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Learning Korean gun gun style |
I call it the budget trip for several reasons. First, it was the cheapest that I could find and I was again like a 20 yr old sharing a dorm with 4-8 nineteen year olds. At the Hobart Hostel a karakoe bar was just a floor down, but it sounded like it was in the same room until one AM.
Melissa, (I hope to see again) who shouted me a vanilla slice famous in the historic village of Ross |
Lovely Aleine from Berlin who was an AuPair in Alice Springs |
At the Launceston "Backpackers" it was the kind of place that I set my roller suitcase down on one side of the room and it followed me back to the door since the room had settled at such a slant. The first night most everyone opened some type of pasta, the universal cheap food. My bag of pasta was passed from traveler to traveler and when I departed from the group I passed mine on to an appreciative Aleine. I guess that I am glad that I went on the least expensive trip and spent very little money because when I arrived home I had a ticket in the mail for going through a red light (don't have a clue when) for $465.00. It kinda put a damper on my evening to say the least. I opened my 187 ML Black Thursday Sauvignon Blanc which I saved from my Quantas flight.
I was about as mad as a gumtree of galahs and feeling rather maggoty as the Tassies would say. After getting my bike stolen and now the ticket, I was feeling a bit like if I bought a kangaroo, it wouldn't hop. Oh well. Like said on the Apple Isle, "She'll be apples."
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Tassie was great! As figured, it was usually wet and cold, but I didn't seem to suffer like the other tourists. I must still have Colorado, thick blood, um, and that extra padding. Photographically speaking, to have had more blue in the skies would have been nice, but rainbows appeared often. The morning and evening light was spectacular.
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From Bonorong |
Morning in Strahan, Gordon River |
Strahan |
Strahan |
David |
Wombat hides in button grass at Cradle Mountain |
name originated, but only got a grunt in reply. Wombat grew up on a dairy farm outside of the northwest town of Sheffield. He was the most amazing resource: great storyteller, environmentalist, and as Australian as Meat Pie.
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From Launceston we traveled to the east cost. The myriad of granite rocks are brilliant orange. I would have thought that the name Bay of Fires
came from the orange colored lichen covered rocks but the assumption was wrong. When the English first arrived, the bay was full of fires lit by the Aborigionals. ( Before British colonisation in 1803, there were an estimated 3,000–15,000 Parlevar. Some historians point to introduced disease as the major cause of the destruction of the full-blooded Aboriginal population. Warfare and private violence was likely more devastating. Most historians regard the Black War as one of the earliest recorded modern genocides. Benjamin Madley wrote: "Despite over 170 years of debate over who or what was responsible for this near-extinction, no consensus exists on its origins, process, or whether or not it was genocide" however, using the "U.N.definition, sufficient evidence exists to designate the Tasmanian catastrophe genocide.) Thousands of years later the landscape of the Parlevar and petroglyphs are visable.
The area was one of my favorites. I could easily have spent some days camping on the beach and simply admiring the changes of the surf and tides.
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Tasmania is only one of three remaining temperate wilderness areas in the southern hemisphere. |
Russell Falls |
become extinct
on the mainland.
Dove Lake |
Tasmanians were the first to have a Green Party and protesters in trees. The state has done much to preserve its natural beauty. Although there are mining towns in the west that have not been restored properly, work continues to be done to reclaim a healthy ecosystem.
The Tasmin air is the cleanest out of anywhere in the world. The Franklin River claims to have the purest water, and
Coke-a-Cola Company capitalized on it by calling its marketed water Franklin. Probably
doesn’t come from anywhere near the river since the water is pure but full of
tannins and unappetizingly brown. The island’s energy was 100% hydroelectric,
but it is now used on the mainland and so it has dropped to 75%. Still sounds good to me. Of course
becoming hydro-powered meant damming wild rivers and flooding special areas, so
the project is controversial. Wind
farms are also taken seriously.
hairpin bends |
Queenstown |
Queenstown will take many years to recover from the copper mines. It is much like towns in Kentucky. Driving into the town we turned 98 hairpin bends without me getting sick! The ginger pills here must be full strength!
. . . . . . . .
Each little town had a scheme to get the tourists to slow
down: real looking Tassie Tigers (now extinct dingo-like marsupials with
stripes) or rain jackets on sale.
Although Tasmania has plentiful resources including
minerals, timber, fish, and agriculture it relies on tourism. One third of its
population is unemployed.
The town
of Sheffield has become the town of murals (some good, some not so good).
Do Town requires each home owner to have a clever “Do name”:
Much Ado, Didgeridoo, Doing Little, Do Time, Do Tell, Scooby Do, and Do Nix were a
few that I remember.
Oh, memories of Destination Imagination.
Ross prides itself by looking English and has the second
oldest bridge in the country. Other towns slowing down point are their convict-built bridges.
Bridestone is famous for the largest lavender
fields in the world. Poppies are legally grown to supply the US with morphine.
and the longest running play in Australia, which I did laugh through.
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The Huon pine is perhaps the oldest living tree in the world (debate remains between it and the bristle cone) alive for more than 3000 years. It is able to resist disease and pests because of its special oils. It is the best-known material for shipbuilding. Dead wood stands throughout the island (very few termites), and since the huon is so rare company helicopters are used to scout dead huon. Huon pines reproduce through pollonation and vegetatively. They do this by layering. Tree branches reaching the ground start to root and establish themselves as a new tree, which eventually breaks away from the parent.
We drove through the area where friends were evacuated in January due to the fires. Half of the houses in town were burnt to the ground, but it was amazing to see how quickly the eucyptulas were coming back. Many trees here thrive on fires to germinate seeds including the Banksia and the Acacia.
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Of course Hobart can speak for itself, but it now also has the MONA, often compared to the most impressive art galleries worldwide.
Hobart reminded me of Portland, Oregon. It was hilly, rainy,
with rivers, and had an outdoorsy feeling. Portland's recent fame is their food carts where
Hobart had similar, but floating in the harbor.
floating food stands |
Installment at the MONA |
I am still not sure what I thought of the notorious MONA museum, but the water drops lasting two seconds and falling four floors creating words of recent news were great.
I had a long bike ride to the museum and went back to town by
ferry. The Salamanca market in Hobart is legendary and a great wander.
The Museum of old and New (MONA) |
The back side of the MONA ferry |
a room in the MONA gallery |
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The bird population seemed quieter than all the other places
in AU, which at first left me uneasy. I have become so accustomed to the
constant cawing, laughing, and singing. Perhaps it was just too cold for most
birds, but I got up close to the kookaburra by the beach at the Ring of Fire.
It is about the size of two fat robins with a beautiful streak of blue in the
wing. Seeing it so close was a highlight of the trip.
The huge wedged-tailed eagle, native to Tasmania, is the
second largest bird on Earth, just smaller than the condor. While driving down
the highway I spotted one on the side of the road and then up on a phone pole-
great luck to view the pair.
Australian Pied Cormorant |
Then down at Wineglass Bay a cormorant landed on a rock
beside me and had a quiet rest. He wasn’t the least bit shy. I have always
longed to see one since I read Island of
the Blue Dolphins as a child. Did you know they are webbed? I didn’t.
. . . . . .
When the first English settled Tasmania they were sure that
devils roamed the forests. Their screams, glowing red eyes, and the little
pointy ears, which were glimpsed while angling lanterns toward the woods helped
settlers draw their conclusion. The forests were feared because of them. Hence, the name Tasmanian Devil.
The Tassie Devil will probably be gone in the next decade. They have a form of cancer that is contagious and spread since their genetic matter is so close. When feeding, they rip apart food in pairs and spread the cancer. About 90% of the devils are gone.
Save the Devil organizations are all over the island. Under Down Under Tours are also involved. If they find devil road kill, they collect samples and take notes to be sent off to a lab. Fortunately, none were found on our trip so that I did not have to play lab tech. (I’ll leave that up to you, Claire.) Those of us that signed up to assist, if needed, were given a year’s worth of free entry to the national parks in Tasmania. It is transferable;
so if you know of anyone traveling to Tasmania
in the next year, let me know, as I have a pass.
. . . . . . . .
Save the Devil organizations are all over the island. Under Down Under Tours are also involved. If they find devil road kill, they collect samples and take notes to be sent off to a lab. Fortunately, none were found on our trip so that I did not have to play lab tech. (I’ll leave that up to you, Claire.) Those of us that signed up to assist, if needed, were given a year’s worth of free entry to the national parks in Tasmania. It is transferable;
so if you know of anyone traveling to Tasmania
in the next year, let me know, as I have a pass.
. . . . . . . .
Port Authur was really too beautiful for what it stands for. |
Not many prisoners tried to escape with the ominous
surrounding sea and forests.
The most likely escape route was an isthmus so starving
dogs and soldiers were stationed there. Billy Hunt is famous for his escape
attempt. He skinned a kangaroo climbed in the hide and tried to cross the
strip. When the dogs barked and the soldiers arrived he thought they would turn
around only spotting a kangaroo, but both dogs and soldiers were hungry and
they lunged and shot at him. He tore off his costume rather than be shot. Creative as he was, he never managed to
escape.
It really looks to pretty to be a prison, but was haunting |
There was a village in addition to the gaol. |
Wineglass Bay is an iconic Tasmanian vista. We hiked up to the lookout and down to the beach where I rested with the cormorant before heading back. It was the hardest trek of the week and my knees thought so too.
It was so wet and cold at Cradle Mountain, wait, it was wet and cold the entire week, but really wet at Cradle Mountain. Mountain climbing was slippery and a bit much for me. The walk around Dove Lake was plenty for most of us.
And so winds down a week of touring an island that I never dreamed I’d see. It was beautiful, but I am glad to be back in my own (well, Viv’s actually) bed. A bed that doesn’t cave in or make me imagine bed bugs!
Now, can I say, “Happy Spring”? I doubt another big storm is
on its way, but I do remember that May when . . .
Wishing you all a purple patch. Planning your visit anyone? It is worth the long plane ride!
Glossary:
purple patch: good daysShe'll be apples: everything will be ok
Apple Isle: Tasmania
Magpie: coming from South Australia or a talkative person
Van Diemen’s Land: Was Tasmania’s first name but no one wanted to settle there with the reputation of it being a penal station, so the name was changed To Tasmania.