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Day Six & Seven – Koala Kountry and Flying through the trees.

January 21, 2008 by

Here we are… another new year under way! After the previous day’s 40+ temperatures the weather settled down a little and we decided it was time to do a bit of exploring.
I’d had the happy accident of a conversation with Mal Austin, a well respected photographer from the area, and had cheekily asked for the inside track on where to go to find good pictures off and on the Great Ocean Road. Mal sent us on a little side tour to the Sequoia park on the (gravel!) road that winds from the GOR cross country to Beech Forest
It was quite some time before we got there… and while the drive was picturesque we were beginning to wonder if we’d missed it before we finally went around the corner find it well signposted and well patronized by picnickers and campers.
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways

Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways

It was a lovely (and thankfully cool) half an hour under these majestic trees. They’re still young by comparison with the redwood forests in California where you can find trees that are ENORMOUS and many years old. But this was a lovely diversion and very restful. I was wishing I had all sorts of wide angle gear to be able to fit the trees in…
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
We’d gone so far up the gravel road that we figured it was prudent to keep going up the short end so that we didn’t have to drive it all the way back to the main road and ended up coming out the other end very near the Otway Fly, an aerial walk through the Otway rainforest.
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
We went in and paid our entry fee and followed the bush path down to the walkway structure. In typical tourist provider fashion there were ‘prehistoric’ attractions for the kids and a dinosaur path that one ‘shouldn’t miss’… hmmm… but the bush walk was lovely and would only have been bettered if we’d seen a few wallabies or possums on the way down!
We went got to the aerial walk and followed it’s paths through the tree tops. It was a lovely way to see the area and get a close up on the gums. Again, a bit more action from the wild life would have made it ‘magic’ but it was a great way to spend a couple of hours and I thoroughly recommend it!
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
The shadow cast by the tower at the top of the Fly a walk up a narrow spiral staircase… my poor out of condition legs got a bit wobbly… not to self get back on the treadmill…
You’d think I’d have more pictures of what we’d seen there!! They were unremarkable… more because of poor skills than what was available to shoot… you’ll just have to go there and check them out for yourselves…
The next day was another exploring day and we made our way down to Kennett River because we’d heard there was a wild koala colony (is that the right collective noun?) down there. It was a short trip along the GOR which was lovely in itself, we parked the car at the Kennett River store (which was basically the sum total of Kennett River’s commercial district) and wandered up the road – darn, can’t remember what it’s called – to see the koalas.
Sure enough the brown sleeping lumps in the trees were easy enough to spot.
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
Koalas are well known for the amount of sleeping they do… 22 hours a day.
So, they were pretty high in the trees and not especially active so we walked along spotted as many as we could (5 or so) jumped in the car and headed back toward Apollo Bay.
But not far out of Kennett River we spotted a number of cars lined up just off the road obviously having a sticky at something interesting.
Not ones to buck a trend we pulled up too and got out with our cameras… sure enough there were more koalas only this time there was one putting on a bit of a show…
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
I don’t know how many times I’ve seen koalas in a zoo… seriously!! But I have to say there’s something magic about seeing them do their thing in the wild… It was a trip highlighted… eclipsed only by a similar sight the next day at a different colony.
We drove home and stopped for a Devonshire tea at a guest house which has an incredible view of the GOR and the ocean, got into a loooong conversation with the proprietress who obviously enjoys a good chat!!! It was beautifully accompanied by homemade scones and jam… A fitting end to another great couple of days!
Looking along the road heading east.
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways
Looking west back towards Apollo Bay.
Day 6&7 - Kennett River and the Otways

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Days Four and Five – Apollo – god of All that’s GORGEOUS

January 16, 2008 by

When you arrive at your chosen destination after dark it’s a little tricky to get a feel for just how unutterably beautiful a place is.
Of course, beauty is in the eye of the beholder and relative to having spent the previous day with your butt ensconced in a car-seat for hours at a time.
Apollo Bay IS lovely. Our motel unit (one bedroom – 2 beds… can’t remember the last time I shared a room – I think it went well…) was only about 30m from the beach.
Days 4 & 5 Apollo Bay
Looking at the sea from our room… This is from knee height… I rather liked the look over the leaves… who said blue and green should never be seen?? Wasn’t me…

Days 4 & 5 Apollo Bay
You can imagine with views like this we weren’t much for getting out of Apollo Bay once we’d got there. I’m always up for exploring but after a day of driving it was nice to get settled and just enjoy the place for a bit…

Days 4 & 5 Apollo Bay
(embiggen)
This is Apollo Bay. You can see the township in the distance, we were a few km out of town, which suited us well! The town falls midway along the Great Ocean Road. It’s name goes back as far as 1845 when a ship (called the Apollo, of course) sheltered there in the harbour… The road itself runs from Torquay, just out of Geelong to Warnambool. It’s probably as romantic as travelling the Californian Pacific Coast Highway with less ‘America’ and probably a whole lot less lanes, but some of the scenery would give California a run for its money I’d suggest…
The township has all the appeal of any holiday town, a carnival, fish and chip shops and ghastly souvenir shops… actually it had a bit of a feel of an English seaside town, probably only in that its shops all stretch along the road front, the carnival on the green, oh and what looked very much like a Punch and Judy stage there on one occasion!!!
Anyway, for these two days we did little more than venture from the unit to the beach or to town…
Sigh… bliss!
It was wonderful to see the sun set over the ocean again too… as I live on the east coast it’s a but unusual… but we got to look to the west of an evening and we’d catch God with his paintbrush out…

Days 4 & 5 Apollo Bay
apollobaysunset4
Days 4 & 5 Apollo Bay
Days 4 & 5 Apollo Bay

So you don’t have to download all these pix at once… the rest are below… give your browser a chance to breathe!!! (and there are fireworks photos… don’t miss those…!)

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Feeling the Love

January 15, 2008 by

I’m chuckling.
It has been since long before my trip away that I had seen any comments from my usual contributors so I was thinking this travel blogging was letting the side down and causing a revolt… seemed like the usual contingent was staying away in droves!!!
Now it’s no secret that I’m pretty useless at interpreting Movable Type’s comment/spam mechanism. I can never find the happy medium between moderating everything or allowing everything… So all the commenty goodness that showed up today was because all you lovely commenters have been hiding in my junk folder.
It’s fortuitous that Antipo has such a distinctive signature else I may well have absently deleted the lot… which would have been a scandal…
Needless to say I’m delighted you are all still reading… and commenting…
And tomorrow we shall return to our regularly scheduled travelogue… though I should point out that I’m off to pastures green on Friday with a visit to the bosom of my family (that was for you Antipo) and as such normal transmission may be a little interrupted…

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Day Three – in which we enter Mexican Territory. December 29th 2007

January 13, 2008 by

I don’t know how it started but it is not uncommon here in Australia for one to hear the expression ‘he/she’s a Mexican’ when you know full well that the object of the discussion is in full possession of an Australian accent and an appetite for VB rather than Coronas… (or tequila…).
Having said that, I could then be mistaken for being a Mexican on drinks preference… However, for the purposes of this discussion I am resolutely not a Mexican.
Unless you’re from Queensland.
Let me explain…
As a New South Welsh woman anyone to whom I would refer as a Mexican would be from Victoria. That is to say they’re from ‘South of the Border’.
I know. It’s a Dad joke…
So Day Three was all about the driving. We took the scenic and most direct route through the Alpine Way which is not a road you’d take in inclement weather. Long, windy and unsealed in parts if memory serves me correctly. Certainly wouldn’t be in favour of it in the snow.
In the picture below you can see red posts marking the side of the road. You see a lot of these in the alpine roads and they vary in size from knee height to shoulder, or even head height… if that’s 6feet or so…(not my head height, that’s for sure!!). The variable height is relative to potential snow depth… this stretch is lower down the mountain.. The posts in Thredbo were at the higher end of the spectrum.
Day Three - NSW to Victoria
We left the Goodtimes in the morning and got on the road around 8.30, given that there were 770km to travel that day seemed prudent to get on the road early… The following photos really only document the earlier part of the day. There was little to capture once we got on the Hume Freeway.
Cycling Along the Alpine Way
This is one way to do it… if you’re of the energetic persuasion…
Day Three - NSW to Victoria
Our first stop on the road was at Scammell’s Ridge lookout – no question that it’s gorgeous…(It’s another Pano… embiggen).
Day Three - NSW to Victoria
(yep… another one… embiggen)
I’m no big fan of hiking but it was so lovely it would have been totally tempting… If you’re interested there’s more information about the alpine way here… Alpine Way or Scammells Lookout
Day Three - NSW to Victoria
Heading out of the alpine way on the way to the Murray River and the Victorian/NSW border I loved these English looking trees all lined up… A marked contrast to the ubiquitous gum trees.
So once we’d got through the mountains and back down into less bumpy territory we made our way towards the Hume Freeway which would take us all the way to Melbourne. Before we got there though we had to get across the border into Victoria… over the Mighty Murray River
Day Three - NSW to Victoria
The river looked reasonably unimpressive, there is water in it, the levels, due to the drought are lower than usual but as I’ve never seen it before I had no basis for comparison!!
I did get impressed once we got to Lake Hume just out of Albury Wodonga…
How amazing are these????
Day Three - NSW to Victoria
Day Three - NSW to Victoria

Day Three - NSW to Victoria

The Dead Trees in the middle of the lake are River Red Gums and as Lake Hume was a man made creation they all drowned when the lake went in… they make for a totally eerie view. I’d love to get shots at lake level in the early morning mist… TOTALLY freaky!
We got in to Apollo Bay around 7pm after a stop in Wangaratta for a McDonald’s lunch. It’s been great getting to see a few country towns in our travels. Reminds me of home. They don’t look much the same but the atmosphere is similar.
Anyway, I know you’re hanging out for Great Ocean Road photos… promise I’ll dish them up for the next post!

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