What we love about Australia
1. cricket
It's almost as good as baseball.
2. cookies
America has the basics -- oreos, chocolate chip, and snaps. Aussie has fifty million different kinds of biscuits (cookies). You just can't have a favorite, since each one is better than the last. Not healthy, though.
3. plumbing
Aussie toilets are way cool. They have two flush buttons, one for a half flush and one for a full flush. Makes a lot more sense than Austin's low-flush toilets which cake up with lime and soon become no-flush toilets.
Aussie showerheads are heaven. Feels like you're in a tropical rainstorm. If you've ever taken a shower at our house, you've experienced it.
What we don't love about Australia
1. the lack of healthy food
Oh, you can find it if you really look, but even the vegetarian stuff is battered and fried. And I'm not talking "health food," I'm just talking non-fried stuff.
2. plumbing
Yes, plumbing is on the list of things we love. However, the dark side of plumbing is the blasts of scorching hot water in the shower for no particular reason, or the way the toilets mysteriously stop flushing at 8 am, or the time I had hair dye covering my head and there was no water anywhere in the unit when my half hour was up (luckily, the water at my parents place across the complex was still on, and nudity is not as taboo here as it is in the States. ;)
3. sand fleas and mosquitoes
We are both covered in little red bumps on our legs from the sand fleas, and little red bumps on our arms from the mossies. Off helps with prevention, and Ivarest helps with cure, but it is Not Fun.
Monday, September 26, 2005
Wednesday, September 21, 2005
Tropical North Queensland
For a little over a week, we've been in the tropics. The scenery has been coastal waters, sugar cane fields, and rainforests with waterfalls. We stayed in Yungaburra, a small village in the heart of the rainforests just west of the mountains west of Cairns. We spent most of our time driving from waterfall to waterfall, seeing the shy wildlife of tree kangaroos and platypussies. I took pictures of the platypus, but it was evening and they won't come out nicely on the web page. I've included some of the many beautiful sights on this page.
The Curtain Fig Tree
This is an incredible tree, hundreds of years old, with roots from the canopy to the ground.
Pepina Falls
Andrew took this picture of us in the Misty Mountains.
There was a wind farm on the aptly named Windy Hill. Why aren't there more of these in Texas?
Millstream Falls, the widest in Queensland
Milla Milla Falls, where we would have swum if it had been hot.
Zillie Falls
Ellinjaa Falls
Dinner Falls on the way to an old volcano vent called The Crater.
The Crater
A warning sign on the way to The Crater. We especially like frame 3, which really means that you are in big trouble, mate.
We took a drive in parts of the outback on the Savannah highway. It was a beautifully clear day and this picture captures it perfectly. We passed many unusual rock formations such as quartz or basalt outcroppings.
The Cathedral Fig tree, formed in much the same way as the Curtain Fig.
Barron Falls. The Dinner Falls above are part of the Barron River as well. This falls is closer to the beach.
Davies National Park
I couldn't resist, seeing how I was born a Davies.
The kids were taking a picture of me. Most of the walk to the falls was over boulders like these.
It was hard to get a good shot of the falls. You might have to tilt your head.
The kids meet new friends everywhere we go.
The Curtain Fig Tree
This is an incredible tree, hundreds of years old, with roots from the canopy to the ground.
Pepina Falls
Andrew took this picture of us in the Misty Mountains.
There was a wind farm on the aptly named Windy Hill. Why aren't there more of these in Texas?
Millstream Falls, the widest in Queensland
Milla Milla Falls, where we would have swum if it had been hot.
Zillie Falls
Ellinjaa Falls
Dinner Falls on the way to an old volcano vent called The Crater.
The Crater
A warning sign on the way to The Crater. We especially like frame 3, which really means that you are in big trouble, mate.
We took a drive in parts of the outback on the Savannah highway. It was a beautifully clear day and this picture captures it perfectly. We passed many unusual rock formations such as quartz or basalt outcroppings.
The Cathedral Fig tree, formed in much the same way as the Curtain Fig.
Barron Falls. The Dinner Falls above are part of the Barron River as well. This falls is closer to the beach.
Davies National Park
I couldn't resist, seeing how I was born a Davies.
The kids were taking a picture of me. Most of the walk to the falls was over boulders like these.
It was hard to get a good shot of the falls. You might have to tilt your head.
The kids meet new friends everywhere we go.
Tuesday, September 13, 2005
Cooberrie Park
Cooberrie Park is an animal park, full of kangaroos, koalas, wombats, donkeys, snakes, emus, cassowaries, cockies, parrots, and lots of other birds and animals. Years ago, I held a koala here, and got to again this time.
The peacocks were showing off.
Feeding kangaroos. They take in animals which can't make it in the wild.
This cocky was telling Richard off.
This koala's name is Mullygrub, which means something like muddy piece of mud.
Andrew holds a carpet python. (by the way, Pam, the park is for sale)
She's heavy, so Richard helps.
And the picture you really wanted to see. Get it off! Get it off! :)
The peacocks were showing off.
Feeding kangaroos. They take in animals which can't make it in the wild.
This cocky was telling Richard off.
This koala's name is Mullygrub, which means something like muddy piece of mud.
Andrew holds a carpet python. (by the way, Pam, the park is for sale)
She's heavy, so Richard helps.
And the picture you really wanted to see. Get it off! Get it off! :)
Great Keppel Island
We've been on the beach for a week now. It's hard to tear myself away to download photos from the camera, let alone write up a trip report! We'll leave tomorrow for a week in tropical north Queensland, then back to this beach again for two more weeks before beginning the journey south.
We took a boat trip out to Great Keppel Island. It has grown from having one hamburger stand to having a large resort and a few smaller camping, dive shops, and accommodations. This is my favorite beach anywhere. The sand is fine and white, the sun is hot, but the water is cool and clear.
The boys and I swam a lot. This is one of our favourite games, sort of a variation of body surfing, just let the waves sweep you onto shore.
This little guy and his friends wanted our lunch, and our sunglasses, and our packets of sugar. He is a rainbow lorikeet. The birds are so pretty here!
On the boat on the way home, full of sand and salt.
We took a boat trip out to Great Keppel Island. It has grown from having one hamburger stand to having a large resort and a few smaller camping, dive shops, and accommodations. This is my favorite beach anywhere. The sand is fine and white, the sun is hot, but the water is cool and clear.
The boys and I swam a lot. This is one of our favourite games, sort of a variation of body surfing, just let the waves sweep you onto shore.
This little guy and his friends wanted our lunch, and our sunglasses, and our packets of sugar. He is a rainbow lorikeet. The birds are so pretty here!
On the boat on the way home, full of sand and salt.
Carnarvon Gorge
Unfortunately, we only had a couple of hours to spend at this national park. It's best on a visit of multiple days, so we did the best we could. Almost all the sights in the park are only accessible on walking tracks. One of the tracks we took was to an aboriginal site called Baloon Creek.
It was only about a 1km walk to the site, crossing the same (dry) streambed multiple times.
These are the handprints which were painted 10,000 years ago (plus or minus 3sigma). The pigment used is from ochre found nearby. This site is very similar to the one I've visited in Boynton Canyon, near Sedona, AZ. Those people didn't build roads either, it's a long walk to their old towns along the cliffs.
The real handprint culprit.
Typical scenery on this side of the gorge -- large basalt monoliths, gum trees, palm trees, rocky stream beds. Most of Australia has been in a 5 year drought.
It was only about a 1km walk to the site, crossing the same (dry) streambed multiple times.
These are the handprints which were painted 10,000 years ago (plus or minus 3sigma). The pigment used is from ochre found nearby. This site is very similar to the one I've visited in Boynton Canyon, near Sedona, AZ. Those people didn't build roads either, it's a long walk to their old towns along the cliffs.
The real handprint culprit.
Typical scenery on this side of the gorge -- large basalt monoliths, gum trees, palm trees, rocky stream beds. Most of Australia has been in a 5 year drought.
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