Canberra, Australia

Canberra, Australia
Canberra, Australia: Where we live

Sunday, 29 October 2017

Kuranda Village - Rainforest

Cable car up the mountain
View from cable car of the coast
At Cairns the big beautiful sea transitions into a flat plain with lots of creeks and sugar cane. The plain slowly starts rising into a ridge of limestone mountains on which a rainforest grows. There are some of the oldest species of plants in the world here - some dating back to the time of the dinosaurs.


We took a tour of the rainforest - first in a cable car that soared high above canopy, then around a walkway with a ranger, then on an aquatic duck vehicle, and finally on a train back down the mountain. In between the tours we had a buffet lunch that included crocodile soup and kangaroo skewers. We also watched some aboriginal dances (move your knees!) and were taught a bit about playing the didgeridoo, throwing spears and practicing with a boomerang. A very full day!
Going up!
About to go on our walk around
with the ranger

We learned that the competition for light and nutrients is very tough. Some of the trees intentionally acidify the soil around their base to prevent other species from growing. The rattan cane has backwards thorns that help ratchet it up the trees. The stinging tree is so painful that it burns for months and people have died from it. The wait-awhile bush will tangle you tighter and tighter if you struggle so you simply have to relax and wait awhile for it to ease off.
It's big. Trust me.
Gorgeous views

The basket plant is like a hotel for insects and animals and grows huge in the trees. The trees benefit because all the poop gets wet in the rains and drips down the trunk in a lovely thick brown river full of nutrients. So the trees actually grow thicker around the basket plant to support the weight of the plant and it's inhabitants (which
Basket plant in a tree
include frogs, snakes and birds).
Elkhorn bush- two types of leaves,
one pointing up, the other draping down.


There are bushes called the stag-horn and the elk-horn which have really neat leaves that are directional. We saw gorgeous butterflies, a turtle, a snake and an eastern bearded dragon. There were also quite a few varieties of fruit plants around, some which we recognized, some which we didn't.

Fruit tree - do you know it?
The views were spectacular and the information very well-presented. A beautiful place with interesting facts not only about the biology and ecology of the area but also the engineering of the cable cars and train line as well as the history of the area. So there was something for everyone.







Dinosaur time - same plants!


A turtle sunning on the log

Our ride - on land and water


Buffet included kangaroo skewers
- yum!



Aboriginal dances included the fighting
kangaroos, hunting, and welcome

Playing the didgeridoo
View from the train - with much
squealing of brakes on the way down

Train down the mountain




Saturday, 28 October 2017

Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary

So you can't touch koalas in most of Australia - except in Queensland. So guess what we did while in Queensland? We got to hold and touch a koala - and had pictures taken. Hurrah!

We spent the day at Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary in Brisbane and it was quite the experience. We arrived and were treated by a very large lizard sunning itself on the path. It followed us around for a bit. We saw birds (cockatoos, owls, hawks, parrots, kookaburras etc.) and platypus (did you know that baby platypus are called "puggles?" How cute!) which ate a crawfish messily, the watched the dingos go for their daily walk (they don't like umbrellas), and listened to a talk on koalas. Lots of interesting facts about these endangered species. Then we got to meet one. Hold it like a baby - except not as close to your chest. They have long nails.


We ate lunch with more than a dozen koalas in the trees around us eating their lunch too.




We ran off to feed the kangaroos - most of them were already fed and were lying down ignoring us. We coaxed a couple to come over and eat from our hands. Very fun! There were emus too but they peck pretty hard. So we didn't feed them.



Dad holding hands with a wallaby








Then off to see a bird show. The hawk was very majestic and the barn owl swallowed a mouse. Hannah saw it and wanted to have a mouse for her lunch too. Ugh. We headed back towards the koala exhibit just in time for a snake talk. If you see a snake just calmly and quietly walk away. Don't throw things at it or yell at it or try to get it to move. You'll just make a happy snake mad and an angry snake worse. It was really neat to see how big a snake's mouth can get - wow! And they look like they have such a petit cute nose. The python was quite large - enough so that at least 6 people could touch it at a time - which of course we did. Snakes are quite dry and their scales feel really neat. Fun! A bit of time wandering and rocking in willow chairs hung from the trees then off to the airport for our trip to Cairns!
Koala surveying her domain





























Driving up the east coast



AirBnb in Sydney
House with "character" i.e. old
We left our our Sydney house (that had a lot of "character") and travelled to Newcastle where we stayed in the Jervis Executive Villas. It was a nice townhouse/apartment but the pool was sooooo cold. Pretty pool with a waterfall but freezing. It was so cold Mom didn't even get in! Not refreshing - just plain cold. 
From Newcastle we headed to Coffs Harbour taking a break at Port Macquarie along the way. We stopped at Sea Acres National Park at the visitor's centre and then walked down to Shelly's beach. We stopped at a fish 'n chips place that made fantastic food! Love those "discover" moments! After our mid-day beach stop, we continued on to Moonee Beach (just outside of Coffs Harbour) for another AirBnb house. It was just across from a playground. 
Fish 'n chips at Port Macquarie
Shelly Beach
Making a moat at Shelly Beach
Lucy's castle
Two kookaburras in a gum tree -
laughing merrily
They were alive! They quickly
dug down into the sand - almost too
quick for a picture


A wildlife tree is kept for the
nesting of birds and animals
in it's hollows.
At Moonee Beach Reserve
Practicing our surfing
From Moonee Beach we drove up to Brisbane, stopping at Byrons Bay for another mid-day beach experience. It was a beautiful white sand beach that was pretty much all for us. Very few people there  in the winter on a weekday. We were chased by the waves, drew in the sand and had a picnic with the birds (they kept following the girls around). After the rest, we got back in the car to go to Brisbane. We stayed at Annerly Motor Inn which was our "seven dwarf" experience - seven beds all in row in a large rectangular room. We were just missing the name signs on each bed - Sleepy, Doc, Grumpy, Happy, Sneezy, Dopey, Bashful. Can you guess who was who?
We spent the next day at Brisbane's Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary and then flew off to Cairns. 
Who spelled it wrong?!

 




Almost there!
On the road again!



"Seven dwarfs motel"