Oz

  • Apr 26 Sydney

    Ferry to Manly for the day. After a relatively lazy morning of sleep and laundry, we hop on a series of trains to board the ferry at Darling Harbor, destined for Manly Beach. We take the slow ferry and pass… Continue reading

  • Apr 24 Sydney

    Drive to Bondi and other Sydney beaches and dinner at Italian restaurant. Travel is good for the soul but it can be hard on the elderly body. Our hosts leave for a variety of appointments and we spend the morning… Continue reading

  • Apr 23 Sydney

    Walking tour of Sydney After a quick brekkie, Cynthia and I walk out David and Gaye’s back yard door, cross a small dog park and get on the light rail for downtown Sydney, about 40 minutes distant. We go to… Continue reading

  • Apr 22 Melbourne to Sydney

    Jim drives us to the Melbourne airport where we visit the food kiosks in the domestic departures terminal for the sixth and last time, this one on our way to Sydney. David Williams (not the same person as in Melbourne… Continue reading

  • Apr 16 Daintree to Melbourne

    We finally discover why Daintree is called a rain forest. Pluvial does not describe today’s weather. “Torrential” is too tame. We pack in a lull between heavenly cascades and leave our lodge in pouring rain, thankful that we had sunny… Continue reading

  • Apr 14 Daintree

    We have a quick breakfast and David, being the slow and stubborn learner he always has been, simply drinks coffee and eats nothing despite Cynthia’s admonition that he might want some energy seeing as how he’ll be snorkeling for two… Continue reading

  • Apr 13 Port Douglas to Daintree

    We leave Port Douglas late after enjoying our wonderful suite, planning our next few days and having lunch. We pass through miles of tall green sugar cane on both sides of the Captain Cook Highway until we reach a ferry… Continue reading

  • Apr 9 Hahndorf to Hall’s Gap

    Visit Penfolds winery in Barossa Valley and drive to Halls Gap. We graze the rolling hills down to a flat plain that is baked into submission by the sun: Shiraz country. Home to Peter Lehman and Penfolds. Birthplace of The… Continue reading

  • Apr 1 Launceston

    Exploring Launceston. Happy Birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear Cynthia, happy birthday to you. I love being married to a fifty-year old who looks forty. Cynthia and I walk down the hill, past the old Catholic… Continue reading

  • Mar 31 Launceston

    Sheffield with murals everywhere, Deloraine community embroidery project, salmon and ginseng farm. David runs the Inglis River track in the other direction this morning, toward Bass Highway (named after George, first circumnavigator of Tassie), and meets the same good-lookin gal… Continue reading

  • Mar 29 Strahan to Wynyard

    Walking around Strahan harbor, collecting mushrooms for dinner in Wynyard with family. After a quick continental breakfast in the 1896 mansion that’s our hotel, we walk left around Strahan’s bay to an old train station, look at its Thomas the… Continue reading

  • Mar 27 Hobart to Port Arthur

    Port Arthur, Tasman Arch, Dogline at Eaglehawk Neck Blue sky everywhere. Sandwiches, check. Chips, check. Cameras and phones, check. Chargers, check. Gas, check. Warm layers, check. Sunglasses, check. We’re on the road to Port Arthur, a kilometer of cars in… Continue reading

  • Mar 26 Hobart

    Day in town for museum, Mawson’s hut and shopping. What a difference a day … an hour … makes. Sunrise is like the inside of a conch shell, the white center giving way to soft and gradually darker pinks with… Continue reading

  • Mar 25 Hobart

    MONA art gallery and Mt. Wellington  Tasmania. The name alone conjures wild, hairy, grinning cartoon figures straight out of Disney. Before we came here, it was certainly less substantial in our minds than New Zealand, which is two islands, or… Continue reading

  • Mar 24 Hobart

    Rain pelts our bedroom windows through the night and we wake to a light drizzle. Thankfully, our seventeenth bed on this trip — yes, you read that number right — is firm and comfortable and we have a lazy morning.… Continue reading