Friday, September 11, 2015

Friday, Sep 11th, Mt Barker, Australian Southwest

Greetings!

Days of driving doesn’t make for many photos.  We made it from Denham to Wave Rock in two days, and have an extra day in the area south of Perth as a result. Wave rock was interesting, but not as much as Pat wanted.  The rock was smaller and less of a geological hit than expected, but nearby Mulka’s Cave (with painted hand prints) made up for it.




We enjoyed the photographers on the rock, each trying to construct their compositions of strangely shaped granite.  I especially liked the Japanese wedding model and her director.

We drove southwest for a hundred miles this morning, and visited the Ravensthorne Wildflower Festival.  Exhibiting 700 species, and including a Devonshire tea service, the town wildflower society hosted an outstanding presentation in the town community center.  Nearby, a quilt show complemented the festival.


Our destination today was Bremer Bay.  At the western end of the Fitzgerald National Reserve, we hoped to get a space and then see what has been called the largest collection of wildflowers in Southwest Australia.  Radio commentators were predicting thundershowers, and two days of heavy rain, and our caravan park managers were cautioning trying to get into (and out of) the park tonight.  I wanted to check out some nearby coastal beaches and bays which featured little surfing icons on the map, and we had a late lunch overlooking two of them.  Taking a risk, we decided to drive to the park entrance and see if we could make it across 4-wheel drive dirt roads to a popular bay an hour away.  Taking exactly the time possible to get there and back (we jumped out of the car, took a photo, and headed back), we made it just before the park closed and the rains began.

Today, we drove to Porongorup National Park, in the Sterling Mountain Range.  The granite skyway walk was a bit too high for us, but we did see some great views from the trail, and saw some awesome karri trees and more wildflowers.  We're checked into the Mt Barker Caravan Park, stocked up on food at the local IGA Store, and are using the wifi in the town's library.   The clouds and drizzle are beginning to get more serious, and we'll probably just hang out here for a few hours.

Monday, September 7, 2015

First Week Completed, September 7th, Denham, Western Australia

Greetings!

It’s been a week today since we picked up the RV and headed north.  And we’ve been without wifi for several days.  We were actually in towns which were out of power (due to improvements being made).  At the most western and northern point of our trip, we have a fairly speedy wifi if we sit in a bench just outside the office before 9pm.  I’m writing this post in the RV, will cull down the photos for today (lots of sights of things that swim), and then try to get it all up to date before it shuts off.

Every day, the flowers along the road are spectacular.  We’ve got four-week passes to the National Parks, and we’ve gotten our cost back in this week.  








I’ve mastered the ability to drive fast enough to cover a reasonable daily distance, and still be slow enough to spot flowers we haven’t cataloged yet.  It easier if they are not green, as the background everywhere is a variety of green hues and textures.  The dirt is usually red, but coastal white to dark grey sand competes well.  The water is turquoise to dark blue, except in the great lagoons, where it can be deep pink to orange.  There are also large circular pans, like we saw in Africa, where everything is red.  The sky is always blue, and the sun has been hot.   We’re thinking of including sunblock in our morning regimen.

We took the advice of a visitor center volunteer in Dondaro, and detoured inland for a few hours to the Irwin River Valley, and the CoalSeam Conservation Park.  All of the literature in the small coastal town emphacized the wonders of the wildflowers there, and the fact that you could view the layers of coal in the riverbed from the fossilbed picnic area.  Geology, botany, and paleontology – all in one place!
No one mentioned the flies.

If you’ve ever had the experience of driving at night on a dark road with few oncoming cars, you may get what I’m talking about.  Driving this wide RV on narrow dirt roads feels very much like using high beams on a dark night drive on remote roads.  If you are like me, you use your high beams until a car approaches, switching them off as he passes, and then back to high beams.  Chances are they are doing the same thing.


These roads can be ragged on the edges, as are the nerves of anyone sitting in the passenger seat.  The trick to driving a wide van on a narrow road is to stay as close to the centerline as possible (maybe even crossing over a couple of inches) until another van approaches. At the very last minute, you each move back into your lane about a foot, hold your breath, and pass each other.  Again, back to the safety, and piece of mind, of the centerline. 

Our RV length is causing some problems finding places to stay.  It’s just a little too long for most RV camps.  We figured out how to describe it (8 meters), and then cringe when we hear that pause as the camp owners try to figure whether they have room for us.  You do not see the huge 40-footers here, which are common throughout the Western U.S.  Most RVs we see are either connected to tents, or are popups.  We see RVs and tour busses our size on the road, just not in the caravan parks.  Not pushing our luck, and realizing that we want to spend a full week below Perth, we’ve decided not to go as far north as we had planned, and have stayed longer at the places we have found. 

In the next three days, we’ll be heading south a bit inland from the road we came up on, aiming at a town a day or two southeast of Perth.  It’s called Hyden, famous for Wave Rock.  Geological formations meeting tourist adventures defines the town.  And it’s on the way to Esperance, which Pat is hoping we can visit.  Whether or not, we’ll swing west somewhere near the southern coast and wind our way through Albany and a myriad of other parks and towns in the region before ending back in Perth on September 20th.  Then, fly to Adelaide, rent a car, and figure out what’s next.


I’ve decided it's futile to try to write posts long after the fact for each of the days in the last week.  And I can hear Steve saying that no one is going to look at 400 photos.  Of well, view as much as you can.  I’ve tried to cut out bad shots without losing the content.  Here’s the link to the past week’s photos (I'm still uploading these, but I'm running out of wifi time on Monday evening, September 7th).  I'll finish them when I get to another caravan site which has wifi)

Friday, September 4th
Stromatolites
Murchison River
Jake's Point

There is a video I created for Jake's Point.  Hope you enjoy it.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Wednesday, September 2nd, Jurien Bay

Greetings!

Our plans to see wildflowers here got off to a huge success today.  Mt. Lesueur National Park was spectacular.  Pat says she's never had an floral experience equal to this one.  I've uploaded my photos, but we have 150 more from Pat's camera we have to sort through and upload.



That will take reaching a more powerful wifi than is at the pub we're have beers in tonight.  Because the availability gets slimmer further north, it may have to wait until we get back to Perth in a little over a week.




We are having so much fun with the RV.  Setting up the bed each night is a bit tiresome, and the width of the middle of it (where the fridge and stove meet the toilet) is a bit narrow.  Passing each other is real cozy, however, so it's not all bad.



Fruit and vegetables are expensive here, but everyone's very friendly.  To my friend Chris, I have to say I've heard three guys say "Good-day, Mate" in four days.  My only disappointment is that the water's cold here on the west coast, and the waves are blocked by reefs and rocks at every bay so far.



We're headed north tomorrow after two nights here.  We recommend Jurien Bay Visitor Park as a base of operations for anyone wanting to see all of the area's natural environment.  While I've yet to see a platypus or a gecko, there are plenty of other great flora and fauna we have seen.

Here's a link to the photos I took today.  Pat is keeping track of which wildflowers we've scored, and we'll be constructing a full album when we get back.



Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Tuesday, September 1st, Jurien Bay

Greetings!

After our first night sleep in the RV, we drove a short way south to Yanchep National Park.  We had passed it last night, but felt we needed more time to explore it before it would close.  With kangaroos, koalas, several species of parrot, and an exciting walk around a large lake, we’re glad we waited.





Our next stop was Pinnacles National Park, an unbelievable landscape of rocks and sand that reminded us of ancient stone structures from Celtic times we’d seen in France and England. 








Tonight, we’ve settled into Jurien Bay, and are now having a pint in a local pub.  We’ll be here for another day before heading north.


Here’s a link to the photos from September 1st.

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Sunday Morning, August 30th, Perth Botanical Garden

Greetings!

After breakfast at the hotel, we walked the 2.5 miles to the Perth Botanical Garden.  We had planned on catching the city bus at a stop a block from our hotel directly to the Park, and saving Pat's walking capabilities for the huge garden.  Perth's annual City to the Surf Run occurred at 8am, and bus services were suspended until noon.  So we headed in the direction of the Park, and asked the very many standing around city workers how to best get there.  We took advantage of lots of benches along the way, especially those on a staircase popularizing a famous battle on Papua New Guinea in which 1,100 Australian soldiers held off 5,000 Japanese troops in WWII.  Marking each segment of the battle, a nice bench with a description of the event has been placed at an appropriate distance up the stairs.

Fortunately, the busses began running again, and we returned back to our hotel at 3pm.  After some pain-killing drugs, we'll start to get serious about planning our next three weeks on Australia's Southwestern coast.  We bought some books on the area's birds and flowers at the Botanical Gardens, and certainly were inspired by the flowers we saw there.  Tomorrow afternoon, we'll take the city bus out to where we pick up the RV to head out of Perth.

Here's a link to the rest of the photos from Sunday, August 30th, Perth Botanical Gardens today.

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Sunday, August 30th, Perth

Greetings!

Just waking up on Sunday morning in a downtown TravelLodge in Perth, Australia.  We've got a day until we pick up our RV, and head off north.  Pat's reading the Press Democrat online, and I'm beginning to remember our visit to New Zealand.

As readers know, our travels have always contained a healthy component of family history.  Pat and I come from adventurers who seem to have taken risks to explore new paths for their families. Following their travels makes the places we visit more real, and their experiences more imaginable.

My grandfather on my father's side, William Walker Fearon, left Cumbria in 1909 with his older sister (Marian McArthur Fearon), and her husband (Gordon Clark Stronach).  My grandfather departed the group in Arizona, where Gordon took a job in the copper mining industry.  After a four-year enlistment in the Army in the Southwest, my grandfather ended up in Ray, North Dakota, where he eventually rose to be the Police Chief.

But this is the story of the travels of the Fearon family to New Zealand.  Gordon and Marian were cremated in a cemetery I visited on Friday about ten miles southwest of Auckland, New Zealand.  The cemetery also contains the grave of Marian's younger sister, Rebecca.  Nearby are the graves of Charles and Roger Fearon, who died in 1921 and 1929, almost fifty years earlier.  With that information,  I have begun to explore online records.  I'll report back when I have more of their stories.



On Friday afternoon, we visited Fearon Park, the last home of my great aunt, and a local cemetery, and you can view them online (Looking for Dead Relatives).  The cemetery is huge (200 acres), and I appreciate the Auckland Council staff for their assistance in locating the information on my family.






On Saturday morning, before our flight to Australia, we drove to a nearby Maori and European settlement which has been occupied for over 800 years.  The architectural and botanical expertise exhibited by Maori landscape designs is overwhelming, and deserves a more detailed explanation in a later post.  You can see the photos I took in an album titled (Aotearoa - the original Maori name for New Zealand).


Sunday, August 23, 2015

Summer's Over, New Australian Adventure

Greetings!

We're packing today for a ten-week trip to Australia.  After a barbecue with Zivolichs (newest PLHS grads to Sonoma), and season-ending rounds of golf tomorrow at Windsor and Tuesday at Indian Valley, we'll take the Sonoma's AirportExpress to SF International on Wednesday.

Thanks to Ken, Dianne, and Dusty for coming up from LA.  We hope the garden gets even more gorgeous with the fall colors.  We'll post what spring looks like north of Perth in the next couple of weeks.  Here's a Google Map with our route and points of interest.