Wednesday, January 31, 2018

A Moment to Reflect

Seven weeks into our trip and in the role of a tourist, I can't help but look back and reflect on what I observe:


  • Aside from our time in the Rainforest (no cellphone service there), everyone walks about with their eyes glued to their cellphones and earbuds in place, oblivious to the world.  No one seems to talk to anyone around them.  In restaurants, people at the same table are glued to their phones and texting. Mass transportation the same.  Walking along the street out and about- ditto.

  • People are obsessed with selfies.  We would be in locations with unbelievable beauty and most of the tourists are only interested in taking selfies.  People- no one wants to see pictures of you...they want to see pictures of the places you have visited!  Has social media pressured us into feeling we need to post provocative, glamour photos of ourselves?  And to get the perfect pose, be rude and push, literally push, strangers out of their way- even if you were there first?


  • Queuing.  For the most part, we as Americans are taught at an early age to stand in line. There’s always that one person or another who will try to “cut” in line, but mostly we are a polite people.  Apparently not the case in many Asian countries.  While we haven’t arrived on their turf yet to experience it there, we have encountered numerous tourist groups that think nothing of pushing you out of their way or ignoring queues altogether.  So far, I remain polite and silent.....

The Land Down Under - Sydney and the Escape from the Wet Tropics



While I loved the amazing foliage, flowers, birds, bugs, crocodiles, and trees of the rainforest, I was ready to leave "nature" for some urban experiences.  After getting settled in our Airbnb, we headed out to see the Opera House and Harbour Bridge via the Sydney Botanical Gardens.  Wow.  Day prior to leaving Cairns, we learned that we'd be in Sydney for Australia Day with fireworks the next evening down at the Harbour.  Perfect!

Spent the next day down exploring Darling Harbour, Circular Quay, and the Rocks (former industrial port- now cute boutiques and restaurants).  It was then back to the Botanical Gardens for the perfect viewing spot for the fireworks and it did not disappoint!



Our ferry ride to Manley Beach (nice sandy beach, water was way too cold for our liking but enjoyed watching the surfers) was enjoyable but it was the ferry ride out and back to Manley on Sydney Harbour that was fantastic.  The following day we took a local bus out to Bondi Beach to hike the six km Coastal Walk to Coogee Beach through Tamarama, Bronde, and Clovelly.  Due to trail repairs, the path detoured through an active cemetery.  Very interesting.  A perfect way to conclude our visit to the Land Down Under (and no rain!).  Onto Asia.........


Harbour Bridge
Sydney Opera House
Harbour Bridge from Botanical Garden
Darling Harbour
Sydney Harbour
Bondi Beach
Cemetery on Coastal Walk
along Coastal Walk
approaching Coogee Beach



Busy around Sydney



Tuesday, January 30, 2018

The Land Down Under - The Wet Tropics

how cute is this church on the waterfront in Port Douglas? 

Touching down in Cairns, I was especially excited for this part of Australia.  The Great Barrier Reef, rainforests, Atherton Tablelands, koalas and kangaroos.  Upon our arrival in Port Douglas (a very cute village), the first order of business was to book our reef tour and Daintree Rainforest visits.  The trip to the Barrier Reef was a big deal- small boat with personalized attention, Outer Reef location preferred.....Booked!
  
raining in a rainforest!

First morning we headed out on our own to Mossman Gorge- a tropical rainforest, gorge, and aboriginal settlement.  It was raining unfortunately, but hey- we are in a tropical rainforest, so kind of apropos........ Hiked about three km through dense rainforest keeping a sharp eye out for bugs, snakes, and other non-urban creatures.

amazing tree with buttress roots in Mossman Gorge

ready to board.....

Next morning we awoke early for our reef adventure.  It was overcast and a bit windy but was hoping it would pass once out in open waters.  We were heading to the Outer Reef so a rather long ride out, but on a stunning catamaran with only 17 people on board.  It was really nice and they fed us constantly.  Well, "the weather started getting rough, the tiny ship was tossed, if not for the courage of the fearless crew".........yes, you know that song and it played over and over in my head as the water got rougher and the rain came down.  We learned when we arrived in Port Douglas that it was the rainy season as well as jellyfish season- did not know that when we planned the trip but we couldn’t have changed the schedule even if we knew in advance.  So, we finally arrived out on the reef, donned our “wet suits” (to protect us from deadly jellyfish stings) and jumped in.  Given the rough water, we held onto long ropes so as not to fight the large sea swells.  Below there were beautiful coral gardens, an enormous sea clam, and tropical fish- even saw Nemo among the sea anemones!  They did not appear concerned with the stormy weather above. Not going to lie- we were queasy in the water as the swells were quite strong.  It isn't the trip we had hoped and were extremely disheartened, but you can't control the weather.  It will take a long time to get over this disappointment.


Cape Tribulation

Next day we had booked a trip up into the Daintree Rainforest and Cape Tribulation.  Raining again but hey- it's a rainforest.  Daintree contains the oldest surviving rainforest in the world.  Cape Tribulation is only one of the few places (or possibly the only place) where two World Heritage listed sites meet- a tropical rainforest and coral reef.  Everywhere you go along the coastline/beach are signs to be aware of crocodiles in the area....a little unsettling.



a wild Cassowary!  What luck to see one...
We did several hikes into the forest and the foliage was amazing. I loved the large trees with buttress roots, which help steady the tree with the soil so damp.  Think architects got flying buttresses used in cathedral construction from nature?  The ferns were humongous, but the very best part was when we saw a wild Cassowary!!!!   It is a huge bird, perhaps just slightly smaller than an ostrich, but so colorful! Not too common to see one in the wild.  Almost made up for the Barrier Reef the day prior, but not quite.........

Lunch was at a tropical oasis resort which was surrounded by the most amazing tropical flowers.  We also cruised the Daintree River to see the crocodiles up close.



A sad farewell to Port Douglas and we were on our way back to Cairns, but first 
stopping along the way to visit Kuranda.  Kuranda is a small village, set within a national park, on top of the mountain overlooking the coastline.  We traveled the Kuranda Scenic Railway to get up there.  Commenced in 1887, it consists of a 37 km rail line with two 1720 class locomotive, each with silky oak timber interior carriages dating back to the early 1900s.  They run on a narrow gauge track with 15 hand carved tunnels, 55 bridges, and 98 curves (I read the brochure).  We passed through spectacular scenery including the Barron Gorge, waterfalls, Hydro Electric Station, and passed over an iron lattice bridge on a curve high over the gorge.




Koala...heavy, sharp nails, smelly, but loved it!
Upon arrival in Kuranda we wandered the many shops and went into the Koala World, where I had the opportunity to hold and cuddle a koala and pet wallabies.  FYI- they are all pretty smelly animals........


The ride down from Kuranda was on the scenic Skyrail, a series of cable cars that flew high over the rainforest canopy.  Speechless!


In Cairns, we visited the Botanical Gardens (so many amazing tropical flowers), and did a day trip to the Atherton Tablelands.  There we visited The Boulders (natural pool amongst boulders), Josephine Falls, and Milla Milla Falls.  We also visited Mungalli Dairy, a boutique dairy farm.  Oh, did I mention, it rained the entire time?  Made for beautiful waterfalls, but muddy hiking.


Cape Tribulation
Ferry on way to Cape Tribulation
Mossman Gorge
look close on leaf-yucky insect
Cassowary warning
Alligators on Daintree River
Cairns Botanical Garden
Cairns Botanical Garden
The Kuranda Scenic Railway
on Railway heading up to Kuranda
heading down from Kuranda
Koala!
up close and personal
Wallaby in Cairns field
Atherton Tablelands
Atherton Tablelands
Atherton Tablelands
Josephine Falls
Milla Milla Falls
more in Cairns Botanical Garden
Cairns Botanical Garden



Our travels in the Wet Tropics...


The Land Down Under - Melbourne


Melbourne Skyline 




We've been told Melbourne is the place to go to experience a real Australian City.  So, we went!  The downtown has amazing skyscrapers (each with its unique architecture), and lots of reclaimed alleyways- some historic with period retail/restaurants, others lined with cafes filled at lunchtime with office workers........









And still other alleyways exhibiting works by graffiti artists.  I particularly loved this one!











Melbourne is filled with beautiful green gardens everywhere, and a dense transportation system consisting of older trolley lines as well as modern light rail vehicles.  Within the Central City, all mass transportation is FREE!  What a concept.....

Our first day there we were picked up by Robyn’s friend, Jane, who graciously gave up her Sunday to take us out to the Yarra Valley, about an hour-drive outside of Melbourne to explore some of Australia’s best wineries. 


We had an amazing lunch with wine at
the Coombe Yarra Valley Estate, formerly the estate of the famous opera singer Dame Nellie Melba and no, I never heard of her...   Then on to the Domaine Chandon Estate (as in Moët and Chandon, don't know what happened to Moët), and a final stop at another winery of which I can't remember the name.  In between visits, we drove through lush fruit orchards, vineyards, and even a temperate rainforest.  Thank you Jane for a wonderful day!!!



To balance out all this nature, we went on a three-hour walking tour the following day in downtown Melbourne, where we first learned about the alleyways, the city history, recent development, and hidden parks and gardens.





Twelve Apostles on Great Ocean Road




Not to be missed, we had booked a small group tour for the following morning to go out to the Great Ocean Road and see the Twelve Apostles.  It was a long drive out, with a picnic breakfast stop on the beach and a walk around a lush tropical rainforest.  The entire the ride out had amazing scenery and of course we spent time at the Twelve Apostles; limestone pillars off the coast which are no longer twelve as some have collapsed into the ocean, but still an amazing sight.


court side...
Australian Open!!







Again, balancing nature and city, the next day we headed back downtown to further explore those alleyways and check out the activities at the Australian Open, which had commenced just a few days prior.  What luck when a gentleman approached us with a free entrance ticket as he was done attending the events.  Nathan went in and slipped into one of the matches while I took off for the nearest mani-pedi, then a river cruise along the Yarra River as it winded through the downtown and out towards the shipping terminals and open sea.  Met up several hours later, both enjoying our time apart.

historic alleyway
alley graffiti artwork
green parks everywhere
Domaine Chandon
beautiful birds everywehre along Great Ocean Road
along Great Ocean Road
rainforest along Great Ocean Road
Loch Ard Gorge at 12 Apostles 
down in Loch Ard Gorge at 12 Apostles
in the gorge
this sign made my day..

happy river cruiser

Yarra River in Melbourne
at the 12 Apostles
coastline along Great Ocean Road


State Library Victoria in Melbourne
best traffic sign ever!!!


Our adventures around Melbourne