Perth on and stayed at the Perth International Tourist Park at Forrestfield. This is a well run camping Park near the airport but still country. They will also store your caravan for you while you are away.
We had a bit of a holiday from sight seeing and just enjoyed ourselves visiting friends and swimming at Cottesloe. We saw the wineries in the Swan River Valley and one of the oldest hotels in Australia at Guilford.
Freemantle - 29 November 2009 at 11h33m55s  507 of 611Freemantle - 19 November 2009 at 16h38m30s  457 of 611We visited Fremantle with another Bushtracker Family and saw the shipwreck museum. Before navigation was an exact science ships from the Dutch East India Company used the roaring 40's as a route to the Dutch East Indies. This saved them from a long hot trip crossing the equator twice, which wasn't good for men or product. If they missed the turn they sometimes ended up wrecked on the coast of WA. They weren't very impressed with what they saw and declined to land and raise a flag. They did name some of the coast. The most gruesome wreck was the Batavia, where a mutinous crew went on a murder spree before being finally brought to justice. A portion of the stern is preserved.

Rottnest Island - 29 November 2009 at 16h21m22s  580 of 611Rottnest Island - 29 November 2009 at 13h56m04s  528 of 611We took the ferry out to Rottnest Island. This Dutch thought the native quokka's were rats, hence the name.
Rottnest was once a gaol but is now a popular destination for holidays and day trips from Perth.


  Rottnest Island - 29 November 2009 at 14h36m38s  529 of 611 Rottnest Island - 29 November 2009 at 15h25m41s  570 of 611  Rottnest Island - 29 November 2009 at 16h29m29s  606 of 611

Friday, November 13, 2009

The Wheatbelt – 13 & 14 November 2009

From Kalgoorlie we drove through the wheat belt. At this time of year the vista is of rolling golden fields.

We stopped at Merredin at the ‘Ave a Rest Campground’. It was very clean and attractive but the 94 is the main East West Highway and road trains kept rolling through the night so complete rest wasn't happening.

We went to Merredin the next day, a very attractive little town.
It was the home of The Kalgoorlie Brewing and Ice Company started by James Cummins. When he died his daughter Alice Mary Cummins became the major shareholder.

At this time the company was in dire straits due to competition from larger brewery's. Alice developed German Top Style Fermentation and had success with Hannans Lager.

We saw the Railway Museum. This has very good artefacts and also includes a very good museum of Pioneer Women.

We visited York for lunch. This is a town which no longer has a reason for being so it is filled with alternatives. We had a very good lunch at the Old Mill.

We travelled via Northam to see the famous white swans. This is a colony introduced from Britain and the only surviving colony of white swans in Australia. Australian swans are black.  Presumably the original white swans were stolen from the British Crown, the owner of all swans in Britain. 

 

Thursday, November 12, 2009

The Goldfields – 10 to 12 November 2009

Norseman, a gold mining town, is West Australia's gateway to the Nullabor Plain. In July 1894 Lawrence Sinclair, a prospector, tethered his horse ‘Norseman’ to a tree and woke to find the horse had unearthed a piece of gold bearing quartz with its hooves, making one very happy prospector.

The reef and the town were named after the horse. It was to become the second richest gold field in WA, producing over 5 million ounces of gold. [Value at today’s gold price over $5 billion]


As was usual in arid areas camels did most of the heavy work. Camel trains of up to 80 camels with four cameleers were common. The width of the main street was the width required for a camel train to turn around.

Beacon Hill lookout gives a panoramic view of the town, the operations of Central Norseman Gold Corporation, Lake Cowan to the north [this view]and Lake Dundas to the south.

Next stop was Kalgoorlie Boulder. Kalgoorlie’s famous Golden Mile is thought to be the richest gold field in the world. Kalgoorlie is derived from the Wangai word Karl Kurla, place of the silky pears. Boulder was originally a separate [and very competitive] town, but the two are now administered as one.

The Gold rush began in January 1893 when prospectors Paddy Hannan, Tom Flanagan and Dan O'Shea travelling through, stopped to re-shoe their horse, found gold [perhaps the horses had more gold sense than the prospectors] and stayed to peg a claim.
The goldfields are in a semi arid zone. Water was very scarce and at first was brought in by camel train and later distilled from saline water.Costs were high, and hygiene and sanitation were poor causing many epidemics. Timber was cleared for up to 400 miles to supply the furnaces for the distilling.
C.Y.O'Connor, Chief Engineer for the Western Australian Government was asked to submit a water scheme for the goldfields. His scheme proposed the construction of a reservoir on the Helena River, now called the Mundarring Reservoir, with eight pumping stations to carry five million gallons of water daily through 330 miles, (528km) of cast iron pipes to a reservoir near Coolgardie.

With the support of Sir John Forrest, then WA premier the scheme went forward. It was a huge project, pumping water uphill over that distance had never been done before. The papers and population of the day unable to understand either the concepts involved or the necessity for such a scheme ran a sustained and malicious campaign against C.Y. O'Connor accusing him of corruption and conceit and holding him and the pipeline up to ridicule. He was accused of taking kickbacks and it was suggested the dam would collapse flooding all of Perth.

Two Royal Commissions completely exonerated him but in the end unable to tolerate the personal attacks he committed suicide in March 1902 a year before the successful completion of the scheme. At the opening in 1903 Sir John Forrest quoting the Bible said, "We have made a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert."
It is still in operation today supplying water to Coolgardie, Kalgoorlie and Norseman.

The Mt. Charlotte Lookout on the top of the Mt. Charlotte Reservoir in Kalgoorlie has a nice fountain, which we hope does not flow back to the water supply, although Trish’s hands were clean!

Most mining now is done in the Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mine ‘Superpit’, an open cut mine developed as a result of Alan Bond’s vision to consolidate the over 100 underground mines to allow all the ore to be extracted.

We toured the pit with Finders Keepers tours. As the Superpit is mined remnants of the mines hand dug by the old timers emerge, often with machinery left behind. There are 3,000 kms of railway in the tunnels.These remnants go to what they call the Graveyard.

When the Superpit is fully mined the plan is to let it fill with water and rehabilitate the remainder of the site. There are many other mines in the region.

Like all wealthy gold field towns there is a lot of beautiful architecture. Hannans was the Gentleman’s club of the era, still operative today. The York Hotel has been maintained in its former magnificence.

The Ivanhoe Headframe is the gateway into the museum. The headframe allowed the miners and their ore and machinery to go up and down when mining was in underground tunnels.
Boulder and Kalgoorlie were highly competitive and had a race to see who could build the biggest and best town hall.
The Boulder Town Hall has the Bay of Naples curtain. This was painted by Phillip Goatcher who was known as ‘Satin and Velvet’ Goatcher and was the most highly paid scene painter of his day. This is thought to be the only surviving example of his curtains although some of his work is in other regional museums. His work was ephemeral and hasn't been kept.

Kalgoorlie - Boulder were very wealthy towns and many well known performers came here.

We did a day trip to Coolgardie, once a very large town now  almost a ghost town, although with fifty mines operating throughout the area locals are slowly moving back.
The town hall hosts a nice museum including a museum of pharmacy(drugstore) , very interesting as all the medications are in their original packets. It is sobering to think that nearly all of those medications were either useless or harmful. The children’s medications contained cocaine, alcohol and marijuana. There is a Dentists room in the back with a pedal drill and crude and unhygienic dental tools. They are keen on pharmacies and dentists rooms here and there is also one in the Kalgoorlie museum which is slightly more modern but reminds us of our childhood dental visits. It still smells the same.
The cemetery contains the grave of Ernest Giles who set out from Beltana Station[see earlier posting] to find a route to the West Coast. He became a municipal secretary in Coolgardie.
There are a lot of unnamed graves of people who died in the typhoid epidemic.It is said they died too fast to tell people their names but we think it is the miners code of don't ask , don't tell. People on mining fields such as these were then were often running away and preferred not to give their history. You could say they didn't have time to give their real names.

The towns folk have put up a memorial to the people who died on the track and were buried as unknowns in the pioneer cemetery.



During our stay Kalgoorlie had a number of tremendous electrical storms. We were lucky enough to watch one of them from the top of Mt Charlotte above the town.