| Sydney airport lounge |
Saturday, 1 April 2017
Day forty four
We are now in Sydney Airport departure lounge, waiting for our flight. Some tears on saying Goodbye ( or au revoir ) to James and Grace, but we have plans.
Day forty three
Our last full day in Aussieland and we spent the morning filling a skip! All the work that has been done on James and Grace's house had generated a large amount of waste and we felt that the most useful thank you we could offer was to help them fill a skip. But, as we are down under, the skip was a very Australian affair.
James had been eying the surf all morning and decided that he deserved a surf so we walked down to watch him catch a few waves. And this time we watched him and got some photos of him, not Francis-not-Henry.
We then had lunch of a selection of cold meats and cheese that Grace had gone to get specially for our last lunch.
In the afternoon we walked the coast path one last time. The waves were not as good as the morning.
But Sydney put on the best weather we could hope for on our last day.
In the evening James and Grace took us to Sefa, a Middle Eastern restaurant for our last meal. The place was exotic and the food was delicious.
Over the meal we made plans for a return visit. To Sydney that is not Sefa necessarily, which means that all this 'last' stuff was pretty pointless. So James and Grace will hope to come to the UK later this year, we will go back to Sydney at about the same time next year and include a two week trip with James and Grace to New Zealand in the itinerary and then James will be in Cambridge in the middle of 2018.
| Skip on wheels |
| Riding along on the crest of a wave. |
| Checking the waves |
| Bondi Beach |
| Sefa |
| Food |
Friday, 31 March 2017
Day forty two
A bright sunny day so we headed in to Sydney harbour to take a river ferry up the Paramatta River to a town called Paramatta.
The ferry took us under the bridge and round some of the dock lands that we have not seen before.
The Sidney-sprawl seemed to go on for a long time but some of the journey was through mangroves.
In Paramatta we walked to a heritage site called Elizabeth Farm and is one of the oldest surviving buildings from the early settler days. Paramatta was founded two years after Sydney and the farm was established then. The house started as a three roomed cottage but over thirty years, as the owners grew more prosperous they extended and remodelled it to create a very stylish home.
The family were unusual in that they befriended the local Aborigines and socialised with them. In the 1900s a Quaker family owned the house for sixty years and did much to conserve the building. The gardens have many of the trees planted by the first family.
The return journey brought us back to the harbour with threatening clouds overhead.
| Bridge |
| Funfair |
| Skyline |
| Mangrove |
| Exterior |
| Interior |
| Gardens |
| Cactus |
| Skyline |
| Reflection |
| 2 |
| 3 |
Thursday, 30 March 2017
Day forty one
Today was wet, very wet, as the tail end of Debbie headed out to sea North of us. We headed in to Sydney on the bus and went to the Museum of Australia. It has a very good collection of Australian wildlife, stuffed not running about, and a very good section of Aborigine artifacts. We happened to meet one of the museum staff at the lunch table and heard about their collection, about the five members of staff of First Nation heritage and about the museum's involvement in returning items, in their collection and other collections in Europe, to First Nation collections in Australia and Tasmania.
The museum also has the usual suspects - dinosaurs etc.
After lunch at the museum, looking out over a wet and soggy Sydney.....
...we headed to the Queen Victoria Building, affectionately known as the QVB, to study the architecture and also a model shop that has a section devoted to trains.
....and it seemed churlish not to buy something.
Thank you Kate.
| Aborigine art - made from fishing nets washed up on their beaches |
| Grave markers |
| Ceremonial mask |
| dem bones... |
| Soggy Sydney |
| 1 |
| 2 |
| Layout in the shop |
| Australian Diesel Rail Car |
Wednesday, 29 March 2017
Day forty
.......and on the fortieth day they rested.
Today we did nothing. Nada. Rien. Nigun. And other words that mean sitting around, reading, studying the seascape and dozing too.
The only practical thing we did was to add names to birds. We go around taking photographs and vaguely work out what we are seeing. So now we have a set of photos and a set of names to go with it.
Just so you don't feel left out here is the list - there are repeats where we have both photographed the same birds or seen the same birds lots of times - like Kookaburras and pelicans!
Kookaburra
Kookaburras
Mynah bird
Australian magpie and noisy miner
Australian white ibis
White-cheeked honeyeater
Sulphur- crested cockatoo
Superb fairy-wren
Superb fairy-wren
Willie wagtail
Rainbow lorikeet
House sparrow
Hawk
Hawks
Dove
Noisy Miner
Grey-backed butcher bird x 2
Rainbow lorikeets x 3
Brown goshawk
Black flying foxes ( mega-bats, fruit bats) x 2
Pied cormorants
Long-billed corella x 3
Sulphur crested cockatoo
Australasian darter
Magpie lark
Intermediate egret
Australian white ibis x 2
Sulphur crested cockatoo
Noisy miner
Sulphur crested cockatoo with noisy miners
Black flying foxes ( mega-bats, fruit bats)
Rainbow lorikeet x 2
Minah bird
Superb fairy wren
White-browed treecreeper
Unknown x 3
White bellied sea eagle x 2
Masked lapwing with white faced heron
Yellow tailed black cockatoo
Galah x 2
Eastern yellow robin
White throated tree creeper
Willie wagtail on a wallaby (no, honestly. There was a wagtail sat on the back of a wallaby!)
Masked lapwing
Sulphur crested cockatoo
Crested pigeons
Red-browed finch
Australasian darter female
Grey butcher birdx 2
Glossy ibis with black wing stilts and ducks
Ringed plover
Black swans
Black wing stilts
Australian pelicans
Kookaburra
Kookaburra
Australian magpie
Australian king-parrot x 2
Crimson rosella juvenile
White-cheeked honeyeater
Australian king parrot
Grey-backed silvereye x 3
White quilled rock pigeon
Eastern yellow robin x 2
Willie wagtail x 2
?little grassbird
Grey shrike thrush
Willie wagtail plus grey shrike thrush
Zebra finch
Unknown
Grey shrike thrush x 2
Eastern Spinebill x 2
Eastern yellow robin
Sacred kingfisher x 2
Australasian darter silhouette
Magpie larks
Pied cormorant
Australian pelican
Long-billed corella
Australian pelican x 4
White bellied sea eagle
Australian magpie
Galah
White throated treecreeper juvenile
White bellied sea eagle juvenile
Australian raven x 2
Kookaburra x2
Rainbow lorikeet
Australian magpie
White faced heron
Plumes whistling duck
Dusky moorhen
Azure kingfisher
Australian king parrots
Grey fantail
?wren
Flying foxes
Kookaburra
Grey backed butcher bird
Silver gull
Australian magpie juvenile
Australian magpie
Noisy miner
Intermediate egret
Purple swamphen x 2
Black swan
Little pied cormorant
Pied lark
Australasian darter x 2
Pied cormorants with Australian white ibis
Pied cormorants nesting
Flying foxes x 4
White faced heron
Grey butcher bird
Variegated fairy wren
Masked lapwing
White bellied sea eagle
Unknown
Yellow tailed black cockatoo
Black faced cuckoo shrike
Lyre bird x 4
Crimson rosella
Olive backed oriole
Crested tern
Crested tern with silver gull x 2
Common starling
Spotted dove
Common starling x 2
Black winged stilt
Black swans
Black winged stilts juveniles x 2
Caspian tern
Black winged stilt
Black fronted dotterel
Glossy ibis
Superb fairy wren
Olive backed oriole
Crimson rosella juvenile
Grey backed silvereye
Unknown
Black faced cuckoo shrike
Eastern yellow robin
Grey backed silvereye
New holland honeyeater
Non native parrots
Australian pelican x 3
Willie wagtail
Australian pelicans
Little wattlebird
Little pied cormorant
Bush turkey
Galah
Australian magpie
Eastern yellow robin
Australian wood ducks
Little grebe
Chestnut teal
Rainbow lorikeet
Little wattlebird
Superb fairy wren
Australian raven
King parrot
Plumed whistling ducks
Tuesday, 28 March 2017
Day thirty nine
Today we are returning to Sydney on a five o'clock flight. We decided to head up North to Tambourine Mountain National Park for some walks and waterfalls.
As we headed up the mountain we got a very good view down to the coast and the shoreline.
Our first stop was at Cedar Creek Falls, a short walk beside some cascades.
The next walk was at the Joalah Section. This was proper rainforest, very dark and very humid.
At one point we walked, very quickly, under a colony of flying foxes.
The trees are very impressive and even more so when they are wrapped in strangler fig vine.
And then we made our way back to Gold Coast airport for a quiet flight back to Sydney.
The view from the runway was impressive, the mountains are the remnants of a volcano. We also saw Byron Bay, which was where we walked out to the lighthouse.
| Gold Coast |
| 1 |
| 2 |
| Rainforest |
| Strangler fig |
| Waterfall |
| Waterfall |
| Well made path |
| Bats |
| Strangler fig vine |
| Boarding |
| Byron Bay |
Monday, 27 March 2017
Day thirty eight
The day started with a short walk locally, along the Mudgeeraba Creek.
Then James drove us out to the coast, to Byron Bay, which is a great favourite of surfers. He had arranged to meet Francis-not-Henry on the beach so that they could surf together. We checked out where the waves were breaking and James decided to drive to a beach called The Pass.
There was a cliff walk from here to a lighthouse, so after a coffee, we walked it.
Amazing views all along the path.
The path took us to the lighthouse by way of the most Easterly point in Australia so it was appropriate to have my photo taken at such a significant location! This is probably the furthest place on the planet from Wales.
On the way we spotted this, an Eastern Sea Dragon.
As we returned we saw James and Francis-not-Henry surfing and took lots of photos of them. Unfortunately it turned out that it was not James in the photos but in some of them you can see Francis-not-Henry with James in the background.
| Creek |
| Nice toadstool |
| The Pass |
| Cliff path |
| Byron Bay lighthouse |
| View |
| View |
| Path |
| Not at all touristy |
| Eastern Sea Dragon |
| Surfer dudes |
| Byron Bay |
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