Friday 27 July 2012

Darwin - Mandorah


Another week slides by in sunny Darwin.  The weather up here is just so consistently great; warm sunny days followed by slightly cooler nights.  Great weather for tourists!!
This Darwin Show is in town this weekend with Show Holiday today creating the first of 2 long weekends in a row.  The next weekend has a holiday on Monday 6/8 for Darwin Cup Race Day.

The ‘showies’ are in town but we have decided to not visit Sideshow Alley.  Instead, this week we concentrated on Carol’s sewing. She is building a good collection of stock and at last weekends Nightcliff Markets we sold more dresses and hair clips.  Carol, (with Kirstys generous help and tech skills), has this week launched her online store on Facebook called “The Vintage Caravan”.  The store has had plenty of ‘visitors’ and lots of ‘likes’ – apparently that’s modern language for good.  While Carol was manning the market stall, Garry visited a museum dedicated to the war on Australia in WW2.  It is a very informative display which really brings home the effect of constant bombing on the people of Darwin.  The audio visual display with the sights and sounds of the bombing and the stories of people who expeienced it were really well done.  Outside was a good display of field guns and equipment based around one of the 9.2inch cannon that was installed to protect Darwin Harbour.
An unexploded Japanese HE bomb dropped on Darwin

Shells for the 9.2 inch Cannon

Personnel Carrier

One of two 9.2inch cannon protecting Darwin Harbour entrance

Field Gun

Blitz Transport

Large personnel carrier

Garry is still enjoying the work at the hardware and having a couple of days spare at the end of this week decided now would be a good time to add another water tank to the van.  We found on previous free camps that we have sufficient power for the van for up to 5 days but after 3 days we ran out of water.  I was previously quoted $700 to have an additional tank installed but didn’t have the time to wait weeks for the tank to be sent from Melbourne to Brisbane.  We found a great little business up here that carries spares for boats, trailers, and caravans (hence the name BTC) and the carried water tanks in stock.  We bought an 82 ltr tank for $125 and then got the galvanised steel sheeting and strapping, and all the plumbing bits and pieces for about $85.  So by the end of Thursday we had our extra tank installed for $210.

Our neighbours here at the van park are old Darwin residents who left Darwin in their van a few months ago but are back for their daughter’s wedding today.  There has been much excitement around with mother-in-law more anxious than the very casual bride and groom.  Apart from the groom’s suit not fitting and the two booked limo’s cancelling about 5 days before the wedding, everyone was relaxed and by the time I post this it, will be all over.   

We have been meaning to get out to have a look at Mandorah and this week was our chance.  Mandorah can be reached by Ferry in 15 minutes from the city or by road over about 110kms from the van park.  We intended to drive and stay overnight but the with the long weekend and half the rooms being let out permanently to contractors working in town we had to make do with a day trip today.  Mandorah is a beautiful little beachside village consisting of a pub/motel that has a large wharf, the pub, the road out and not much else.  The beach looks a great place to swim except for the crocodile warning signs and the outlook from the pub across the harbour to the city 7 kms away is very nice.  We fished from the wharf, had lunch at the pub (barra and salad, of course), and fished from the wharf again.   Carol had her hand sewing to keep her occupied.  Despite being assured by the lure salesman that I had to (buy and) use metal slices only, the fishing was slow so it must be the operator.  Out of the 20 or so different fisher people using the wharf during the day we only saw two queen fish, a tuna, and a few small bream(?) caught all day.  The queenies and the tuna were very good sized fish, all around 15 kgs and the bream were bait sized and thrown back.  For the record, I did not catch anything but had a very enjoyable day not working. 
Beachfront bar at Mandorah Pub

Eating area with Darwin City over the harbour
A relaxing place for a beer!!

Mandorah Wharf - ferry to the city in 15 minutes

Interesting rocks


Pub gardens outside the motel rooms


Perfecting the cast in between hand sewing

Waiting for that first bite.....

The most amusing part of the day was watching a Hire BBQ boat from Darwin trying drop a couple of passengers off at the wharf for a nature break.  There was about 10 ladies and one lone bloke on board who sat in the corner and shut up.  After several unsuccessful attempts, the young lass piloting the boat eventually decided that the best way to let her passengers off was to ram the wharf at about 10kph, keep the power on and hope the passengers were able to leap safely onto solid ground.  Several fishermen offered to tie the boat up to wait for the return of the passengers but the skipper decided it was easier to keep powering along the wharf bouncing off several pylons until they bounced out into open water again. Most land based people lost interest in the fate of the boat and its crew about then.

((Sorry about the messy post but our Telstra Bigpond internet is giving us the yips here in Darwin.  For the last 3 days it has been veeerrryyy slow and was taking minutes to upload a photo.  Several other people in the park are having the same problem.  Today it is working just fine again!!?? Go figure.. This is the second time it has slowed to a crawl for several days in a row. Last time it happened it cost us $100 at a PC repair place only to be told it is Bogpond and not our PC.))

Friday 20 July 2012

Darwin 20/07/12


This has been another busy week with the Beer Can Regatta on last Sunday and work at the hardware and at the Races on Saturday and Wednesday. 

The Beer Can Regatta was a popular event with 16,000 people attending and crowding the Mindil Beach area.  Apparently the entries were becoming a little weak so 2 locals got together to show everyone how to build a ‘proper’ beer can boat.  37,000 cans later they had a floating twin hulled bar.  The boat had a net between the two hulls, 2 hammocks, a 2 person crows nest on the roof, and two bars with an esky each holding 540 cans of unopened beer.  It was propelled by a 140HP outboard, measured 7.5m long by 7.4m wide and at one stage we counted 18 people on its decks.  It was a standout but couldn’t enter the beer can boat race as the craft had to be paddled by 4 or less people.  The markets ran all day and the crowd was happy.  We had a good day out with Ted and Linda.
The Bunnings Entry

Muddie
Relaxing under the good shade provided
"Extravacanz" - made of more than 37,000 cans; the Croc on the roof contains 7,000 cans, apparently.
A (low) Speed Boat
The paddling is on in earnest
 The Markets were in full swing all day
The Turf Club hosted Ladies Day on Wednesday and we both worked the TAB as it was a work day and quite a few of the Saturday Staff were not available.  What an eye opener that was.  There were thousands of ladies dressed up in their finest smashing the bubbly like it was the last batch ever made.  One marquee had sold 800 tickets.  The betting was very different to the weekend punters with lots of $2.50 both ways bets being requested but all in all it was a pretty fun day.  The cabs and busses were doing a roaring trade at the end of the day.

Government House was holding an open house Friday and Saturday this week.  After work on Friday we went in for a sticky beak.  It is a beautiful home set on a great block of lad with 270 degree views of the harbour.  The first house built on the site was finished in 1871 and in 1874 a second story was added but was devoured by white ants within 12 months. In 1879 the second house was completed after a cyclone made a rebuild necessary.  The house has been extended and modified (and eaten by white ants) several times since but the original stone work and cellar are intact.  When the cellar was first filled with wine, the Governor found that the white ants could even eat through the foil coverings to get at the corks and eat them out of the bottles.  Since then only hard liquor with steel tops is stored in the cellar.  We both loved the wide verandas with shutters all around the house.  The formal dining room, sitting room, and guest bedroom are beautifully furnished.
Govt House - from the veranda to the sitting room
Off the verandah looking over the harbour
Sitting Room
Formal Dining Room
The Cellar
Apparently people were smaller when they made the stairs in 1879
The Queens Bedroom.


Along the SW veranda
The gardens are also well worth the walk around.  The lawns are the greenest in Darwin and the plants are very healthy and very well kept.  There are a lot of bromelliads, flowering ginger, bougainvillea, orchids, and palms – plus a whole lot of plants and trees we have never seen before.
The old and new Govt Cars
The Gardens

Ginger

The Courthouse over the road is an impressive new building.
We also received a phone call from a very excited Isobel today who was awarded student of the week on parade today and also got the Principals award on Wednesday.  She was very excited and we were very proud of her.  Her reward was a trip to “Sizzles” for dinner and she especially likes not having to wait for her food after you order it – you just go and get more ice cream yourself!!

Friday 13 July 2012

Darwin - Litchfield National Park


Our weeks seem to be getting busier!! Garry has been working 3 days a week at the hardware and both of us are working on Saturdays at the races.  We also spent last Sunday at the Nightcliff Markets where Carol had a stall and sold several of the girl’s dresses and hair band and clips that she has been making.  It was a good start but not a raging success as it was her first outing.  It is a small world though.  As we were setting up our stall there was another couple setting up a stall selling thongs next to us and it was Jack Eddie and his wife Barb.  They had just arrived from Mackay and are doing the grey nomad thing also.
The crowds are building at the races and we are starting to earn our keep there.  The fields of horses are big and one race had to be split into 2 races as there were 24 nominations.  9 races makes for a long day but we are still enjoying it.
We got back into the sightseeing this week.  Garry took a tour through the Aviation Heritage Museum which was very interesting.  There were a lot of aircraft featured in the main hangar which was purpose built to house a B52 Bomber donated by the US.  It is a huge plane and all of the other planes and helicopters on display fit under its wings.  It has a (small) movie theatre set up in the bomb bay which the size of semi-trailer capable of carrying 58 HE bombs or 4 Neuclear bombs.  It has a wing span of 185 ft and is 157 ft long powered by 8 jet engines.  Fully loaded it flies at over 50,000 ft high and cruises at 1014kph.  It is a pretty scary aircraft and there is about as much room in the cockpit as there is in the cockpit of a Honda trail bike.  The Tiger Moth, large Navy Helicopter, and Mirage Jet Fighter were also impressive.  The museum also contains a lot of aircraft wreckage as it was found in the bush after WW2.  They must have been tough times especially for the Japanese pilot who crashed inland from Darwin and was captured by Aborigines and held for a week in the bush before he was handed over.  It was a good facility and very worthwhile taking the time to read the stories on display.
 The B52-G. note the Mirage Jet Fighter under the wing between the body and the 1st engines

 B52 Cockpit

 1938 Indian Motorcycle

 Part of the Air Force control room

 Hurricane beautifully restored

 Navy folding wing helicopter

 Bomb bay of the B52 - that is a 50inch LCD TV at the other end

 Mirage Jet Fighter with B52 wing behind

We followed the Museum with fish and chips on Stokes Hill Wharf and then had a night out at the movies.  A easy meal on the water watching the sun set and the boats sail is very relaxing. The Darwin Film Society operate the “Deckchair Theatre” 7 nights a week.  The theatre is on the water’s edge in the middle of the city beside Parliament House and is outdoors with old fashioned sling seats.  The movies are current and we saw ‘Salmon Fishing in Yemen’.  It was a good movie but the atmosphere was great – especially the bit in the middle of the movie when the possums came down out of the trees and ran through the seats and over the ladies feet.  Many squeals followed by much laughter.  There are picnic tables set up along the sides in the trees and across the back and food and drinks are available.  It was very pleasant sitting out in the cool air beside the sea watching a good movie and enjoying a cold beer; with good company also.
 A sunset cruise departs the wharf

 Relaxing waiting for the movie (and darkness). Yes that is the sea 20m away.

 Carol in old fashioned chairs with cushions supplied.

Another day of work and then we set off on Thursday for Litchfield Nat Park.  Before I start describing what we saw at Litchfield, I will dwell on Darwin for a minute. It looks dry, brown, and the sun shines every day.  For the last couple of weeks it has been hot and the evenings have been uncomfortable until just before daybreak with the humidity increasing daily. Definitely air conditioner weather.  The locals have been complaining that the ‘build-up’ has started 2 months early and are saying they are glad the ‘cold’ weather has gone but whinging that the ‘build-up’ has started too early!!  So, having lived in dry and dusty conditions with brown grass everywhere, Litchfield was always going to be better.  It was!!  It is a beautiful place with several very impressive waterfalls and running creeks of pure clear water within a few kilometres drive of each other and with reasonably easy walking access.  We started by seeing the Magnetic Anthills.  They are a strange formation of anthills along a clearing that have been constructed very wide (2-3m) and very thin (100-150mm) The theory is that they face North-South so as to expose the smallest amount of sun to the surface of the anthill.  Only a short distance away there were anthills amongst the trees that were regular round(ish) shape?? 
 Magnetic anthill in the clearing with a regular shape hill in th trees behind.  There were hundreds of the magnetic ones running along the clearing for more than a km.

 A tall regular anthill over 5m tall.

Next we enjoyed morning smoko sitting in a creek and then walked to the Florence Falls for a swim.  School Holidays are in full swing (they have 4 weeks winter break up here) as the swimming hole at the falls was very crowded.  We settled for a soak in creek below the main pool. The return walk to the car led us through very different types of bush.
 Smoko cooling our heels

 Florence Falls

 Pool below the falls full of tourists

 Enjoying a quiet lay in the creek

 Reflections on the walk back

  A few kms up the road and a short walk in took us to a lookout over Tolmer Creek Falls on the edge of the escarpment. 
 Tolmer Creek Falls

 Cycads showing their new silver growth

We then spent the afternoon at the twin falls and pool of the Wangi Falls.  This is no doubt our favourite spot with large grassed areas and a huge pool below the twin falls. There is camping allowed here but the sites are full by about 11am.  The falls are large and beautiful and the pool is huge, clear, not very deep, and perfectly cool.  Garry spent a long while in the water and, course had to swim out to the falls and take a heavy shower under the falls – just like a lot of others.  It was very peaceful and refreshing from the hot walks. 
 Wangi Falls swimming hole

 Wangi Falls

 View NW from the escarpment beside Wangi Falls

 Garry enjoying an afternoon shower

There was another camp ground nearby and we spent the night in the back of the Cruiser in an unpowered site with a campfire.  And Garry got in trouble for putting vegemite on the bottom of the sausages because he was too busy chatting with the neighbours from SA.  The snags were still edible and the story from the neighbour about what minus 5deg C does to your plumbing was entertaining and reminded us why we are up here.  Apparently the water tank froze and burst the rear brass tap apart, broke the seal in the front tap, and burst the fitting off the tank at the T piece in the middle of the camper trailer behind where the kitchen slides out so that all the water ran into the camper when it thawed in the morning.  Of course the T piece was inaccessible and could only be reached by removing the kitchen or inserting a large tent pole and levering the fitting back together – an exercise that required the use of all known swear words and the creation of several new ones; apparently.  I wish I could have seen it; not.  If anyone knows of the whereabouts of a stretch Landcruiser then tell the owner I want it for my next campout!! And also I am wondering while I type this in whether I should slam the screen shut on my laptop and then re-open it and photograph the squashed bugs on it. I bet there would be at least 20 or 30 species of insect that the Brisbane Museum never even knew existed!!!  Now the fn bats have started landing in the tree next to the car where I am sitting.  Isn’t nature wonderful?   I think so!!
Anyway, back to Litchfield and how nice it is….  We actually slept ok in the car and after breakfast headed back to the Buley Rockholes to get an early park.  It was a beautiful area with cascading water over many levels with good size swimming holes below each drop.  The ferns, moss, grass and trees made the area very pretty and it was still too early for the kids to crowd the place.  We found it hard to believe that we were swimming under a waterfall at 9am on the 13th July.
 Buley Rockholes at 9:15am mid-winter


 Art??

 Clear water

 Garry spent a couple of hours swimming and taking photos before we headed off for a drive to the Lost City.  This is an area of weathered sandstone blocks that appear to be rectangular blocks in tall stacks.  It was interesting and similar to the Carnarvon Gorge but it was a long rough dusty drive in and out. 
 We kept seeing these flowering trees along the side of the road so finally took a photo.  The trees are covered in flowers and bees.

 Lost City

 Is this where they got the design for the Michelin Man from??

 We just had to return to the Wangi Falls for lunch and another swim before heading home through Berry Springs.  On the way we called in at an abandoned tin mine at Bamboo Creek.  The mine was a small underground pit with very rich tin ore but the last 3 leaseholders all died of silicosis within 12 months of the mine finally closing in 1951 when the pit was flooded.  Some veins of tin were pure and just bagged straight from the ground for sale.  Mining lasted from 1906 til 1951 and the site is very well preserved.
 Owners residence beside the Bamboo Creek Tin Mine

 Tin processing plant 50m from the house.  Quartz was crushed into very fine gravel and the tin wash washed out on a corrugated shaking table