Paradise found…? Well, it’s pretty darn close…

Pre-trip photo

 Well, it was never even supposed to happen. Claire wanted to go somewhere exotic to celebrate her “Sweet 16th”. Turns out there was a great Emergency Medicine conference in Fiji right on the big day, and I already had vacation scheduled. BINGO! Suddenly, we were on our way to Fiji, just over 3 hours East from Brisbane, Australia. Our first trip into the South Pacific, this was a “girl’s trip”, meaning deluxe with lots of food and lounging about. The boys stayed home in Brisbane with friends, another miracle of sorts…

First trip on our new Aussie passports

Three hours east and you are in a different world

Girl’s trip!!

A rice-stuffed pineapple….yum!

 The conference was held at Denarau Island, a multi-resort area just south of Nadi. Purists may sniff; it is after all, not the “real” Fiji. But as a quick getaway, it provides a very relaxing and even magical tropical escape. You first notice the warmth and relaxed attitude of the all-Fijiian staff. “Bula” means welcome…

Radisson Blu lobby, all open air

 You wake up to soft warm breezes and gently lapping waves, definitely full tropical. Over breakfast, Fijiian musicians serenade with their distinctly high, lulling harmonies accompanied by acoustic guitars and ukuleles. A great way to greet the morning…!

Setting the mood…play on brothers…..

Moses, the skipper

 Right off, we were booked for an all day snorkel and cat cruise with Coral Cats. They were #1 on Trip Advisor, so we booked ahead, anticipating a great day…. Stephanie stayed ashore to avoid severe sun exposure and perhaps a touch of sea-sickness. Perfect weather and we headed out to the Mamanucca Islands a few hours sail West of Nadi…

Chillin’ and grillin’

Fresh local fruit platter
After the first snorkel

 The water was warm and calm, with good visibility-50-60 feet. Decent coral with little bleaching, lots of colorful fish, though nothing big…no sharks, rays etc…Beautiful experience…Then it was into Musket Cove for a Fiji BBQ lunch, a nice break and stretch.

Frangipani blossoms

 The multiple smaller islands and shallow, turquoise waters felt somewhat Caribbean, but with a distinct Polynesian/ Melanesian flavor….the South Pacific indeed!

Musket Cove resort

Cate, now 11 yo

Claire, 16 yo tomorrow…

Island mind

Our ride for the day…

Tropical lunch

Loving Fiji!!

Dave with his incredible palm creations

Setting the troll for the run home

Anticipation…

 After lunch, the second snorkel was even better. A long sloping coral bank, covered with soft coral forests, and some Staghorns, Shelves etc. Clouds of fishes of all sizes and descriptions, including larger Parrot and Triggerfish in the deeper reaches where the corals dropped out of site. Superb snorkeling experience…

The run home to Port Denarau

 The entire day was just so well-paced and handled. The crew, company, food, scenery, snorkeling and overall vibe was just one of gentle relaxation, exotic land and seascapes, with a bit of adventure to top it all off. Coral Cats, #1 for good reason and even better than hoped. Highly recommended if in Nadi/ DI.

All great days must come to an end…

Back ashore for an evening dip…

Linking up with Stephanie for sunset
Fiji Bitter sunset, it really doesn’t get any better folks….:-)…!

Traditional Fijiian dance and song under the stars

 The resorts each have free nightly activities and are focused on traditional Fijiian culture. You can witness multiple performances, including full dress traditional “Meke” ceremonies that are only seen in more remote villages on special occasions. Cynics may feel it’s staged, not “authentic”. Whatever…I found it added a lot to a specific sense of place and enriched each evening.

No doubt, given more time and planning, much of the “real” Fiji can be found in the hinterlands, and especially on multi-day sails into the over 330 islands that make up the country. Perhaps the subject of a future DDU: a 14 day sail and snorkel/ dive trip through the Yasawa group? Sigh….one can always dream….

Relaxation, a vital component of any Fiji trip…

Wedding Chapel

South Seas dreamscape

 A unique feature of DI is that six high-end resorts are contiguous and share a mile or so of uninterrupted beachfront facing West and North. You can walk freely among all the beautiful gardens, pools and water features and use any restaurants etc that strike your fancy. There are no roads, cars or distractions between the lawns and the shore. At night the entire beachfront is subtly lit by gas tiki torches under swaying coconut palms and tropical flowers. Restaurants are open air, with some tables out on the sand…The overall  experience is one of soft, green escape. A fantasy perhaps, but a pleasantly persuasive one.

I’m in….

Claire’s Sweet 16 Birthday party guests

A beautiful young lady on her big night
Proud Papa Nolan

 Then it was time for Claire’s sweet 16 birthday party. It all fell together like it was fated. We managed, with a little intrigue,  to score a special birthday cake and have it delivered tableside, complete with Fijiian singing! A sudden tropical squall added to the excitement and soon gave way to a warm, humid evening under southern stars…

Celebrating Stephanie’s big accomplishment too…!

Aussie’s best Mom!

Sister’s birthday mocktails

Happy Sweet 16, sweetheart Claire

The miracle cake

Lifetime memories with our wonderful young ladies

Another gorgeous day draws to a close…
Cate gone troppo

A traditional Meke ceremony

Girls dancing like a local…

Another day in paradise

 Oh, and the EM conference was great too! High level discussions, good content, nice snacks and afternoons off. Perfect balance!

A ginger flower

Port Denarau

A (very) friendly local…

Returning to port

An acquired taste love….

Last Fijiian evening, at least for a while…

Final family sunset in Fiji

 Suddenly, like all dreams, it was over…the sun rose on our last morning in Fiji. Up at 0500, a quick final look, a few snaps and into the waiting cab for Nadi airport and a return to reality… But it was a wonderful dream, one we hope to revisit someday…

Hotel lobby goodbye

Nadi Airport, small but modern

So, that’s the story of our adventures in the South Seas thus far. While paradise might not truly exist in this life, a reasonable approximation would be Fiji. As an entree, Denarau Island was perfect, hopefully whetting the appetite for future adventures further off the beaten track, in true Doc Down Under fashion. Thanks for joining again on the journey. I hope it was marginally educational as well as entertaining.

Until who knows when, I remain your faithful DDU. Still manning his duty station, now some years later, somewhere out in the South Pacific. Your kind comments and support always appreciated!

Vanaka, DDU

Nolan clan, Christchurch, NZ airport, January 2016

Koala Christmas bears, Brisbane

Everyone wanted to see New Zealand for a Christmas present. So, we planned an 18 night road trip covering both islands for January 2016. Trouble is, that’s high summer season down here; camper vans, cabins etc all sold out almost everywhere, six months in advance. A tip for anyone planning this trip: you can almost always get a spot if all you’re looking for is an unpowered tent space; you also have tons of flexibility, even at the last minute. So, we decided to do it old school; 7 people, two mountain tents, one Hiace Toyota van….New Zealand….. It was epic, and wonderful, if a bit cramped….!

An exciting day!

In country, Aotearoa

Summer in NZ, “It’s a bit chilly…”

 We started out east of Auckland on the Coromandel peninsula, a beautiful area with forested mountain ranges above wild beaches and bluffs. Not heavily touristed; it’s more of a Kiwi family escape. Well worth checking out.

Cathedral Cove

Cathedral Cove is the most famous landmark on this coastline, and pretty impressive, but there are many other fascinating features in this part of the world.

Pohutukawa tree, flowering at Christmas-time, a Kiwi icon

New Zealand rainforest on hike to Cathedral Cove

Coromandel coastline

Camp duty Cate…

 We stayed a few nights at Tiarua/ Pauanui. Beautiful small towns on a complex marine estuary. A small volcanic spire affords fantastic views of the surrounding landscapes.

 

Owen, our baby boy…

Coromandel landscape

Beautiful, but not a ‘stralian beach, mate…

Lake Rotorua, a flooded volcano crater
Our entire setup…keeping it simple folks

Rotorua is famous for hot springs, geysers, mineral springs and all things geothermal. Hopefully you will camp well upwind…

Tongariro National Park

Daughters with Mt Doom

We then headed up to the high and wild Tongariro plateau. We initially planned to hike the stunning Tongariro alpine crossing; an 18 km trail up between two of the three volcanoes here. Brisk winds gusting to 50 km/ hr forced us to choose a lower, less exposed 14 km hike to some isolated lakes, and a perfect waterfall.


On the trail to Mt Doom with Stephanie! I carry the ring of power…

Lower Tama Lake

Mt Doom, aka Ngauruhoe, LOTR was filmed here

It’s hard to capture the vast, wind-swept austerity of this place on film. In my 40 years of serious hiking, I have to say, it’s an entirely unique and
intriguing environment. Well worth a detour and several days of exploring.

Claire and Mt. Ruapehu

Daddy, Daughtie and Doom…

Kiwi Love

A frigid shower after a long hike

Taranaki Falls

Feel the spray!

Mt Ruapehu, active as recently as 1995

And now, a brief digression…due to a glitch with a camera SD card, I lost several hundred photos; from Tongariro twilight, thru Wellington (cool, arty place), the epic crossing of Cook Strait to the South Island by ferry under blue skies and calm seas (lucky, as they cancel the ferries when seas are running over 8 meters (24 ft)! Also Marlborough wine country (bucolic…) and hiking in the sublime Abel Tasman National Park. Further losses, Westport, Pancake Rocks and the Franz Joseph and Fox glaciers… the entire west coast of SI NZ; stormy, moody and mystical. No place to live perhaps , but certainly a wonderful area to explore…Alas, locked in the confines of my memory with no photos to share….For those planning on that well-worn trip; yes, just plan on crap weather and head out…you’ll be well rewarded….. The photos pick back up climbing Haast Pass heading east and inland towards hip little Wanaka and Queenstown beyond.

Aidan fishing NZ
Ditto Dad, I lost a nice trout right here…

Over Haast Pass, heading for Wanaka

Lake Wanaka

A well earned hot tub, Wanaka

Alpenglow, Lake Wanaka

Wanaka morning

My #1 son and good buddy, Luke

Next morning , up early, around the lake for a 50 km drive to the end of the gravel road in Mt Aspiring NP. The landscape here on the Central Otago plateau is the polar opposite of the wet, wild and windy west coast, only 30 miles away….much higher, drier and ranchy. Very reminiscent of western Montana-love it!!

Swing Bridge start, a NZ icon

Our goal, hiking the Rob Roy Valley Track, a stunning, varied 12 km trek that’s considered one of the best day hikes in NZ, and that’s saying a lot! We headed out under perfect blue skies, and the hike did not disappoint…in fact, better than advertised.

Gonna be a great day

After crossing the impressive swing bridge, the trail heads steadily up the valley through beech and fern-clad forest…Hobbit land comes to life…! Occasional openings in the forest canopy reveal massive glaciated peaks, shimmering in the intense sunlight, high above. Building plenty of anticipation to encourage you to keep moving ever higher…

The trail ends above stunted timberline in a huge glacial cirque. Plenty of open space to stretch out and have lunch with friends while being serenaded by the music of a hundred waterfalls, rivulets and rills. Truly a magical experience.

Hiking the NZ lowlands generally means sheep as companions

The road back to Wanaka

A SINZ Rainbow…

Bogan Aussie party people….stop….!

Ma and Pa atop Mt Iron. Right over downtown Wanaka

Central Otago from Mt Iron

Lake Wanaka

My excellent young men, Luke and Aidan

Cardrona Pass, the high road to Queenstown

Lake Wakatipu foreshore, Queenstown

That feels…weird…!

Right outside of Queenstown is the birthplace of bungy jumping, since 1988, at Kawarau Bridge. The adrenaline pumping visitor’s center is a mandatory stop. Though on this particular day, our teens deferred from making their leap of faith. Maybe next time…?

Uncertainty reigns….

Kawarau Gorge

“I don’t think so Dad…”

The next victim…

Relieved to be back on the road…!

The Church of the Good Shepard, c 1935, Tekapo

The sheepdog monument, Tekapo

Moving further north, the Central Otago plateau gives way to a vast inland grazing area known as the Mackenzie country. This region was settled by settlers from Scotland and is comprised of large, remote sheep stations.

Claire and Luke with Mt John behind

Next morning dawned bright and dry. We hiked up Mt John for panoramic views of the surrounding Mackenzie country and to check out the telescopes operated by the University of Canterbury, due to the purity of the night skies in this region.

Best way to spend a day…

Lake Tekapo, ice cold, even in summer…!

Two hours north brings you to Christchurch and our destination. The city is recovering nicely from the devastating earthquakes of 2011. What were depressing vacant lots in the CBD, during my visit in January 2014, are now filled with foundations and rebar forms. Signs of life everywhere, but still a long way to go. Someone mentioned that the rebuilding of the Christchurch CBD was now the largest construction project in the southern hemisphere…I believe it!

Avon River boathouse

Ongoing restoration of a heritage building

The Botanic Garden sustained little damage, and is magnificent in full summer bloom in January down here.

A Christmas display

Maori Greenstone (Pounamu) implements

Equally impressive, and miraculously undamaged is the superb Canterbury Museum, on the Botanical Gardens grounds. One of the world’s best regional museums, and free; it has extensive collections of Maori artifacts, Antarctic exploration and New Zealand bird life dioramas. Really exotic and highly recommended.

Antarctic exploration diorama, I believe they ate the dogs…

KIWIS!

So, finally, it was time for the end-of trip celebration. We saw and learned an amazing amount traveling rough together over 18-20 days. New Zealand is very different than Australia in almost every way, and we all took home memories that will last a lifetime.

Last bedtime in NZ!

Packing it up for the airport

Stephanie, the one who pulled it all together!

Even after five months, the memories or our NZ trip are very fresh. So many common experiences shared; we all want to go back again soon. In fact, I just booked a hike on the Routeburn Track with Aidan for November 2016…Long story, but an epic DDU in waiting…If you are ever planning on traveling this way down under, I tell everyone that Australia and New Zealand, though neighbors joined by common heritage and language, are otherwise entirely different places. My advice is not to miss either, but to plan on spending adequate time, 2-3 weeks in each country, as a minimum….you could easily spend a lifetime.
Thanks again for traveling along with us; family, friends and fans of DDU wherever you are. Sorry for the drought…just busy, busy, busy living life down under with five kids…. Wishing you the best in your adventures, still reporting from my duty post in Brisbane.
Fondly, Doc Down Under.

Back in Brisbane…it’s so hot here…!

Merry Aussie Christmas, #3, from Aidan, Claire and Luke

So here we are, still down under, heading into our fourth year…Looking back, I see that this is only my third DDU entry for 2015…WOW…just wow…….Time flies, and we are busy living life I guess. Lots has been going on, it seems maybe we’re too busy for me to sit and write a bit…..All apologies friends and family. Anyway, a southern hemisphere ” Merry Christmas” to you all from the Nolan family….:-O

Muscle Beach…?

Flying Nolans!!

Our teens…

 We had a nice Christmas dinner with several other American and Canadian families we’ve gotten to know. Played whiffleball out on the foreshore park in the 85 degree heat. Everyone feeling similarly displaced from family and familiar environments…

Dad, I’m starving…when’s dinner…?

Groovy Baby,…!

Christmas elves

Christmas bump….

Santa’s sista helpers..

Christmas morning sleigh ride
It’s a universal holiday at this point!

Stephanie, the girl that makes it ALL happen…!

Luke and Claire on Manta Bommie

Claire getting close to a Giant Manta
Divemaster Harvie with the Certificates

 Luke and Claire also got their open ocean diving certificates, finishing up their last year’s Christmas presents right on time…They did an amazing dive where they saw Giant Mantas, Lemon Sharks etc…So proud…! Look up KingofAqua on youtube to see Luke’s video of the dive..Sweet as….!

Some tourist…
Luke, Claire, Aidan and Cate
Recording some new o.g.nolan tunes, nooo…!

Road warrior…excellent.

 So, working backwards from Christmas, Luke and I did a father/ son camping trip down the coast in Byron Bay, visiting some old favorite haunts and finding some brand new ones too…Really fun and laid back trip…Luke’s developed into a most excellent road warrior.

Aussie countryside

At The Farm , Byron Bay, NSW

Amazing lettuce, Mullimbimby Farmer’s Market

Minyon Falls, NSW

Flyingbuddahthinghy…

Byron Bay Brew Pub

The o.g. at Wategos Beach
Julian Rocks dive boat

The Pass in a rainstorm

The Pass, Byron Bay

Schoolies week, night action, Byron Bay..(Gulp…..!)

Don’t miss this act!! NSW Public Health warning…;-O

Mixed messages…

World’s oldest (and most enthusiastic) schoolie…..

Hand painted stage mural, The Rails, Byron

Keepin’ it simple…home.

Morning beach scene, Byron

Byron Head and lighthouse

Traveling minstrel at The Rail (from Atlanta, Georgia!)

The Rail, Byron Bay, cool pub in the old train station

Now that’s a beach….

Wooden footbridge, Brunswick Heads
Roadtrip…!!!
Bruns Pub– our regular pit stop….

Sublime Mount Warning, Tweed River valley, northern NSW
Doctor Beach Bum…

Cheers mate…and a Happy Christmas from ‘Stralia…!!…..:-)

So, not that anyone has called or written to express concern……but, we are doing just fine thanks; as 2015 evolves into 2016 and beyond….Wishing you all the best of health in the New Year…We’ll likely be here for a bit longer yet…stop in, say hi… Cheers! DDU

The Nolan Clan with Uncle Nicky

A friend from the USA says she’s been regularly following the blog, but wondered why I hadn’t posted since January. I couldn’t believe her, but I checked, and correct she was; no DDU for almost 6 month! And yet, somehow, life carries on apace…how did all that time slip away…?

Brisbane Airport pickup

Kids lovin’ their Uncle

Now in our fourth (!) year in Australia, we are all doing well, settled into the normal life rhythms….birth, school, work, death….all that stuff…(almost!)
I was recently asked to be ED Director, a real honor, and a big job. The ED at Redlands is approaching 60 K visits and has around 250 employees and staff. Everytime I try to leave this country, they make me a better offer…!

But times have changed!

Nicholas was between jobs and able to get away for 3 weeks of R&R down under. Late March- Mid April, late summer, early fall here….Perfect…We took him on a tour of all our favorite haunts…

Beach Beauties, Claire and Cate
Bruns Pub love

Cabin at Brunswick Heads

Aussie Chillin’

The old wooden footbridge to the beaches

Aidan with a nice Bream

Byron Headland
Iconic Lighthouse, Byron Head

Tallow Beach, Byron Bay NSW

Sweet southern sun, watch that burn…!

Lennox Heads

Me and Cate

Banksia Bloom

Fishin’ was just the alibi

Bruns Pub groovin’

My daughties…

Brothers reunion

Natural Bridge hike

Cast after party

Luckily, Nicholas was here during the kids school play, “The Wizard of Oz”. They worked really hard at it, and it came off wonderfully. Featuring Luke Nolan as the hippest Wizard ever, Claire as a munchkin and Aidan as an angry apple tree…

The MAN!!

Sushi with the neighbors, Stephanie and Jean

Story Bridge, a Brisbane landmark

Brisbane River

uhhmm… that ain’t right…

Another great coincidence was that Luke and Claire were getting one of their open-ocean dives done. So, we all headed across Moreton Bay to the wrecks at Tangalooma, a fantastic artificial reef for diving and snorkeling.

Luke and Claire with Harvie the Divemaster

Claire ready to go

The kids have done really well with the diving, which can be challenging off the Australian coast…”So proud…” 🙂

Luke all set to dive

Leaving the wrecks

Glasshouse Mountains from Moreton Bay

Day hike on Mount Coolum, near Noosa

Next up was a last minute ED conference at the resort town of Noosa, on the Sunshine coast. Amazing how it all came together, including accommodations for eight!

Stairmaster time…!

Claire beat me to the summit…just barely..!

Team Photo, Mount Coolum, Sunshine Coast

Looking good Owen!

Marcoola Beach phantom

Nice digs for Stephanie

Big Sandy N.P. wild coastline north of Noosa

Sublime Noosa Head N.P.

Besties…

Hell’s Gate, Noosa NP

My wonderful eldest son, Luke

Noosa River and villages
Aidan at Noosa main beach

Noosa Main Beach

Outrigger Resort, Noosa

Hastings Street, Noosa

ID please, Aidan…

Finally, time was getting short and it was back to Raby Bay, Cleveland for a few preliminary good-bye celebrations. So great to get a visitor from home…:-)

Luke’s amazing wild-caught and self-prepared calamari

Sunset cocktails on the pontoon

Aussie beer…yes…!!

The last supper…for now…

Siblings 4 eva

Finally, and sadly, lift-off morning…and a farewell, not goodbye, to Uncle Nicky….We hope you had a wonderful Aussie adventure with the Nolans! We loved hosting you and welcome any family or friends from the States to swing through if their travels take them through the Brisbane area…Love from us all, still, in Australia.

And, this entry makes me realize how remiss and tardy I’ve been here at DDU…I still can’t believe it’s been 6 months…We are doing stuff, honestly…maybe I’ll do a random catch-up entry asap…At least before another 6 months goes by I certainly hope…!
Anyway, my love to all, near and far-flung, from DDU, still manning his post here in Brisbane, Australia. Someone’s gotta do it I suppose….

Morning from the dock, Raby Bay

Airport selfie…

And one last, best, Cate hug…..

Male King Parrot

Trails entrance

It’s January 2015, the kids are still on their mid-summer school break. We decided to get out of the hot, humid coastal zone and return to Lamington National Park. At over 1000m elevation (3,000 ft), and 50,000 acres, it’s the largest intact subtropical rainforest in Australia, and perhaps the entire world. Only 90 minutes from Brisbane, you are suddenly in an entirely different world.

A nice rainforest bungalow

Rainforest skywalk

Our first few days were cool, cloudy and misty. A refreshing change, and the moisture made all the greenery glisten…adding to the sense of adventure…

Fashionable Miss Cate

Too slippery today!

The treetop skywalk at O’Reilly’s leads to the famous giant Fig Tree ladder look out. You start at around 80-100 ft off the forest floor, and then climb up two more stories by ladder to a tiny lookout perched at the top of this ancient tree. Not for  ‘fraidy-cats!

Nolan crew

Claire and rainforest tree buttress

O’Reilly’s is also famous for the daily wild bird feeding that’s been happening since the 1920’s. Using specially screened seed to protect the bird’s health, it’s one of the few places in Australia that allows feeding wild birds. Wild King Parrots, Crimson Rosellas and Rainbow Lorikeets come readily out of the surrounding forest to feast…an incredible opportunity to get so close to normally reclusive species… Kids of all ages love it!

Moran Falls overlook

Booyong Tree root buttresses

World-Heritage listed Lamington NP sits on the northern flank of the massive, extinct Tweed Volcano that last erupted around 23 million years ago. It’s only one of a network of dozens of parks that form a continuous preserve running for over 100 miles along the Border Ranges, so named because the height of land forms the border between Queensland and New South Wales to the south. It’s one of the premier hiking, or bushwalking, areas in Australia, containing hundreds of miles of trails through a vast and complex ecosystem.

Root detail

 

A strangler fig that has killed the host tree

Moran Falls, several hundred ft high

Kids chillin’, post-hike

Stimson crash monument

O’Reilly’s was also the site of the famous Stimson plane crash in the 1930’s. After a massive search was called off as fruitless, one of the brothers, Bernard, struck off on his own through the trackless rainforest and found 2 survivors 10 days after the crash. They were carried out to safety and the case made headlines world-wide. There is an interesting museum, statue and similar original plane on the grounds today. There are even occasional guided hikes out to the ruined plane’s remote crash site.

A similar Stimson plane, not a replica

O’Reilly’s started as a remote family dairy farm around 1915. It was soon surrounded by the new Lamington NP. Gradually the family began housing explorers, tourists and visitors. It’s still owned by the original family and is world-renowned for it’s high standards of hospitality in the middle of a huge wilderness area. Truly one of the world’s first eco-lodges! Plan to visit if ever in the area, it’s a unique experience in Australia

The path forward…

But ultimately, a trip to Lamington is all about the magnificent rainforest that surrounds all. We did a 16 km (10 mile) hike on day three up to the edge of the ancient caldera. As you are already high in the mountains, it’s mostly a gradual uphill ridge hike. For the truly fit, this is the first 1/3 of a legendary 24 km (15 mile) one-way hike across the caldera ridge and down a neighboring ridge to the wilderness lodge at Binna-Burra. You have to shuttle cars, but it’s one for the future bucket list for sure.

Ancient Antarctic Beech trees

As you get up onto the highest ridges the forest changes to predominantly moss-covered Antarctic Beech, which thrive in the cool moist cloud cover. They are the last vestige of a lost time, 20 million years ago, when Australia was a cooler, wetter continent. It’s a fantastic world to visit, if even for a few hours…

Mount Warning, the central cinder cone of the Tweed Caldera

Springbrook Plateau and NSW coastline beyond

Luckily, the weather held and we had wonderful views of the entire Tweed Volcano caldera with Mt Warning at it’s center. The furthest mountain ridges beyond are actually the southern rim of the caldera, almost 60 miles across! This is one of the largest and best preserved calderas on earth…Truly a stunning environment and a wonderful playground to explore! The lava flows, some thousands of feet thick, blew out and flowed SE forming the rich sugar growing soils of the Tweed River valley and Murwillumbah, NSW.

Luke, Claire and Aidan, my adventurous teens

Yellow-Faced Whipsnake, venomous but shy

Claire on the mysterious ridge trail, steep cliffs below!

Back to the Treetop Walk after six hours of effort

Aidan conquering his fears

The ladder up….gulp…!

Treetop vista!

Relief…!

The lodges at O’Reilly’s, Border Ranges beyond

O’Reilly’s library

Good effort Owen…!

A well-deserved dip

Daypack detail

Cate with some wild friends

Crimson Rosella

A well-deserved hot tub, Cate and Claire

My eldest Daughtie, Claire

And Cate

Luke and Aidan, the young Nolan men

Besties!!

Still crazy after all these years….! Stephanie, who makes all good things possible…

Border Ranges sunset with Mount Lindsey

Twilight…….

Border Ranges morning

Luke, Jan 2015

Well, it was our last day at O’Reilly’s. We first came here soon after arriving in Australia, in March 2012. I thought it would be fun to compare the kids in 2015 vs 2012, almost exactly 3 years later. I dug out the old pictures…What a surprise! Time flies and kids grow, change and rarely look back….Sigh….Enjoy them while you still have them!

March 2012!!
Claire, Jan 2015
March 2012!!
Aidan…2015

In 2012…same hat anyway…!
Catherine, 2015

and cute as a button, in 2012…
Owen, still in a stroller, in 2012
Dad, needing a shave, in 2015

Ma n’ Pa Nolan in 2012…stressed…?
Stephanie and Owen, not cooperating, in 2015

A pretty scary ladder!

And then, a final trip to the Big Fig Tree, for a final courage trial. Not everybody made the climb….Owen insisted on climbing the tree, but I stopped him at the first lookout, some 120 ft above the ground. He wanted to go all the way up! When the small crowd below realized he climbed up, at only six, using only one arm, they were very moved and broke out into a spontaneous round of applause….Well earned indeed Owen!

Owen and the girls high up above the world…

Success Owen….!
Rainforest Kids

Above Canungra, QLD

The sublime “Scenic Rim”, Queensland

O’Reilly’s Pub

Regent Bowerbird, O’Reilly’s Rainforest Retreat symbol

Balancing life, moving towards the future….

So, we visit old haunts and take a moment to mark our progress through this life….One thing is for certain, it never stands still…! This year we look forward to many more Nolan family adventures in this fascinating land “down under”.
We wish you all the best of health in 2015, and hope you can occasionally join us for the ride….Thanks for following along….:-)…DDU

Luke, aka Snorkel Santa

 We just finished our 3rd Aussie Christmas. It’s mid-summer down here, and an eight week school break, so the Aussie’s all take off to the beach for an extended summer holiday. They are really into Christmas as well, so the familiar trappings of (plastic) trees, Santas and Christmas carols are everywhere. It is very disorienting to try and get into the mood when it’s 90 degrees, under brilliant summer sunlight. I suppose we will just have to adapt to the chilled jumbo prawns and fresh mangoes poolside. Pity the poor expats….!
Smell the fresh scent of plastic!

But work in the ED carries on, 24/7/365

Santa’s helpers

When life gives you mangos….

The skiing alternative….

Evenings out on the veranda

Aussie Ginger Beer…Luke approved.

Christmas Ham Dinner– all served cool….

V-a-c-a-t-i-o-n!!!!
Working off those calories

Aussie Christmas Day

Seasonal flowers

My three wonderful sons

Pandanus Palm

Christmas Choir

Claire’s handmade masterpiece

Growing up!

Summer blooming

A Brisbane summer storm blowing up….

Tempting the fates…

Lightning fear…

Merry Christmas from Brisbane, Australia 2014 !!!

 I thought it might be fun to just throw in a random bunch of
photos of what we’ve been up to since the Sydney trip.
So, here’s a quick blast of various fun, interesting or downright
weird stuff we’ve experienced recently. Enjoy!!

Boxing Day sea monster!!

Watch yer fingers…!

Crazy monster eel caught off the dock

Ominous seabirds….

Banksia bloom

White faced heron (and doctor…)

Beach Hyacinth?

Rae’s at Wategos…where we couldn’t afford to stay…

The Pass, Byron Bay

Keepin’ it simple folks

Byron Beach scribblings

Me and “Mister Skunky…”

Aidan in the surf

The Bruns Pub- my favorite hideaway…

The return of ominous seabirds….

Luke at the Pass, Byron Bay, NSW

Byron Head from Brunswick Heads beach, with kite sailors

Freedom brothers

My beloved Cate

The three young’ns

Luke and Cate, besties….

Aquatic Center, Cleveland

My lovely ladies

Ma ‘n Pa

Stephanie in Brisbane- the Big Smoke

Southbank evening

The Brisbane eye

A G-20 survivor

Laughing eel
Beach bod! (Uhmm….:-0…!)

                                                                                                          

Surf Lifesaver Santa
On the beach-Brunswick Heads

                                                                    
So, a perfect Aussie Christmas moment; as I was walking down the open, endless beach at Brunswick Heads I came upon this Surf Lifesaver group and thought, “That’s a perfect Christmas photo…” I approached and asked if I could get a few shots..In true Aussie fashion, they were really psyched and cooperative. When I asked them if I could put them on my blog that would be read all the way back to America and New York, the blonde bloke in the ballcap laughed incredulously and simply said, ” Oh cheerio, lovely….!”

So, that about sums up the year of 2014 for us in Australia….Oh cheerio, lovely! Thanks for following along. And we wish the same for you and your families in 2015…Merry Christmas and peace on earth to one and all…..DDU

Merry Aussie Christmas… Oh, Cheerio, lovely…..!

                                                                 

The Blue Mountains- Luke Love!

Sydney aerial

We’ve been busy down under, settled into the inevitable daily routines of school, work, meals, laundry…..just living life. But every so often a really great opportunity comes along and we try our best to grab it. I had scheduled a Royal Flying Doctors Aeromedical Retrieval course in Sydney. As school is in mid-session, we couldn’t all get up and go. Thus, a father-son road trip with Luke was hatched. He missed a week of school, but gained a lifetime of new experiences and memories…

Wentworth Falls

Over Wentworth Falls

We left right out of Sydney airport and headed west into the Blue Mountains. Given that Sydney, at 4 million is, along with Melbourne, the largest population center in Australia by far, it’s remarkable how quickly you leave the ” Big Smoke” behind. Within 50 miles you are heading up into the vast Great Dividing Range; home to three major national parks covering over 2.5 million acres of mostly wilderness.

Rock n’ rails abstract

It’s a long, sheer drop down!

The World Heritage listed Blue Mountains have been a summer playground for wealthy Sydney-siders for 150 years. The infrastructure and overlooks are all well laid out and safely constructed. In the small mountain hamlets of Leura, Katoomba, Blackheath and Mount Victoria you find impressively preserved Victorian-era hotels and country estates with formal English gardens. A bit of an Australian imagined version of the distant motherland. But if you veer off the established walkways a few hundred meters you are suddenly into the vast Australian bush, with treacherous 500m drop offs everywhere! As always in Australia, whatever your expectations, expect grander, vaster, more awesome…and they really are the most curious, variegated shades of blue! (Said to be due to suspended eucalypt oils refracting the sunlight BTW).  Still, impressively, deeply blue….

Strathearn Cottage, c 1930’s

We had a good connection to a simple restored coalminer’s cottage in Leura; Strathearn Cottage, circa 1930. Owned by our Cleveland landlady’s sister, it made a handy and quaint base for exploring the region.

The weather was favorable, and on the first night we had fantastic views of the iconic Three Sisters in the evening light. Storms were rolling in, it was a mid-week evening and the place was deserted. Per-fect! Unfortunately, for many visitors the famously fickle Blue Mountain weather settles in and leaves the view limited to your basic grey cloudbank. Lucky!

Storms approaching across the Jamison Valley

A curious local Echidna

That’s the money shot!

It’s all in your perspective…

See, it’s easy….
Leura cascades

Another wonderful feature of the Blue Mnts is the number of cascades flowing off the escarpments. Virtually every eroded canyon contains a creek, so water music is everywhere. And, as water supports life, every riparian stream side is a veritable cool fern grotto; tucked beneath the jagged sandstone cliffs overhead. Magical!

Adventure buds…

First Sister summit

That was so cool, the next am we were back at the Three Sisters to explore a bit more. There’s a famous bridge out to the first Sister. But I never realized that you have to clamber down to it. Another surprise is how high off the valley floor it rises. The spires you see in the calenders is just the top of a ridgeline that falls away over 600-700 ft to the forest floor below.

On the First Sister

Luke across the little bridge, with a bench even…

Flying over the Jamison Valley

Cockatoo in flight
Ancient aboriginal face ?, rainforest pocket

We visited ” Everglades” in Leura, the weekend home of a wealthy Sydney industrialist from the 1930’s. It’s now heritage-listed and has acres of formal gardens; manually hacked out of the stony mountain side over decades. Very impressive achievement! The Azaleas and Rhododendrons thrive in the cooler climate and were at peak bloom during our visit. Lucky!

Luke at Everglades

Feeling very floral…
Leura, NSW. A hip mountain town indeed

Now that’s a PIZZA PIE!

In keeping with the well-heeled , resort-y feel of the area, the restaurants were really good. Even the basic Asian/ Malaysian places were top notch. We got a tip on Trip Advisor about a highly rated family pizza place in Katoomba. I walked in and saw a US style pizza oven, and wanted to cry. I said to the waiter, ” You have a real pizza oven..”  He apologized, ” It’s not wood-fired, only gas…”  I then cried….What ensued was “the best Aussie pizza ever”, an easy 8.5 on the USA scale. Real dough crust even…! It might seem a bit over the top, but Australia, while awesome in many, if not most respects, is certainly a pizza desert. Skinny, pre-formed frozen crusts cooked on toaster-like conveyor belts is the norm. Dominos counts as gourmet here….Sorry to obsess, but it’s been a LONG three years counted in pizza-time. So, all love goes out to Papadinos Pizza, Katoomba, NSW.. Just go there…:-)

Working off the pizza at Govett’s Leap, Grose Valley

Springtime in the Blues

Soon enough it was time to hit the road. We took an alternate high altitude route back to Sydney on the famous Bells Line of Road, a route laid down in the 1820’s by a 17 year old surveyor named Bell. Still in use today, it’s one of only two major routes crossing the Dividing Range west of Sydney. In fact, the rugged mountains, which rise to over 1100m (3600 ft)  turned back successive expeditions; keeping the early settlers crowded on the eastern coastal plains of NSW for 25 years before finally being breached.

A Waratah, state flower of NSW

The sublime Grose Valley

A major destination is the Blue Mountains Botanic Garden at Mount Tombah, a cool climate annex of the vast Royal Botanic Garden in Sydney. It’s free and very well done. Highly recommended for several hour’s relaxing wandering and perhaps lunch.

Wollemi Pine, a living dinosaur

Wollemi Pine detail

Very near here, in the 1990’s,the botanical world was stunned by the re-discovery of a genus of pine tree thought to be extinct for millions of years in a remote canyon. The Wollemi Pine has since been successfully transplanted to various locations in Australia. Imagine the botanic equivalent of a living dinosaur found thriving within 50 miles of Sydney! Australia, such a strange, remarkable continent!

Chillin’ and grillin’, Palm Beach, NSW

It would be easy to spend weeks, or months exploring the vast Blue Mountains, but our schedule carried us on back to Sydney. The conference was held at MacQuarie University, north of the CBD, so we had an opportunity to explore the fabled Northern Beaches that run up a narrow peninsula for 20-30 miles north from Manly near the entrance to Sydney Harbor, ( Port Phillip Bay).

Most of these beaches are pretty wild, and famous for surfing. So, each has a saltwater tide pool build below high water mark to allow for swim competitions and safety for families. They are refreshed on each incoming tide, and tend to be community social hubs.

Saltwater tide pool,  Palm Beach, NSW

Twilight, Northern Beaches, NSW

Bronte Beach Saltwater Tide Pool

We had a final day before the RFDS course started, so we headed for parts yet unseen, the Eastern Beaches of Sydney. Famous for the well known Bondi Beach, the coastline here feels somehow Mediterranean. Densely packed but livable, with small coastal headlands seperating distinct communities, each centered on crescent beaches and green public parks. Sweet as…!

Bondi Beach overlook

We somehow stumbled upon opening weekend of  “Sculpture By the Sea” a 2 week open air sculpture fest, running along the famous clifftop walk between Bondi and Tamarama Beaches. It was a bit busy, but the great weather and festive air made for a memorable outing. The sculptures really couldn’t compete with the natural beauty of the stunning seascapes however. Lucky!

Luke on the Clifftop Walk, NSW

We’re getting fried out here! Tamarama Beach, NSW

We headed into town for lunch and to explore the Rocks, inner harbor and Opera House. This was Luke’s first trip to Sydney, and I’d only been once a few years ago. It’s a vast, complex metropolis, so we only had time to hit the highest of the high points

As stunning as ever, an iconic structure.

We did walk up onto the harbor bridge

Futurism now!

Checking out the mannequin. I actually bought the dress for Stephanie. Weird, huh…?

Praise the Lord!
Lord Nelson Brewery respite!

 The course was held at the MacQuarie University Graduate School of Management, a green oasis on the north side of Port Phillip Bay, only 20 minutes from Sydney CBD. The hotel rooms there open directly onto a large park. Highly recommended.

Pediatric Trauma drill

Next up, it was back to work. The RFDS
Aeromedical Retrieval Course is a full 3 day, hands-on primer on all things aviation/ pre-hospital emergency stabilization and transport of critically ill and injured patients. It culminates in an intense multi-casualty, nighttime moulage using live paramedic actors, recus. dummies and buckets of fake blood. Luke was very psyched to be able to audit most of the classes and was even allowed to be a patient actor. RFDS was really kind to include him, and even gave him a Certificate of Attendance! Perhaps a career changing experience for Luke?

Amputation via Crocodile
Luke delivering an alien

Impaled! A tricky one to sort out,,,

On MacQuarie University campus

Well, the course wrapped up without a problem Thanks to RFDS for being so welcoming of Luke as a participant. It was a real eye opener into the world of Emergency Medicine and EMS for him. Who knows, he might join the next generation of front-line lifesavers! Thanks to all friends, family and loyal DDU readers for coming along for the ride. I hope the trip kept you interested and informed as we continue to have new learning experiences, now heading into the final months of our third year down under. Best to all, near and far.. Luke and DDU.

Packing up and out…
Heading home to Brisbane

A seasoned traveler
Nolan family hello, from Whitehaven Beach
Urangan Pier, Hervey Bay

It’s now winter in Australia. The kids had a two week winter break in July, so we headed north along the vast coastline of Queensland, to get to some warmer weather… I guess we’re getting soft; mid-60’s just don’t cut it anymore..:-) ! Here, north means heading towards the equator and our destination the Whitsunday Islands. It turned out to be an epic 2500 km (1600 mile), 12 day adventure. We hope you enjoy the ride.

Pier Abstract…1984..?

Given that we were traveling with seven in a van, we broke the trip up into manageable bites, 20 hours of driving over three days. First stop, the whale watching center of Hervey Bay. The Urangan Pier, circa 1913-17, constructed of local hardwood and was over 1100 meters long at completion, and actually had a railroad line to carry coal and supplies. Now only 900 meters, it’s been fully restored and is an impressive coastal landmark.

Vacation time…!

Next morning, it was up early and 9 hours north through the vast cattle country of central coast Queensland around Rockhampton. Winter is the dry season here, so we passed through hours of dusty brown savannah under flawless blue skies. Second night was spent out on the beautiful coastal peninsula near Yeppoon and Kinka Beach.

Kinka Beach

Breaking up the boredom at 110 km/hr

Bundaberg Country Pub

Sugar Cane fully ripe

It’s amazing that much of the M1 coastal highway, the major north-south artery along the populous east coast from Sydney to Cairns, is still undivided two lane road. Especially north of Brisbane, you really have to be alert for cattle, kangaroos and oncoming tractor trailers! The plan is to complete a modern, four lane, limited access highway all the way to Cairns within the next 30 years. There is an enormous amount of construction going on. But it’s a vivid reminder of just how young and vast this country really is.

Luke at Airlie Beach

North of Rockhampton, the cattle ranges gradually give way to widespread sugar cane plantations. They grow, cut and harvest cane year-round up north, so you see vast fields at all stages of growth simultaneously. Small country towns can be located off in the distance by their distinctive sugar mill smokestacks. A different world than Brisbane!

Finally, we passed through the sugar capital of Australia, Mackay, and arrived at Airlie Beach, the jumping off point for the Whitsunday Islands. Although you are now about 1000 km north of Brisbane, you are still less than halfway up the coast to the northern tip at Cape York.

On the ferry to Hamilton Island

Passing Daydream Island

The 74 Whitsunday Islands are a major winter playground for Australians, and the international yachting fraternity. Only 6 islands have any development, the remainder are all protected as a National Park, and look very unchanged since Lt. James Cook named the passage he sailed through on Whitsunday (Pentecost Sunday) in 1770; during his epic voyage up the Australian east coast. The whole chain is protected by the Great Barrier Reef offshore, and the brisk SE breezes make for world class sailing through the complex archipelago.

At last…Hammo!

The Nolan ladies, Catseye Beach

Outside of Blue Water Views Apts.

Student drivers!

Hamilton Island is the most well-known resort island, but even when fully booked out, only holds 10,000 people. Surprisingly, some pretty famous people have private homes out here including George Harrison and Angelina Jolie. We decided to rent a three bedroom condo for five nights, which came with a golf cart. No private cars are allowed on the island, which maintains a pretty relaxed vibe. The other great thing about getting a condo is that you have a full kitchen, so you can self-cater and not have to go out for every meal.

Local, wild Sulphur-Crested Cockatoos

The boys ad I fished nightly on a local pier, catching a variety of colorful reef fish…All released unharmed.

One Tree Hill : Sunset over Whitsunday Passage

Resort Hotels on Catseye Beach

One area of the island contains the hotels. As a single company manages the entire island, you have access to all the hotel pools and facilities if you rent a condo, which are in a much more private area. So a win all around!

And a hot tub on the deck too!

Owen?…..A ghost,…a mirage? A really bad hangover…?

Dent Island from One Tree Hill

Catseye Cate…

Cool teens… stylin’…

Passage Peak from Catseye Beach

Hamilton Island Yacht Club

The bait boy

Uhhmm…Dad…

A reef jewel!

A nice grouper

The Fourth of July BBQ

Hamilton Island is 70% undeveloped National Park, so there are some really great hikes right out the door. We took all the kids on the 6 km hike up Passage Peak. The views were stunning.

Cardio Challenge

Looking down on the resorts below


A silver-blue dream, Whitsunday Island beyond…

Pentecost Island

TheWhitsundays are surprisingly mountainous. This is because the entire region is an ancient flooded coastline. The rising seas now surround the once coastal mountain ranges.
With it’s rocky ledges and Pine Trees, at times it feels, strangely enough, like Coastal Maine or Blue Mountain Lake in the Adirondacks…But then a parrot flies by overhead…so….not really…

Island Chapel

Claire

Parrotfish

Waiting on a bite

Yellow-tailed Pike

Moses Perch

Wedding Fireworks

Morning view from Blue Water Views

We took the girls over to the Dent Island Golf Club for a tour and lunch. Build by the Oatley family, famous wine makers, for 45 million dollars, it might someday break even. But it’s a stunning course on an otherwise uninhabited island. Highly recommended.

Looking over the Club House to Hamilton Island

A stunning setting for lunch

Local Spanish Mackerel, superb!

Gettin’ frisky!

The Nolan Men

Sunset dream over Whitsunday Passage

One Tree Hill

The next morning, it was the boy’s turn. Fishing charter out around the outer islands. The Spanish Mackerel were running strong and our hopes were high.

Renegade Fishing Charters

Up on the bridge, Psyched!!

Interesting trolling rig, it has to be perfect

Unfortunately, though there were fish on the depth finder, they had plenty of real food and weren’t hitting, so we switched over to bottom gear for some reef fish. The next day, the same boat landed 15 Spanish Mackerel!  But that’s fishing… you’ve gotta get out there to have any chance at all!

A small Red Emperor

A nice Nanigai or Scarlet Perch

A nice catch of Nanigai
Renegade crew dudes. Great job guys!
Hiking above the resort

Nanigai filets for dinner- beautiful

A Cresting Cockatoo

On our final day departure, we headed north on the ferry to visit Whitehaven Beach on the eastern side of Whitsunday Island. World famous for it’s pure silica sand, it’s considered one of the most pristine and beautiful beaches in the world. The only development is a few primitive campsites on the entire island! A good place to play Robinson Crusoe for sure…

The beach is really impressive, the sand like flour and the waters a crystalline aqua blue. You can polish your jewelry to shine in the tropical sun. Even though I was expecting just another beach, I must admit, it’s a really, really fine one!

NB:  he was Lt. Cook until his return to England, a national hero

Cheeky Aidan…

A wild and colorful friend

So, after five nights and six days, it was time to bid the Whitsundays a fond adieu and head out on the long drive south to Brisbane. All the kids were unanimous in naming this the best road trip yet.

On the return we stayed in Airlie Beach and were treated to a wild bird feeding; where the normally skittish and constantly in motion Rainbow Lorikeets got up close and personable.

Why, Hello….!

Local ducks too…

A typical cabin, available all over Australia

We spent our last night in the beautiful beach town of Noosa. It’s a high-end resort surrounded by National Parks, wilderness coastline, surf breaks, rainforested mountains, lakes…oh, and the restaurants are great too. In short, it’s got everything you could want except urban sprawl…Perfect!

In Noosa, we had a final Thai feast to celebrate such a safe and wonderful road trip together. Blessed indeed!

Next morning, we had time for a hike out onto the Noosa Point headland. A very beautiful spot indeed.

Hell’s Gate, an impressive sea gorge on Noosa Point

Spazzing at Noosa main beach…Not sure why…:-)

So, after Noosa it was a final 2 1/2 hours drive south, back to our busy daily lives near Brisbane. Reality calls…It was a long but interesting journey to drive the central coastline of Queensland. The distances are impressive, but we survived intact! Thanks for taking the journey with us, all friends and family, near and far. Next up, hopefully, will be a long-planned return to Sydney and spring hiking in the Blue Mountains. Stay tuned…docdownunder

Hell’s Gate , July 2014






Coff’s Harbor from Muttonbird Island

Luke and Claire on Muttonbird Island

I got a recent offer to work as a Locums in the ED at Coff’s Harbor, a 5 hours drive down the coast from Brisbane in northern New South Wales. As it was school break, the hospital was kind to provide me with a three bedroom apartment right on the beach. So, we were traveling with seven. Stephanie and the kids had a blast while I spent some time in the ED.

Stephanie, Cate and Owen

Aidan, the Big A…

Morning beach walk before my first shift

Sunrise surfers

Pacific Towers holiday apartments

Pacific Towers, our crash pad for the week

The coastline in northern NSW is very undeveloped and beautiful. Lots of space and surf breaks. At Coff’s, there are large rocky fingers that stretch seaward with open grassy tops. Strangely, it feels like Ireland to me. The coastal mountain ranges are in close proximity to the sea at Coff’s Harbor, making it a well-established holiday center for adventure and eco-tourists, as well as divers, surfers, boating and fishing enthusiasts. The area is also capable of producing an amazing array of fresh fruits and vegetables, as well as seafood, beef and lamb; making it a foodie heaven for the growing hoards of localvores, including me!

A minimalist, painterly sunset

Sublime Digger’s Beach twilight
The grow so fast! Claire, a beach beauty

Best buddies!!

Stephanie and the kids saw some of the local landmarks, including getting kissed by friendly seals and dolphins at Dolphin Marine Magic. Highly recommended by all the kids!

Holding up the famous Big Banana

Digger’s Beach morning. Feels like the west coast of Costa Rica…

Best buds…

Luke, a dedicated and improving surfer

Child of the Sea

Coff’s ED…How I spent my week..Reality intrudes!

Natural saltwater pool, Sawtell, NSW. Refreshed on each tide…

Sawtell Seascapes

Introducing Aidan to the ED

But, it’s not all a vacation….

Leaving Pacific Towers

Soon enough my ED shifts passed (uneventfully) and it was time to move on. We decided to do a large loop back to Brisbane, first heading west into the rain-forested mountains above Bellingen; up the famous Waterfall Way. We had a few nights booked in a vacation home on a mountaintop above Dorrigo. This is a lush, rolling landscape of ranches, dairies and 11 national parks.

Bellingen heritage building

Dangar Falls, Dorrigo

Stephanie, my life partner and true love

Home for a few nights, 3000 ft above Coff’s Harbor

Contemplation…

Dorrigo landscape

Getting cheeky with fresh limes…!

My excellent young men, Aidan and Luke

Front porch view

We spent a few days hiking in the amazing sub-tropical rainforests of Dorrigo NP. Well marked trails lead down into heavily forested, shady fern grottos. Mountain streams become impressive waterfalls as they drop over ancient escarpments.

Behind Crystal Cascade, Dorrigo NP

Tropical shower!

Best buddies!

Virgin rainforest

Crystal Cascade Falls

Natural refreshment!!

Sisters hiking out

Dorrigo tablelands #1

Dorrigo tablelands #2

Tree Frog visitor

Mountaintop guru

NSW sunset atop Mount Christopherson

Sunset fireball…unretouched…!

Aidan…our chef at work

Mt Christopherson sunset

Ebor Falls, Waterfall Way, NSW

Our sweet Owen

We headed further west along the Waterfall Way towards the New England highlands college town of Armidale. The area is surrounded by enormous National Parks containing many large waterfalls, impressive remote canyons and a diverse range of habitats.

Looking into New England NP

My wonderful son Aidan

Woolombombi Falls, Oxley Wild Rivers NP

We spent a final two nights in the Granite Country of northern NSW and southern QLD; returning to the sublime, mysterious Girraween NP.  Regular readers of DDU will recall this was one of the very first road trips I did with Luke and Aidan on our arrival to Australia. Being a New Englander from the US, I just had to check out a region of Australia labelled, curiously enough, New England. We chose the Girraween Environmental Lodges, a beautifully landscaped eco-lodge on over 400 acres surrounded by Girraween NP. It is a peaceful, wildlife filled retreat. Highly recommended. At over 3000 ft, it was crisp enough at night to have a woodburner going. Just like home!

The boys loving the cabin life…

Mom and joey

A brilliantly colored Common Rosella
A young Kangaroo
First Pyramid, our hiking goal

The climbing team prepares…

Interesting rock slide

The world’s most savage ants, over 1″ long!

Girraween is famous for it’s unusual rock formations and high altitude meadows, filled with wildflowers in springtime. Like a miniature Yosemite in a way…but really not…

Second Pyramid beyond

Indigenous Cunningham’s Skink, 14-16″ long

Success!!

Claire holding up Balancing Rock

Claire with “Little Biddle”

Hello to friends and family near and far

Weird boulders

Wave Rock

Multi-colored Ghost Gum

Girraween meadows

Hot-tubbing after the hike

Our five amazing, energetic kids!

Cathedral Rocks

Life finds any roothold…

Girraween Environmental Lodges below

A country church
New England tablelands

Heritage Town Hall, Glen Innes, NSW

QLD Scenic Rim Mountains via Cunningham’s Gap

Looking NE towards Brisbane from Cunningham’s Gap

 Heading northeast down out of the Granite Belt, one passes through the historic, pastoral shiretowns of Tenterfield, Stanthorpe and Warwick. You have to negotiate the impressive Cunningham’s Gap through the mountains that ring Brisbane to the south and west. The trail took decades to establish, cut by hand out of the antipodean wilderness in the 1830-40’s.

Your host and driver, Doctor Nolan

…and Stephanie and the Nolan kids.

So, after nine days on the road, it was nice to get back to our temporary home on the coast near Brisbane. The northern NSW region is especially gifted with a vast, sparsely populated and highly diverse, productive landscape. It is probably my overall favorite region of Australia we have yet explored. I hope making the trip with us was enjoyable and informative for all of you as well. Next up, we have planned a 12 day road trip north up the mid-coast of QLD, including a five night stay in the tropical Whitsunday Islands over July 4th!  Please come along too as, it being “winter” here, we head north for some warmth and sunshine, ( as if we don’t get enough in Brissie!)…Until then, safe travels, the best medicine of all…DDU

Aoraki/ Mt. Cook, 12,320 feet over Lake Pukaki

Lakefront Kiosk

I really don’t want to bore any of my fine readers, but the final leg of my NZ South Island adventure deserves a decent run-through, as it’s a very different environment once you leave Queenstown. And perhaps you’ll pick up a few pointers as you plan your trip to the “Land of the Long White Cloud.”

An easy attraction to miss is the beautiful botanic garden in QTown; on a point in the lake, right downtown, it’s definitely worth a few hours of your time.

Silver Fern sculpture, a NZ icon
The TSS Earnslaw steaming down lake, from the hotel, departure morning.

A region built on sheep and wool

First stop, the actual birthplace of bungy-jumping in 1988, Kawarau Bridge, a few miles out of QTown. It’s been upgraded into a high-tech adrenaline machine, but the hertitage bridge, c 1880, remains. Surprisingly, they let you walk right up to the action…Close enough to “smell the fear…” With five young kids to raise, Stephanie made me promise not to try it. So, I have an airtight excuse not to participate!

Almost ready to drop 140 ft

Awaiting pick up by a dinghy

Kawarau Bridge and Gorge. Some LOTR scenes were filmed here as well

The modern Bungy Center

Vineyards along the gorge

High, dry country

Fresh local cherries

Soon after leaving the Gibbston Valley vineyards, the landscape changes dramatically; becoming higher and much drier. Beyond the irrigated fruit-growing areas around Bannockburn and Cromwell, the landscape feels reminiscent of the American west; Wyoming or even Nevada…

A long rural drive takes you north through Twizel and finally along Lake Pukaki towards the towering heights of the very ruggedly alpine Southern Alps. The storm clouds were building ominously and the landscape became marginally more fertile; with wide, glaciated river flats…Suddenly, Alaska…!

Approaching Mt Cook

Mt Cook/ Aoraki under clearing, if windy, skies

The famous Hermitage Hotel, clad in corrugated sheet metal

Miraculously, once again on this trip, the clouds parted at the vital moment and there was the summit of Mt Cook, luminescent, almost 13,000 ft above the valley floor. Like Milford Sound, a view many travel miles to see, though oftentimes obscured by cloud cover.

The Nolan Hotel, keeping it basic next door

I did spend a rather sleepless night with clear, sharp winds gusting off the mountains to over 100 km/hr (60 mph). A few times, I actually thought my stout mountain tent would be shredded, but no…we passed the hours without disaster.

One thing not to miss in Mt Cook NP is the wonderful, free museum that details the history of NZ mountaineering, including the ascent of Sir Edmund Hillary, who trained here for his successful assault on Mt Everest.


A series of books commemorating all the park alpine fatalities over 100 years
Hooker Valley view

Next morning it was up early, under beautiful sunshine for a 3-4 hour solo hike up the Hooker Valley. There are tour operators who do guided day tours here, but save your money. This is an easy, exciting hike that you can plan on your own. Just pack a lunch and head off…

NZ swing bridge- a big one!

Never happier than on a hike..

The trail follows a glacial stream up to a moraine lake, right at the foot of Mt Cook. Impressive peaks if the weather is favorable.

Of 27 NZ peaks over 3000m, 22 are in this park

High up, the vegetation becomes sparse due to the many months of snow cover and poor soils.

No place for sissies….Even the plants here need to be tough

Mt Cook over Lake Pukaki

Mt Cook NP was a real highlight of the trip. Much more severely alpine than I expected. The awesome weather helped, but if you come well-prepared, you won’t regret the effort required to get here.

Lake Tekapo campground
The famous Church of the Good Shepard, c 1935
Campsite neighbor

Heading north a few hours towards Christchurch, you arrive at Lake Tekapo, one of a series of large, turquoise, glacial lakes flowing out of the Southern Alps. This is the heart of the MacKenzie Country. A vast sub-alpine plateau, settled by tough Scots-Irish shepherds in the 1840’s and still wild and sparsely settled to this day. Sheep remain the primary occupation in this austere, but intensely scenic, area.

An Echidna
Mount John from the campground.

Climbing Mt John, a small mountain on the SW corner of Lake Tekapo, is a must do. The views are awe- inspiring, and there’s a highly regarded summit cafe, as well as natural hot-springs at the base, for an after-hike reward. The campground here is beautiful, right on the lake, next to the hot springs. Plan on 2 nights at least.

Evening cloud sliding over the ridge…

Tekapo from Mt John

Summit contemplation

Above Lake Tekapo

Because of it’s isolation and clear, dark skies, Mt John is also the sight of a major Observatory for the Univ. of Christchurch. Not something you see on many summits…

The MacKenzie Country below
The Collie Monument

Just out of town is the ridiculously photogenic, lakeside Church of the Good Shepard, built in 1935; scene of many weddings and calendar shoots. Much less known is the nearby Collie monument, a tribute to the dogs that helped settle this wild country.

Cantebury Plains, approaching Christchurch

Banks Peninsula interior

Heading several more hours north brings us back into Christchurch. I arrived in ChCh a full day early for one last adventure. Several travellers had raved about the unusual beauty of the Banks Peninsula; a vast, varigated coastline which is actually a massive, flooded, collapsed volcano
 caldera. And even better, it’s only an hour’s drive SE of ChCh.

Strangely, the main town and harbor, Akaroa, was originally settled by French sailors prior to NZ being claimed by Britain. They stayed on, and now 150 years later, there exists a tiny outpost of Gallic culture on the South Island of NZ. Incredible history….!

The peninsula is a genteel weekend playground for Christchurchians, and retains a very charming, pastoral feel; like some long lost Carribean isle.

WWI monument with earthquake damage

Another activity I was here for was a dolphin cruise on the  Fox 2, a restored 1920’s Ketch, run by an American expat couple from NYC! Several people told me it was a “Top Three” NZ experience, so I just had to get aboard…

 

The weather was perfect, the company fun and the skipper very enthusiastic and informative. It was awesome. We got outside of the long harbor of Akaroa, into the open sea, passed impressive sea cliffs and saw lots of wildlife

 

As good as all that was, the star feature of the day was
the gregarious pod of Hector’s Dolphins that played right alongside the boat. They are the world’s smallest (3-4 ft) and rarest dolphin, less than 2000 are estimated to remain. This is the only place on earth you are likely to encounter them, so we felt very blessed and fortunate to have the experience.

Mast and sea cliffs

Cool sea caves
Back at port

I have to agree…a day sail on the Fox 2 out of Akaroa was a top NZ experience for me too. If you are in the area, it’s a must do..Highly recommended!

Summit Road, Banks Peninsula

From Akaroa, you can drive the impossibly windy summit road back towards ChCh…..It’s an amazing drive, but “keep your eyes on the road and your hands upon the wheel…” for sure. I had to get back for the next day’s flight out. If you have time sufficient, one could easily spend a very pleasant week out here exploring all the little harbors and byways.



Akaroa below

The flooded caldera

A distant, remote harbor and village

Akaroa Harbor NZ, a sublime landscape

The end of the line

A country estate, Banks Peninsula

So, even the best adventures have to end; and life, work, family…reality…. soon enough intrude.  But these eighteen solo days in NZ felt like a real gift, and a vital reinvigoration of my busy life in Brisbane. And that’s how the perfect trip should end, not with regret, but anticipation…. As great as it was, I was surprised to find myself ready to get home, sleep in my own bed,  pick up Stephanie and the kids at the airport the day after my return and get back into our routine. Hopefully, there will be many other adventures to come, but the warm, golden memories of this one can sustain me for a long while, indeed, until then…

Thanks for hanging in there folks. This was a long one, but I wanted to do NZ justice. Hopefully, you can take away a few nuggets of info that will help you as you plan your next great adventure too. All the best in your travels. Cheers! DDU

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Custom bus, Queenstown to Lake Te Anau
So, onward to conquer the Milford Track…or, maybe not. First though, a confession. I’ve hiked backcountry all over the planet for over 30 years. Everywhere from Alaska to the Andes. Slept in a lot of rainy, muddy places and ate marginal food while swatting flies. Loved almost every minute of it too. But now in my mid-fifties, for once I have more $$ than time and knee cartilage. I now say if someone offers you a dry bed, hot shower and a grilled lambchop in the absolute wilderness, just say ” Thank you sir, may I have another…?”
The Milford is considered one of the most beautiful multi-day hikes in the world. As you’ll see, the way it’s laid out builds the excitement gradually, culminating in a challenging 1000 ft ridge hike and then a long slog out. It covers around 35 miles, with most of the hiking occurring over three 10-13 mile days. The Fiordland region of SW New Zealand is a vast temperate rain forest, and World Heritage area. It’s so remote that the Tekahe, a large, blue, flightless bird (pictured below) was recently rediscovered in the forested mountains, after being considered extinct
for over fifty years!
A model of a Tekahe, thought extinct for years
First evening misty mountains from Glade House

Glade House lounge and dining room

The Milford is really popular, but still remote. You have to drive 3 1/2 hours south from Queenstown, and take a ferry down Lake Te Anau for 1 1/2 hrs just to get to the trailhead. There are public cabins, but permits need to be booked a year in advance, as weather closes the track for 6 months every year. Ultimate Hikes is the only private company on the track. For a very fair price they arrange all permits and transpo, provide private bunkrooms with hot showers and real beds, and provide all food for four nights and five days. For me, a first-timer to NZ, it was the way to go. PS: you still have to put in the hard miles, though with a lighter pack.

Glade House Museum

Steve leading the post dinner orientation

Local NZ Venison Stew…Yum….!

A really great feature were the friendly, knowledgeable guides. Every evening held an informative talk on the day’s events, local history, flora/fauna and a preview of the next morning’s challenges.

Lead guide Steve heading out on Day ##2

Clinton River at Glade House

I seem to have lost my photos of the ferry ride, but it was a pretty wild and windy affair; with whitecaps and angry grey cloud-cover overhead as we headed down lake and into the impressively steep and brooding alpine mountains. Very reminiscent of the Alaskan panhandle around Sitka for me. Towards evening, the ceiling lifted somewhat, and we had high hopes of better weather and visibility by morning.

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A deep, green world…. The trail ahead.
An iconic NZ swing bridge

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Clearing skies…!
Exploring a sphagnum bog

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New life reaching upwards
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Heading up the Clinton River
Snacks and blister check

An interesting aspect of a group hike was to meet people from all over the world and hear their stories. Fifty strangers all working towards the same goal, for many different reasons. The esprit de corps was high and over five challenging days, bonds and memories were forged. Another nice feature of the Milford is that it’s a one way trail. Once you got into your groove, you hardly saw anyone else all day long except at rest stops. No “trail etiquette” required working past oncoming groups…Very chill indeed….

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Feeling the freedom in the sublime Clinton Valley

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Maddie, a nurse from Maine, working in Sydney

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Pristine water, all drinkable without treatment

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Up into the “Prairie”

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Higher into the valley, timber thinning out

Peaks tower 4000 ft overhead on both sides of the valley

Crossing avalanche talus rubble

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Pompolona Lodge, ten miles in

Clean and dry. Spartan, but beats a tent!
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Fresh scones to greet you

Pre-dinner cocktail hour. Sharing stories of the trail

Guitars even..!

Pompolona twilight, night #2

Lights out, big day tomorrow.

The way ahead, morning day #3

Looking back down valley
Guide Andrew and Maddie setting the pace

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Approaching Mackinnon Pass

Adjusting gear before heading over the pass
Mackinnon Pass to the right

Pass trail winding higher

As a marquee hiking destination, the trails, bridges and shelters along the Milford are maintained to a world-class standard. The public shelters are placed a mile or so beyond the Ultimate Hike’s, so you never encounter the folks ahead of you. The entire experience feels authentic, uncrowded and pristine. No fires or camping are allowed on the track and hikers must keep moving every day.

Looking down into Clinton Valley, the way we’ve come.

In the groove and feelin’ good…

Mt. Cook Lily

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Moving higher, above timberline

Getting “rugged up” in the alpine weather

Clearing skies in the pass, pretty rare…

Mackinnon Memorial at the pass, built in 1912

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A spot of hot tea..?….”Why, yes…”

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A Kea, the world’s only true alpine parrot

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An ominous cloud break; the way down as well…

Above the monument, “12 second drop” beyond

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Heading for the Pass Hut, out of the wind…

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High above the Clinton Valley

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The famous ” Loo with a view” Listed in the top ten in the world!

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Lives up to it’s reputation…!

Keas are very bold and cheeky. Watch your lunch, and fingers!

Lunch and warmth inside the Pass Hut

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The “12 second drop”, off the backside of the pass

After making the pass, the work’s not over. For many hikers, the 3 1/2 mile, 2000+ ft down hike to Quintin Lodge is the real knee-strainer. It was long and painful by the end of 10 miles…

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Trail down

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A portable bridge over avalanche rubble, placed seasonally.

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First sighting of Sutherland Falls

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Water music all around you

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The trail follows a wonderful series of cascades

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Amazing infrastructure engineering

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Below 12 second drop, off the Pass

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A profusion of ferns

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Quintin Lodge piano carried in almost a century ago

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Bridge towards Sutherland Falls

Once you get to Quintin lodge, you really just want a well-earned rest, hot shower and cold beer. However, the rest must be brief if you intend to make the 3 mile, 1 1/2 hour side trip to Sutherland Falls before dark.
At nearly 2000 ft, it’s the world’s 5th highest waterfall and NZ’s highest. A thunderous triple cascade that overwhelms with it’s raw power, it’s definitely worth the extra effort.

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Even from far off the roar is impressive, and exciting!

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Approaching the falls, too wet for cameras!

Another awesome experience is to brave the forceful blast of the falls and go laterally up towards the cliff face. You can then walk behind the falls. As you approach closer, the water is blowing horizontally off the rocks in gale force, an icy, stinging spray. You stumble over mossy, soaked boulders, nearly blinded by the force. You then sneak along the cliff face and are suddenly in a relatively quiet pocket behind the thunderous cataract. Soaked to the bone, but feeling more alive than you have in a long while!  Exhilarating….!

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Look carefully to the far left, you can see Pete’s leg

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Me and Pete after the falls soaking…Feeling very alive!

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Drying room at Quintin Lodge

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Steve, lead guide, at Quintin Lodge

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The evening’s entertainment begins
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A well-earned eye-filet….Oh, yes….
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What happens in NZ, stays in NZ…Quintin hijinks…!
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Packing lunches for day #4

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Evening storm moving in. But the pass is behind us…

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Getting ready for day #4

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Morning waterfalls above Quintin Lodge

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Wayne and a Tree Fern, Jurassic Park in real life..

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Two Concord-Carlisle (Mass) Grads, Peter 1989, Me 1975. Small world!

It finally rained on the 4th day. But we’d been very fortunate. The guides remarked that in the past two 5 day hikes, they saw not one ray of sunlight over 10 days! Only 1/3 of days on the pass has any visibility at all. In a weird way, having the rain falling gave the track an entirely different feel. The rivulets and creeks were all running hard, filling the air with water music from every direction. And the verdant, varied greens of the foliage glistened with a magical iridescence. Completed the rainforest effect, you might say…

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Long swing bridge over the Arthur River
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Camera’s getting pretty soggy

Day #4 is a long one, 13.5 miles,  but you are over the pass and on the long slog out to Sandfly Point and the ferry to Milford Sound village. The miles and hours pass as you get into the rhythm of the trail.

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A long green tunnel

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Iconic Mackay Falls, a scene from a thousand calenders, but worthy!

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Trail buds, Wayne and me at Mackay Falls

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Trail cut into the cliff by prisoners in the 1890s

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Giants Gate Falls

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Sensing victory selfie

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Trail now broad, flat, open….Close…!

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Sandfly Point shelter!

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Reaching the finish line, and not even a blister!

A feeling of real accomplishment!

Waiting for pickup

Milford Sound Ferry

New Zealand nautical colors

Buddies celebrating their experience

Milford Sound, our destination


Mitre Peak Lodge
A well-earned lambchop!

And then amazingly, the ceiling began to lift again towards evening; and we were treated to the sublime Grand Finale of the stunning Mitre Peak. This is a view that many travel great distances to see, and are often denied; due to the persistant cloud cover….Lucky folks indeed…!

Mitre Peak from the lodge

Feeling the Pinot…or something…

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Epic way to end the hike…

Our guides; Steve, Adie, Amanda and Andrew

The evening finished off with a really funny awards ceremony and talent show, liberally lubricated with adult beverages, now that we were all safely off the track. Only then did we discover that a quiet, unassuming Japanese gentleman was the oldest person in our group. He did the Milford, without even a complaint, at 79 years old! Inspiring…!

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Morning over Milford Sound
Morning walk to the Ferry

The adventure, and great weather, continued as the hike culminated in a 2 hour cruise of the fabled Milford Sound out onto the Tasman Sea. None of us could believe our good fortune with the sudden weather change. The boat pilot said it was the best day on the sound in over three months!

The perfect end to a lifelong dream

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Out onto the (rarely) gentle Tasman Sea

Even the Fur Seals are basking

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More waterfall close encounters!!

Me and guide Andrew, a Sydney college student in real life

Kayakers dead ahead…

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It’s a busy little harbor

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Back on the bus to Queenstown,  a very smooth operation

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Road scenery along the famous Milford Sound road

Up in the high, dry country near Lake Te Anau

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Our guides dropped off at Te Anau ferry to start all over again!

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Lake Wakatipu, approaching Queenstown

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A valley sheep station, Lake Wakatipu

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Queenstown along the far shore


Evening light in downtown Queenstown

And suddenly, you are off the bus and back into reality. The past five days of cameraderie, effort and accomplishment a sweet memory, already past. Fifty people working towards a common goal for very different reasons, now scattering around the globe, most never to be seen again.

In sum, hiking the Milford Track was a life-long goal, and while not the extreme climbing challenge of my younger, wilder days, provided a challenging goal to work up to and accomplish. The trip was even better than anticipated, and I expected it would be great! Ultimate Hikes took all the logistical challenges away, and allowed for peace of mind as well as a lighter pack, which made the entire experience more enjoyable. They come highly recommended for those with a little extra cash laying around but the desire to share a challenging adventure in New Zealand. I hope to do the Routeburn 3 day alpine hike with them next year, in fact!
So thanks to them for being wonderful guides and hosts during our brief time together.

I will eventually finish “DDU Does NZ -part three “which will travel north into the Mt Cook/ Aoraki National Park  and McKenzie Country Lakes District for some further alpine adventures, Kiwi-style; as well as a sailing adventure off the sublime Banks Peninsula and French heritage town of Akaroa. Until then, I hope this installmant inspires you all to dust off those old hiking boots and find that trail less travelled that still haunts your dreams..And hike it…! Happy trails!  DDU


Hiking up the Clinton Valley, Milford Track, NZ

Hard to believe it’s been six weeks since I returned from an 18 day solo hiking/ road trip on the South Island of NZ. Stephanie and the kids were back in the US for Christmas and January,  I worked over the holidays, and then took the opportunity to see a new part of the world and complete a lifelong goal of hiking the Milford Track in the Fiordlands area of SW New Zealand. It was an amazing adventure; one that will require yet another three-part DDU, so I hope you enjoy the ride as much as did!

Maori wood carving

So, New Zealand…I’ve never been, and after two years in Australia I thought it would basically be like an alpine Aussie experience. It’s only a three hour flight from Brisbane to Christchurch, on the east coast of the South Island. There’s a long and lively rivalry between the two countries about everything imaginable, but especially rugby; also a common English Commonwealth heritage and language. At one time NZ actually considered entering the AU Federation as the seventh state!

But, in fact, NZ and AU are very different worlds indeed. A few amazing (non-scientific) facts to consider:

NZ is one of the most volcanically active places on the planet, the last AU volcanic period was around 20 million years ago.

There are some 700 species of eucalypt in AU, by far the most dominant plant genus. There are none in NZ.

AU is word famous for it’s curious mammals, most of which are unique marsupials. NZ has no native mammal species except for two species of bat

Maori hunting the now extinct, 6 ft, flightless Moa

NZ was the last major, fertile landform to be inhabited by humans. The native Maori (15% of the pop. today) only arrived 800-1000 years ago, crossing the vast Pacific from Polynesia in small boats. They are closely related linguistically to Hawaiian Islanders.

The Aboriginals of AU are considered to be the oldest currently active culture on earth. Origins somewhat obscure, they have been in AU for at least 50,000, and perhaps as long as 100,000 years. They have no cultural connections to the Maori.

And even the native NZ folks, so-called Kiwis, are a different breed than their Aussie cousins. Perhaps it’s the harsher, more demanding climate, but Kiwis in general seem more direct, focused and no-nonsense than the laid-back Aussies. If Kiwis are similar to New Englanders, Aussies are more southern Californian, or if rural and ranchy, Texan. Just my own observations here.   So…it’s like a completely different country down there….Who knew!   And only just across the Tasman Sea (or “Ditch”  as they call it down here).  Well, let’s get going, shall we…..?

Brisbane International

1st view of the wild west coast

Southern Alps heading east

Mount Cavendish above Christchurch

Micro Brews..Oh, yes…!

Junk fish art…

ChCh Cathedral with the main spire gone

Christchurch (ChCh) was historically considered the most English of NZ cities; a small (500K) compact college and literary center, founded in the 1840s, it is the capital of the Canterbury region and sits on a vast alluvial basin right on the east coast . Famous for extensive and beautiful heritage stone buildings and graceful parks, a genteel pastime is punting on the Avon River that flows through downtown. Life changed abruptly on 4 Sept 2010 when the city was struck by a 7.1 mag. earthquake. A second 6.3 mag. tremblor struck on 22 Feb 2011; shallow and centered less than 10 km from the CBD, this quake essentially destroyed central ChCh in under 30 seconds. A heroic rescue and rebuilding effort has been underway in the ensuing three years and I was very interested to see how the city was recovering.

Extensive heritage building resoration

Eighty-five percent of the buildings in the CBD were damaged beyond repair, and most of the ones still standing are condemned and will be torn down. Extensive, and ingenious, re-engineering is ongoing to salvage the remaining fragile heritage buildings and make them more earthquake resilient. Work moves ahead slowly, impeded by over 2000 aftershocks.

Botanic Garden bridge


Antarctic exploration exhibit at Caterbury Museum

In spite of the destruction, life continues along. The Botanic Gardens and adjacent Canterbury Museum are wonderful, orderly spaces of normalcy that are highly recommended.

And punting continues on the Avon River

Downtown, the scappy local community soon got a temporary shopping district up and running. Using shipping containers, painted in bright colors, it’s become an iconic testimony to human ingenuity and resilience in the face of overwhelming loss.

Unfortunately, much of the CBD remains a vast network of
vacant lots; now cleared and leveled and awaiting
the next, uncertain phase. Frankly, I was overwhelmed by the scale
of loss and how much recovery remains. It’s daunting to think of all the sub-surface “stuff” that was also destroyed. Sewer, electic, water all needing to be meticulously reconstructed while life continues along above ground. So thoughts and prayers for the resilient residents of ChCh as they continue to rebuild their shattered city….

Heritage dormer awaiting replacement

The entire structure rebuilt and reassembled over a concrete and rebar form…

Summit road above ChCh
The basin ChCh is built on, much of
the substrata liquified and can’t be rebuilt on

Very high and dense windbreak, outlining pasture. Unique!

After two nights exploring Christchurch, it was time to hit the road west, through Arthur’s Pass to the west coast…Another thing about NZ, it’s a very rural place….About the size of Great Britain, with one fourteenth the population (at 4 million). You are into farm country with grazing sheep within 30 minutes of leaving the CBD.

Castle Hill, right out of Lord of the Rings

Amazing limestone formations

Summit selfie

Midsummer wildflowers

Riders of Rohan, I swear…!

Antarctic Beech

Devil’s Punchbowl Falls
Green, wet and wild….I like this…

Perfusion of ferns

Summer Lupine

Extensive glacial rivers

Heading west…

Over the pass, into the wild and wooly Westlands

Engineering marvel

A very cheeky Kea, the world’s only true alpine parrot

If you can”t beat ’em; shunting rock and waterfall over the road…

Kea, crow-sized , olive color, with bright red underwings..

Heading for Lake Brunnner

Rough country

Cow tunnel under the road,  at milking time…

Lake Brunner
The wild west coast

Downtown Hokitika

Clearing skies…a good omen

Hiking up to the base of Franz Josef Glacier

Water falling everywhere…music!

Chocolate and Vanilla avalanches…
Keepin’ it simple at Fox Glacier

Evening pastures

Famous Mt Cook reflections at Lake Matheson

Matheson Cafe…excellent!
Western face of Aoraki/ Mt Cook summit in twilight

Clearing skies at dusk, psyched..!

NZ can be expensive, that’s per LITER, (around $9/ gallon!)

Fox Glacier moraine

More LOTRs…Helm’s Deep…?

Lake Wanaka

After getting really lucky with the weather for a few days on the west coast, I turned inland heading SE up and through the sublime alpine Haast Pass. Into the high, dry Central Otago plateau. It’s a landscape of vast, dry alpine valleys and enormous, crystalline mountain lakes. Stunning…..Next stop, Waneka and then Queenstown, the adrenaline capital of NZ!

Sunset at Wanaka

Summit ridge above…gee, that looks pretty far…

Next day it was up early, hot and dry already. The plan was a challenging training hike up Mt. Roy. Around 16 km (10 miles) and around 3000ft elevation gain, my final buildup for the Milford Track.

Sublime Lake Wanaka below

Summit Ridge, and really feeling it, believe me…!

Looking NW into Mt Aspiring NP

Happy, happy knees…
Mt. Aspiring

Wanaka town below
“The earth makes music for those who listen….”   Shhh….

The road home…

The parking lot….tiny…tiny….tiny…

Leveling out, finally…
A NZ icon, on the high road to Queenstown

High road to Queenstown, see it off in the distance?

Gibbston Valley

Lake Wakatipu and Walter Peak, Queenstown
TSS Earnslaw, a 1912 steam-powered lake steamer. The last of it’s kind

Busy, groovy, outdoorsy QTown

Queenstown is the outdoor adventure capitol of NZ, and the birthplace of bungy jumping. There are a million ways to break a sweat and spend a buck in this town. Nice to visit, but I was here for a very specific purpose; as the link-up point for a five day, 35 mile hike on the Milford Track with Ultimate Hikes NZ. After spending the afternoon exploring the compact downtown, we had a pre-trip orientation at their headquarters, then off to bed for an early morning departure for Lake Te Anau and wild places beyond. The Milford Track will be the sole subject of “DDU Does NZ”, Part 2. I think you’ll find it to be quite a worthy adventure and perhaps motivating to start planning your own hiking adventure. Safe  travels and happy trails, until then!  Your DDU….

Calorie loading before the Milford Track
Hotel sunset over Lake Wakatipu and the Remarkables

Well-named…..Remarkable!

Morning storm brewing….?
All set to go…….morning pick-up.

Ultimate Hikes last minute preps and meeting the crew…..

Stay tuned for the next, riveting installment…Will they make it out alive….?  With how many blisters…? Cannibalism in the wilds of NZ…? We’ll see…. Thanks for traveling along, ddu

Welcome to “Rad”elaide…

Botanical Garden main gate

Welcome to Cheers! Part 3. Thanks for staying around…Tonight’s offering might be a little below my usual standard for scholarship and careful fact checking. I’m off solo to the South Island of NZ tomorrow at 0600, for 18 days.  Bags packed, now only the waiting… I pick up Stephanie and the gang from New York the morning after I get back to Brissie. If I don’t finish this installment now, it likely won’t ever happen. So, lots of pix and captions. Hang on….!

Sebel Hotel dining room

University of SA with Jacaranda Trees

Living Fossils

I have to take a moment to comment on this weird looking tree. It’s the botanic equivalent of finding a living T. Rex in 2013. Some botanists found a few of these specimens growing up a remote, tight canyon in the Blue Mnts of NSW, not 100 km from the Sydney CBD. This genus was thought extinct 100 million years ago or so….This tree was germinated from the seeds and grows in Adelaide, now truly a Jurrasic Park!  Oh, and me…crap, I’m pushing 60…!

Bicentennial Dome, largest in the Southern Hemisphere

A classic Aussie pub on Rundle Street

The Mount Lofty House

Stephanie could only stay one night in Adelaide. Had to get back and pack up the kids for their Christmas adventure back in NY. I dropped her off at the airport and spent the day exploring the Adelaide Hills, only 30 minutes east of downtown.

After the wedding vows…

Looking east, into the hills. Higher and cooler than the coastal plain below

The Botanic Garden is beautifully maintained by volunteers. Entry is free with a goodwill offering if so moved. A gem of the area and highly recommended.

Fern Selfie

Fern Gully

Heritage Cafe at Waterfall Gully

Devonshire (iced) Tea…

The weather began to clear as I drove off the summit of Mt. Lofty, so I took a windy side road up a dead-end canyon at Waterfall Gully. Aussies love their English-style Devonshire Tea; which is basically a fresh, soft, plain scone with strawberry jam and clotted cream on the side. Makes a great Sunday brekkie. The day being hot, I innovated with an iced tea, without raising any eyebrows. Thus fortified, I started up the 2 mile trail towards the summit, not sure how far I would get.

First Waterfall

Above the falls

As is typical in Australia, the cool cloud cover lifted, and the heat was quickly a’ risin’…This trail started to kick my butt….

Stunted eucalypts nearing the summit

Feel the burn….

Adelaide below Mt. Lofty summit

I have to say, after all that wine-tasting, the last 500 meters or so was pretty tough. But success at last!

Matthew Flinders really got around these parts in 1802

Clearing skies over the Adelaide Hills

The way down

I was really lucky to hear a soft digging sound in the bush with dirt falling, on the descent. Hiking off the trail, (watch those snakes!), I came right up to a Short-eared Echidna, busily searching for dinner.. Pretty uncommon, a porcupine sized, spine-covered hedgehog..I stood right over him. Attempts to pop him out with a stick, to see his face , were met with more furious burrowing, so you’ll have to be content looking at his butt!

Second waterfall

Trails end, four hot, sweaty hours later

A large Sycamore, not native

She’s on stilts too

Local shucking talent

Opening night party was a superb blend of Adelaide Festival weirdness and sublime foods from SA. It was a mix and mingle on the back veranda of the convention center, on the Torrens River, right downtown. Oh, and the weather was flawless, not unusual in SA.

Aussie Prawns, not shrimp down here…

Yikes, it’s Serpent Girl…!

Meet my three new friends….

Goat Cheese with edible flowers

Band o’ Clowns, playing Gypsy-swing jazz no less…!

Local Coffin Bay Oysters– beautiful!

I’m pretty much OK right now,,,,

Who are all these people anyway….?

Oh no….she’s back….!

Lecture view, proof that some work was done…BORING….!

Governors House, nice pad….

WW1 Monument

There are WW1 monuments all over Australia, and the Aussies mourn that war in some ways more than WW2. The young nation, pop. around 7 million in 1914, had over 400,000 casualties in WW1. Over 60% of troops were either killed or wounded, an astonishing figure by any historic measure. Basically the British put them on the front lines as cannon fodder for the Empire, and Australia suffered a vastly higher % of casualties than any other Western nation.  The losses in WW2 were comparatively mild , though Darwin was bombed repeatedly and there was a real danger of invasion by the Japanese.

It tells a story, if you speak the language….

Aboriginal shields

Adelaide has several highly regarded museums, including the world’s finest collections of Aboriginal and Pacific Island artifacts…

Bark paintings

A map of Aboriginal linguistic dialects, hundreds of them…very complex…many now lost forever….

I almost missed the Pacific Island display. Over 100 years old, and brought to Adelaide by various missionaries and adventurers over many years, each island group has it’s own display; beautifully arranged and encased in antique hardwood frames. Many of these traditions are extinct today. Eerie, primordial, a bit spooky. Highly recommended!

Birds of Paradise

Spear point detail

Art Museum of SA

Wooden skelton
He carved himself….!

German born Hans Heysen, the finest painter of the SA Outback

In complimentary contrast to it’s hipster-vibe reputation, Adelaide is also a city of colonial sandstone buildings and graceful English-style parks and gardens. A winning combo in my book!

Saltwater Croc skull…a large one…!

University of Adelaide with Jacarandas blooming

Another classic Aussie pub…let’s get busy…

Indeed…Dr. Ross out on the town

Real Belgians….on draft too!

Thai style whole Barramundi

Mall sculpture, affectionately called “The Mall’s Balls” by locals

Piggin’ out, late night Adelaide…

Dr Ross and his new friends…

Convention Center

It seems the whole city was undergoing construction

Peking duck window shot…

Adelaide Central Market

Another night, another “function…”

Tough work

Duck n’ Wine…OK by me…

What was that you were saying…?

X Ray of my head, the next day….

Botanical Garden art shot,,,Steady…

Convention Center detail

Final night, closing dinner. Honestly, I left early,,,Got to give it a rest Dr. Nolan…!

Roaring 20’s Theme, band etc…Me, too Pooped to Pop…

Endless Aussie plains

Coming home to Brisbane

The Lucky Country indeed!

Well, there, we made it! Thanks for staying with me thru all three installments. I hope you enjoyed the trip and learned a bit about SA, a unique corner of this fascinating continent. Believe me, I’m learning all the time…Now I can head off to NZ with a clear mind and conscience…..No “homework” waiting for me on my return.

I’ve never been to NZ, and this trip will start and end in earthquake- ravaged Christchurch, get an update on their rebuilding progress;  head down the wild and windy west coast, then up into the central Otago/ Queenstown region, before touring the Mt Cook National Park.
A particular highlight, and a bucket list sort of experience for me,  will be a five day side trip to hike the 55 km Milford Track. Wish my aging knees well. I think they are up for this……In any case, it sounds like an epic multi-part DDU from Aotearoa, the “Land of the Long White Cloud” is in the offing. Until then, Cheers! All the best in 2014 from down under. DDU

Aussie Christmas, Sevenhill Cellars

View west from the Blickinstal B&B

Coming north through the Adelaide Hills, the windy roads straighten and flatten out and you arrive in an entirely different landscape, the broad, open, sunny and fertile Barossa Valley. This is the epicenter of the SA wine industry, which was begun by Prussian/ German immigrants in the 1840s. Many of the wineries are still owned and worked by the 6th Generation of the original settlers.

Heritage Building, Williamstown

Chateau Yaldara

Although the Barossa is home to many of the giants of the Australian wine industry; Jacob’s Creek, Wolf Blass, Peter Lehmann, Penfolds and Kalleske, it never feels crowded or overly commercialized. It’s a very large landscape, full of wonderful food and wine opportunities, but adamantly rural, similar to Sonoma in California. Arriving in early summer, mid-week, we had the place almost to ourselves.

Getting down to business, Chateau Yaldera

One feature that gives the Barossa such a distinct ambience are the many stone heritage buildings built over 150 years of settlement from the local bluestone. Beautiful stone churches stand sentinal in every hamlet.

Irrigated vineyards backed by golden hills.

The famous German church at Gnadenfrei, surrounded by vines

Gnadenfrei vineyards

The rows of palms leading to Seppelt Winery

Tawny Port casks from the 1930’s

The Seppelt Winery, est 1851, is an Australian icon. The family made it’s fortune shipping fortified wines, Ports and Sherrys, throughout the British empire at it’s zenith. They still produce fortified wines and possess the world’s largest collection of ancient wines, with an unbroken lineage back almost to the founding of the winery. They are famous for their DP90 Tawny, which is only released when it is 100 years old!

Barrel detail

Seppelt Winery

The pathway to the relatives

Generations of Seppelts are buried in the family crypt, a Grecian-style mausoleum that sits on a beautiful knoll above Seppeltsfield, the family…..town!

Seppelts Mausoleum

View over the valley

Shorn for summer…lambchops..!

Settler’s gravestone, many in German

German church, Gnadenfrei

A working agricultural landscape

Wheat harvest

Restored heritage farmhouse

A rare, unrestored farmhouse

Blickinstal B&B garden and gum
Ferment Asia


We had dinner in Tanunda at a fabulous Asian fusion restaurant, set incongruously in an 1840’s German farmhouse. It’s an interesting place…

Driving home in the evening, the golden hills deepen dramatically as the sun sets over the verdant valley floor. Magical…!

The road home to Blickinstal

The road towards Tanunda

Barossa Valley sunset

Next morning, we were up early to hike the gravel road that snakes up onto the hills that back up behind the B&B. The sense of mystery just pulled you along, higher and higher, and we soon found ourselves in a different world. Wilder, tumbled and rumpled…nothing like the manicured vineyards below.

A misty morning rain

We started out in a refreshing, misty rain, but in these parts rain never lingers. The sky cleared as we moved higher, and the heat began to rise.

The road ahead

A rough back valley, no grapevines here

Ancient Eucalypt, aka “Gum”

A curious local

As we moved higher into the bush, the birdlife became amazing in numbers and diversity. Sudden bursts of rocket-fast Lorikeets, a multi-colored blur, hoarse calls of Cockatoos and Galahs, hawks riding thermals overhead. On this five mile walk, we had some of the best birdwatching we’ve experienced in Australia, which is really saying a lot!

Wildflowers..

The subtle play of light on prairie

The road back down to reality…

Galahs willing to pose patiently

A satisfying hike…

Blickinstal B&B vineyards, overlooking Tanunda

Stephanie, in the vines

Soon enough it was time to hit the road, moving further north, another 1 1/2 hours to the Clare Valley. Higher, cooler and famous for its white wines, esp. Rieslings. But of course, always time to stop at a few wineries along the way.

Old vines, self supporting

Australia, being so isolated, has some of the oldest commercial
vines on the planet. In fact, after Phyloxera and other diseases decimated vineyards in Europe, grafts of some varietals were sent back from Australia to their countries of origin to help re-establish the vines.

The tastemaster is actually English

The William the Conqueror Shiraz was a real eye-opener!

Turkey Flat also makes an excellent Grenache Rose

Dense lavender planted as a hedge and pruned

Stephanie at Maggie Beer’s Farm Shop
Leaving Barossa vineyards

Recently harvested wheat field

We took a rural side road north though undulating, extensive wheat and barley fields, now being harvested. Bleached almost white under the intense sun, I actually had to put on sunglasses because it was hurting my eyes. Driving on a two lane blacktop for miles, the effect is hard to capture on camera, but like being immersed into a vast golden tapestry, that you drive over and around for hours. Very uniquely beautiful experience….

A fixer-upper

Signs of past wealth, middle o’ nowhere, SA

Marian vineyard sculpture

A Clare Valley must see is the Australian landmark of Sevenhill Cellars. The oldest winery in the Clare Valley, and one of the oldest in Australia, it was founded by the Jesuits in 1851 and is still run by them as a parish and retreat center. We learned that Sevenhill makes 80% of the sacremental wine used in Australia; as well as a wide range of highly regarded, world-class varietals.

Sevenhills vineyards

Post bushfire ruin, with bicycle

Retreat Center

The spacious grounds and European-styled stone architecture feel very non-Australian, and it’s hard to believe you are in rural South Australia at all.

Sevenhill is most famous for it’s arched stone-ceilinged wine cellars, which are from the 1800s and unique in Australia.

Am I really still in Australia…?

A bottle of the local drop….

Final resting places

It gets even more unusual, as adjacent to the wine cellars and under the church are the crypts where the Order has buried it’s brothers since arrival.

Room for three more….

Saint Aloysius Church

The Clare Valley Hotel Baby…!

After the monied, somewhat posh Barossa , Clare Valley came as a bit of a surprise. Firstly, as you drive up the main route north, it’s hard to tell you’re in a valley at all; kind of low and rolling. Also, while you see some vines, it feels much tighter and more forested than the open expanses of the Barossa. And the main town Clare, feels like a down to earth working ag town. Nothing fancy at all, just all the services you need. So after all the upscale food and wine since landing in SA, we embraced it. Had dinner at the Clare Hotel downtown, among all the local farmers and their wives. Pork roast dinner with roasted root veg, and the salad bar for $9.95…which is a screaming deal in Australia,, believe me, less than McDonald’s. And it was awesome….And funnily enough, this country pub had a world-class wine list of high-end SA wines; $7 a glass, filled generously, almost to the rim. I commented to the bartender, that I’d been eating and drinking half, for twice the price, all week. He seemed very pleased….

Tucking into dinner, Clare Hotel.

Clare Valley Hotel

Clare room service

The Clare Valley Hotel was similarly down home. When told the room came with complete cooked breakfast, the matronly Aussie owner asked if we’d like it in the dining room or brought to our door. I asked what the charge was for room service and she just laughed and said, “No worries, we’ll just bring it over.”  Which they did, and right on time.. My kind of place…!

Escarpment overlooking Clare Valley

Gum detail

After our awesome brekkie, we got out on a hike where you could get a better idea of the vastness of the Clare region. As always in Australia, more vast, strange and intriguing than expected…

Golden plains of SA

Getting onto the back roads, we explored some of the wineries for which Clare is world famous, esp. the Polish Hill River and Watervale areas.

A high-tech, closed wine dispenser. Just press the button!

Pike’s Winery Heritage building

View from Paulette’s Winery

Country road to Mintaro

The famous Magpie and Stump, Mintaro

We took a back road to the heritage-listed hamlet of Mintaro. Very much lost in time, it’s becoming something of a destination on the wine-tourist path. Surprisingly, many of the buildings are not yet fully renovated. But it is a fascinating glimpse into the not-so-distant past of SA.

A slightly odd renovation…

Country chapel

Slate walls and door detail

Holleyhocks!

Trimming the lawn bowls lawn,the scooter flows back and forth sideways…

Reilly’s Winery, Mintaro

Roses everywhere

A fixer-upper…

Pretty quiet out here…

Martindale Hall

A major feature near Mintaro is the stunning Martindale Hall, an intact English Pastoral estate from the 1800’s. It’s been featured in several movies and earns it’s upkeep today as a  high-end B&B. Unfortunately, time was tight, Adelaide waiting two hours further south. Perhaps on the next visit….

Princess Stephanie welcomes you…

Martindale Hall stables

SA wheat fields, outside Adelaide

So, back on the road it was, heading south into Adelaide and, finally my Emergency Medicine
conference, and a bit of honest work…! Cheers! Part 3 will take you on a tour of “Radalaide”, a fascinating, hip city and the Adelaide Hills for some hiking, or bushwalking, as it’s called in Australia. January will find the good doctor hiking on the south island of New Zealand, including the famous Milford Track.  Surely, the stuff of an epic DDU series. Stay tuned!

I’m finishing Cheers! Part 2 on Boxing Day, after a solo Aussie Christmas, very festive….but eerily quiet without the kids… Stephanie and they are back at Fairview Farm for seven weeks. If you are in Cooperstown and reading this installment, please call and try to stop in to say Hi. Until our next meeting, I wish all family, friends and loyal readers a wonderful, healthy New Year in 2014. Cheers! DDU

Old Vines…cheers!
Airbourne, sans children!
More than 3 times closer to the South Pole than NY!!

Stephanie and I recently had a chance to get out and see another part of Australia, the vast and dry state of South Australia. I had a five day EM conference in Adelaide and Stephanie came along for five nights leading up to the event. We spent four wonderful nights B&B exploring the world-renowned wine districts of McLaren Vale, Adelaide Hills, Barossa and Clare Valleys. A fertile arc running north, east and south, all are within a two hour drive from central Adelaide; making them popular weekend destinations for Adelaidians. These are some of the oldest and best vineyards in Australia, dating back to the arrival of German missionaries and settlers in the 1830’s.

It’s a dry country off the coastal strip

We found a sitter crazy enough to stay five nights with the Nolan kids, and were on our way… Adelaide is a green, graceful city of around 1 million , laid out by British military engineers in the 1830’s. The CBD is completely encircled by a wide swath of parklands containing the Torrens River. The Gulf of Saint Vincent presses along the western edge of the city, providing residents a long stretch of pristine beaches twenty minutes 

from downtown. The overall sense one gets on landing is similar to the central coast of California, with fertile valleys backed by sparsely wooded, low golden hills to the east. It gets pretty rural 30 minutes out of the airport and you suddenly feel you are somewhere out near the very edge of the planet…which you are.

Not feeling very Christmas-sy at 75 degrees

Feeling swell at the Victory Hotel…

We sort of started the trip backwards, getting right on the road from the airport, south to the McLaren Vale, beginning on the coast 45 minutes south of town. It has a cooler, maritime climate with refreshing ocean breezes from the SE sweeping up into the hills. With the elevation changes, it has multiple micro-climates and is the home to some legendary Aussie wineries. The diverse climate also allows a wide variety of grapes to prosper, Shiraz, Grenache, Chardonney, even Pinot Noir.

Local oysters two ways; natural with lime or soy and seaweed…

Lavender trimmed as a hedge

The first night, we got a taste of the howling SE winds off the vast Great Southern Ocean…It was throwing sand up off the beach at us. We ducked into the well-regarded Victory Hotel for the first of many great meals in SA.  The coastline is wild and ruggedly beautiful, but remains a memory only, due to a camera malfunction.

SA has a Mediterranean climate, and is often referred to as the Sonoma of Australia. The food and wines are local, diverse and world class; seafood, lamb and beef, charcuterie, cheeses, olives, fruit and veg of every variety.

Coriole Winery
Chapel Hill vineyards

Kangaroo pelvis antlers…or something…

Canine friend, Samuel’s Gorge Winery

Local lunch platter

Coriole tasting room

Wine tasting is the big activity in all these regions. They start around 1000 and end by 1700 . At no charge, the wineries pour small amounts, but you’ll sample 6-8 wines per stop, so a full glass. Most will pour some pretty high end stuff, $75-90 a bottle. So, it’s an awesome real-time education on the various styles grown in each region. The variations are startling. After 4 or 5 stops you can begin to get a bit tipsy, so a DD is recommended. Many wineries also have adjacent high-end restaurants.

Funnily enough, most only serve lunch. After a few days I began to realize that most everyone was probably back home napping by 1800, after a long day sampling the local hootch..So, if you go, plan on lunch, probably not dinner.

McLaren Vale from d’Arry’s Veranda, d’Arenberg Winery

Asian style  Duck Confit, d’Arry’s Veranda

d’Arenberg is the largest family owned winery in the Vale, where small family wineries are the norm. Fourth generation, and still very innovative, the wines are sublime and well priced.  We had one of the best meals ever  at their d’Arry’s Veranda restaurant. The staff was awesome and laid back, as we arrived almost two hours late for lunch, waylaid by a hike and various tastings…no worries…! Highly recommended.

Grilled Snapper with some crazy salad top…

McLaren Vale from d’Arry’s

d’Arenberg Winery

Chapel Hill Winery, built around an old abandoned country chapel

Clearing skies at Kay Brother’s Winery

Chilling out after a long day among the vines

Coriole Winery garden

Baby grapes

Sampling “The Absconder” Wirra Wirra Winery. Very good Shiraz…!

Big Bottle, made of wine corks..                                                

The famous “Church Block” vineyard, Wirra Wirra

Golden Coastal ranges hold in the moisture

 After two nights in the McLaren Vale we headed north through the Adelaide Hills. Home of over 50 smaller boutique wineries that specialize in cooler climate, lighter-bodied wines, we had lunch in the old German settlement of Hahndorf. Dating back to the 1830-40’s, it’s an unexpected delight; full of stone heritage buildings and interesting shops.

Getting in that Bavarian mood…Frauleins beware…!

Hahndorf Church

This can’t be Australia, or can it…?

I’m willing, but the horse appears startled…and alarmed!

Well-tended countryside everywhere

As charming and varied as the Adelaide Hills are, we had miles to go before we slept, and drove further north into the “Big Kahuna” of SA wine regions, the Barossa Valley; where we had dinner and B&B reservations waiting. That will be the subject of Part 2 of SA wine Regions. In part 3, we will finally make it to Adelaide proper, and back to the Adelaide Hills from the western side. Stay tuned (and sober !), I think it will be an interesting ride. Until then, Cheers!  DDU

Captain Arrrr #1…
Captain Arrrr redux……

Hi again to all family and friends near and far. Got a few recent notes that the blogs have fallen off in frequency. I suppose that’s true …. Well, at least someone noticed!  So, today’s post will take a slightly different tack.  As we are approaching our second anniversary of living in Australia, and having never been expats before, lots of conflicting emotions and opportunities arise. It’s all going very well; job secure with lots of positive reviews and reinforcement, money good, kids all busy with school and friends, home life settled into a more predictable rhythm.

Stephanie and Annette

It seems we are now balancing on the fulcrum….when/how/if this dream ends and we consider extrication, or staying…and diving in…. even deeper. And if not, what next…? Nothing we’ve ever confronted or even considered before…Bear with us, this ain’t easy…. We have been busy, doing short trips, kids working through the challenges of Nippers, Luke trying to master the deceptively difficult art of surfing and learning the art of crewing racing Cats…. Now more established here in Cleveland, we are no longer visitors, and are living a community life completely unknown to the casual tourist. We now have a network of friends met via school and work, common concerns and daily experiences. We even get the occasional invitation to go sailing on Moreton Bay….

Luke crewing…under sail

Skipper Bruce

Aidan on the bow seat

Nolan party crew

Aidan’s #11 Birthday

Sam digs in….

Cleveland Point with the historic lighthouse

Skipper Bruce

Like a mirage, floating over the silver seas….

Yesterday was my 56th (!) birthday, passed quietly with a few close neighbors  grilling steaks and sharing good wine on the back veranda. It’s November, and summer approaches. The heat is rising, the sea warms and turns an aqua blue. I find myself thinking in 3-5 year blocks, trying to navigate our way forward with five young kids towards the final act in my medical career….Life ain’t for sissies…

Halloween, an exotic concept in AU

Dinner at seven…

Stephanie, the one who pulls it all together,,,, every day…

Another Claire Nolan masterpiece..

My beloved family…

I thought it would be fun to just post a bunch of random pix about our daily life here in Australia, telling that, and no particular story. I hope you enjoy them….

Ray love, Baby…!

Aidan played hooky and we spent a few nights on the NE coast of New South Wales, around Byron Bay, Brunswick Heads and Bangalow…one of our favorite areas of Australia…and that’s saying a lot…!

Music under the southern stars

Byron Head, right under the light

Tallow Beach surf breaks

Stephanie and I had a belated 20th anniversary, four months late (!) up in the mountains inland from the Sunshine Coast, aka the hinterlands. Ninety minutes N of Brisbane and you are in another world of hill farms, remote waterfalls, rain forest pockets and amazing B&B’s.

Hand carved cabin door detail…

“Secrets on the Lake” is an amazing enclave of 15 beautiful, unique tree houses tucked away on a lake. It feels like a tropical Adirondack Great Camp. They’re famous for extensive carvings of local wildlife…

Our tree house, the Bower…

We splurged and had an memorable dinner at the Spicer’s Clovelly Estate in Montville…highly recommended,,,

There are only 11 tables, and all the food is locally sourced…It’s a leisurely, full, romantic evening…

Can I live here….please…?

Secrets front door

Bower “cabin” at Secrets…incredible…

A visiting Koock…

A large 4 ft Lace Monitor lizard
An even bigger one..harmless…
We did a 10 km hike on part of the Sunshine Coast Hinterland Great Walk and returned to Secrets in 4 hours flat, thereby working off dinner from the night before. It was hot, lizards were scattering through the undergrowth everywhere…but no snakes spotted…though I’m sure they were all around…Fantastic, varied hike with waterfalls, gorges, rainforest, dry eucalypt ridges….

A strangler fig encroaches

In the bush

Hiking out of the Gorge

Grass trees

Resting on the deck, post hike…

Happy feet at the lake

Major pad overlooking the Glasshouse Mountains

Girl’s welcome home committee

Straddie surf breaks

The kids continue to work at becoming Surf Lifesavers..a challenge to overcome ocean fears. What was once so exotic is now the stuff of weekend routines….

Baby Nippers, aka ” Green Caps.” Owen next to Stephanie

Nipper Moms

“Slip, slap and slop” the SPF and Zinc cream

Surfer dudes, Dr Ross and Luke

Green cap ocean drills…

Owen, aka “Mister Skunky”

Cate the SLS kid…

Aussie beach chick….

In uniform

Oh, Hugh….!
Luke hammock chillin’

On Moreton Bay

So, there’s a quick tour of what we’ve been up to lately…Life evolves and time passes, kids grow up….We hold onto all the memories and experiences together that we can…Time slips away through your fingers, but hopefully the memories remain…… I have an Emergency Medicine conference in Adelaide in late November. Stephanie will join me for the first five nights. We plan on touring the world-class food and wine districts of McLaren Vale, Adelaide Hills, Barossa and Clare Valleys. It sounds like the makings of an epic, multi-part DDU, which I really hope you will enjoy…Stay tuned…!  BTW, Stephanie and the kids will be home in Cooperstown at Fairview Farm over Christmas, through December and January. We hope many friends and family will be able to stop by to say hi…Until then, happy trails and safe travels…Best, DDU and the Nolan family :-)…..

DDU and the Girls, Great Ocean Road, Victoria

Brisbane airport sign, not Hawaii…

Life has really accelerated for us all in Australia, with full time ED work and 5 kids in school. No longer wide-eyed visitors to this remarkable continent, we are now somewhat more settled, working and living here; and that’s a very different experience. We’ve been trying to keep on top of everything, but the weeks and months just fly by. Luckily, I was able to get away for an EM management conference in Melbourne recently. Three nights right downtown with the hotel on Collins Street, the ritzy shopping and dining area in the center of everything. It seemed like the perfect time for “Girl’s Weekend, Part 2”. So Claire and Cate played hooky and off we went. Stephanie and I reasoned that they’d learn a whole lot more on the road than stuck inside some drab classroom. It’s mid-winter down in south Australia, so a bit nippy, but nothing like mid-winter in Boston or my homeland of New England. In fact, it’s a good time to visit, as lots of plants are in bloom, and you avoid the hot winds off the central deserts north of Melbourne that can make the city scorchingly hot in mid-summer.

Departure Brisbane

Happiness is an airline ticket somewhere

Brisbane aerial

Arriving in a new world…

Melbourne laneway cafes

Greater Melbourne, pop 4 million is, along with Sydney, also 4 million , one of the two largest urban centers in Australia. Nearly 1/3 of the Australian population lives within their two orbits. There’s a very vigorous, friendly rivalry between the two for best-of status, think Boston vs NYC, without any other contenders. In truth, they are very different experiences to an outsider. Melbourne lacks the dramatic setting of Sydney Harbor or headlands or the iconic landmarks of the Opera House or Harbor Bridge.  Instead it’s a subtle city of graceful parks, ethnic neighborhoods and outstanding food, with a very active cafe culture. It’s famous for it’s laneways, small dead end streets right downtown, filled with cafes and streetlife. For what it’s worth, an international quality of life poll recently named Melbourne as the best city worldwide for overall quality of life. Sydneysiders were not pleased to say the least! It’s a lively, safe and friendly place with plenty to intrigue a visitor for days.

Let’s Go, Melbourne..!

Saint Paul’s Anglican cathedral

Victorian train station

The Yarra River, muddy but well-loved…

The climate here is much cooler and wetter than Sydney and is famously unpredictable. The Melbourne based band Crowded House sang about ” Four Seasons In One Day” from experience. But I think it’s this temperate climate that gives the city it’s rich cultural tapestry and focus. I felt the strongest sense of being in a “real city” here more than anywhere else in Australia so far.

Thai Green Curry with Chicken- Asian comfort food!

Girl’s Night out…

University of Melbourne

Showin’ the LOVE baby…!

Real pizza, at last…!

Melbourne has old, established Italian and Greek communities, and up north on Lygon Street, their own version of Little Italy…an antipodean Old North End complete with real pizza, a rarity in Australia, believe me…It’s said to have one of the largest Greek communities in the world outside of Athens.

Lygon Street cafe

Sorry to seem obsessive , but you might notice that this blog seems very concentrated on food and dining. Well, it was mid-winter in Melbourne..and it seems that is what the entire town is about…as well as a few museums…Memories to savor and enjoy…

Chin-Chin crowd scene

Asian braised Waygu beef with rice noodles and cilantro

Even Gelato….!

Silver Fern flat white coffees

Hotel breakfast

Victorian Era shopping mall

Pastry shop window, very European style…

The Queen Victoria Market is a Melbourne institution dating back to the 1850’s. Right downtown, it runs thrice-weekly and provides a mind-boggling array of fresh produce, meats, seafood..Truly foodie-heaven, it was even featured on Anthony Bourdain’s “No Reservations”. If ever in town on market day, it’s a must do….

Mmmm, hungry yet…?

Fruiti de Mer…

I am LOVIN’ all this crazy food….

We were lucky to be in town during a winter exhibit of Monet’s Garden, an impressive collection of over 50 large Monets direct from Paris. No photos allowed, but a great experience for the girls.

National Museum of Victoria

Monet’s (fake backdrop) Garden

Prepping for another night on the town…

Thumbs up from Cate and Claire

Cool Hot Cocoas…

Melbourne Aquarium, Great White Shark
The question finally answered…Here’s Nemo…!

A tender morsel….

Dad, I’ll take the pink ones…

Melbourne is also considered the cutting-edge fashion and shopping mecca of Australia…Lots of interesting things to see and buy….if that’s your bag, baby…!

Street art….

Bridge detail

Royal Botanic Garden sculpture

Shrine of Remembrance

The Shrine of Remembrance is a very moving tribute to the Australian war dead of WW1. It sits near the Botanical Garden on a hilltop overlooking the entire city. Made entirely of hand carved local stone, it’s oriented so that on the exact annual date and time the Armacist was announced, a beam of sunlight enters the room and crosses silently over the tomb of the unknown soldier for 15 minutes. Very Indiana Jones…They do a simulation on the hour….

Winter Fire

Melbourne from the shrine roof

The war widow and orphan monument

Royal Botanic Garden

It was off season, so cooler with a grey filtered light…Quiet in the gardens, with few tourists around but still very peaceful and beautiful. And always, a cafe nearby for a “hot cuppa and a bikkie.”

Downtown from bridge over the Yarra River

Saint Paul’s cathedral

Old and New

Now let’s eat…!

Asian Peking Pork

Fancy Chocolates…!!

As any of you who follow DDU regularly know, we are not really urban-folk..Love to get that city vibe for a few days, but then it’s always “Let’s hit the open road and see what lies ahead!” …or something… So, the plan was perfect; three nights in downtown Melbourne and then head out down the southern coast and see Lorne and the Great Ocean Road (GOR). Quiet off season and one of the world’s great oceanside drives…Let’s go….!

Port Airlie Lighthouse

Southern coast near Airey’s Inlet

The official start, I guess….

It’s a very windy road….

Flotsam and Jetsam…

The GOR has an amazing history. It began as a jobs project for returning WW1 veterans and took over 20 years to complete. It runs over 100 miles along some of the most remote and rugged coastline in Australia. There’s a string of tiny old fishing and resort settlements strung along the coast and backed by the temperate rain-forested Otway Mountain ranges, now all preserved as National Parks. In summer season, booked out a year in advance, off season you have the place to yourselves…Per-fect…!

She Oak Creek Falls

The Otway Ranges are remote, rain-swept, forested and steep right down to the ocean. Numerous creeks run off to the sea, carving tight canyons full of indigenous plants, birds and wildlife. A surprise to me was how many large waterfalls and hiking trails exist right off the GOR. Stopping at any creek outlet leads into an impressive stone canyon within a few hundred yards..We did a day trip into She Oak Canyon, hiking over the falls, which culminated in a large open cave high above the falls. A fantastic, diverse hike in only a couple of miles…


For scale, the Birdsnest fern is about six feet high

Cardio workout

A bend in the road

Lorne winter sunset

We stayed two nights in the well known resort town of Lorne, completely dead off season. Got a great winter escape package on-line, complete with a kitchen and two bedrooms. Of 200 or so units, there were around six occupied. Had the place to ourselves…It’s a convenient base for exploring the GOR and taking a long day trip out to see the iconic Twelve Apostles near Port Campbell, our agenda for the next day….stay tuned….

Pool and hot tub…the only guests….

Lorne Main Street morning

GOR overlook

As we drove west, the weather cleared and we got beautiful, filtered, low northern- winter sunlight by the time we made it to the Twelve Apostles; an iconic Australian landscape, three twisty-turny hours later…As you approach, the anticipation builds and the overall effect doesn’t disappoint; you are standing at the ragged, battered southern edge of the continent, and could be nowhere else on the planet…

The Twelve Apostles, (with 1 and 1/2 Saints)

Not a fake backdrop….

Actually only some eight remain in this constantly evolving landscape

As the sunlight and clouds shift, the limestone formations change rapidly in depth and distance. The southern ocean, driven by cold winds right off of Antarctica, is never still or silent…

By all reports, we were most fortunate, as in mid-winter many tourists drive for hours through near gale force winds only to arrive here in virtually white-out conditions. Our weather was balmy by comparison.

Visitor’s Center, Twelve Apostles

Port Campbell Harbor
Loch Ard Gorge

Incredibly narrow gorge mouth

This coast is called the Shipwreck Coast, scene of hundreds of disasters over the centuries. The most famous was the wreck of the Loch Ard in 1878, on the final night of it’s 3 month voyage from England. Of 55 passengers and crew only two 18 year olds, a boy and a girl, survived; both miraculously swept into the protection of Loch Ard Gorge. Legend says he rescued her, after hearing her cries for help above the storm, brought her into the cave pictured, build a fire and both survived the stormy night. The romantic tale made headlines world-wide, but no real romance ensued. She soon returned to Ireland, and the lucky two never saw each other again.

The rescue cave

Another surprise is that this coastline is much more than just the well-known landmarks shown here. In fact, the entire limestone coastline is capped by a windswept, rather flat heath plain that ends abruptly at the storming seas several hundred feet below. It is a complex, varigated system of gorges, caves and headland stretching for 50 or so miles and constantly evolving with time and tide. A long day trip really isn’t time sufficient to see even the highlights. There are many trails to hike and nooks and crannies to explore.

Headland arch, the next Apostle..?

Loch Ard Gorge with Heath

A coastal labyrinth

Local humor, Port Campbell

The road back over Cape Otway

The Southern sub-species of Koala. Fuzzy Ears much??

We took a side trip out to Cape Otway on the ride back to Lorne for the express purpose of seeing the southern subspecies of Koala. Larger, darker and furrier than their tropical cousins, it’s one of the best places to see them in the wild. We weren’t disappointed, seeing several dozen. We had no time to explore the famous Cape Otway lighthouse though. Maybe next trip.

GOR overlook

Old Lorne Hotel
Bedtime after a long, tiring day

Lorne morning

Nice lil’ birdie…

Australian birdlife is amazing. Here in Lorne, raucous, wild, Sulfur-Crested Cockatoos come right to your balcony for a handout. They are so intelligent and exotic, you can’t help yourself…which only encourages the neighbors…Before you know it, a full-fledged Cockatoo riot, complete with fisticuffs….!

Getting fired up…

And a few of me mates….

C’mon just one more tidbit….

Don’t say you weren’t warned about me….!

Cumberland Resort, Lorne

Lorne bathing beauties

Looking back at Lorne, heading east on GOR

Australian nautical colors

On any trip you have only two real choices…stay local and explore a small area intimately, or hit the road and try to see as much of a region as possible, within reason…We normally prefer the former, but the state of Victoria, by far the smallest and most populous of Australian states, is famous for the stunning diversity of it’s landscapes. Everything from hiking and skiing in the Snowy Mountains and Victorian Alps, to the GOR and coastal ranges to the desert landscapes of the western goldfields with the Outback beyond, all within a four hour driving radius of Melbourne. Given that we might never get to this part of the planet again, we decided to see as much as possible. So here the tale gets a bit tricky. Driving east off the GOR we stayed on the coast south of Melbourne, crossing the narrow neck of Port Phillip Bay by ferry to the Mornington Peninsula and the resort town of Sorrento. This area has been the playground of Melbournites since the 1860’s, think Boston-Cape Cod. The area is riddled with boutique wineries, restaurants and excellent B&B’s. We were only passing through, but did stop for an excellent snack in Sorrento and lunch in Mornington.

Ferry selfie

Sorrento Harbor

Queenscliff-Sorrento ferry

Empty ferry
Amazing ferry, with back massaging recliners…!
Sorrento Hotel

Sorrento Cafe

Sorrento back beach

” The Sphinx”

A “crook” penguin

Claire and Cate, our lovely daughters

Sorrento back beach scenes

Lunch in Mornington

We went to a famous Italian market and restaurant for lunch in Mornington…Really, really, (really) good….

Nutella too, X-Large…Paradise found….!

Claire and Stephanie

The ( genuine Italian) chefs

Seriously real pizza….

And Calzones too…unheard of in Queensland…!

Psyched…!

Healesville Hotel dining room

Even though the Mornington Peninsula was magical, and could easily occupy a week, or an entire summer, of your time, we had a few miles to go yet. On a friend’s advice, we decided to head two more hours north, to spend our final night in the Yarra Valley; a wine region famed for it’s cooler weather wines, and Pinot Noirs especially. Healesville is the small agricultural town at it’s heart, like Napa, well regarded for fine, local-sourced ingredients and seasonal menus. The Healesville Hotel is a rustic foodie haven, so we decided to end the trip with a big splurge on a winter dinner there, complete with roaring fireplace. I held the line on accomodations though, we spent the night in a roadhouse up the road!

Table for four, seven o’clock…

See you at seven…anticipation…
The loving couple…

What followed was one of the best meals I’ve experienced while in Australia, and that’s high praise. Relaxed, attentive but not fussy service, thoughtful pairing of courses with local-sourced wines. More than merely dinner, it was a shared life experience with our beloved daughters; and hopefully a subtle education in the more refined pleasures of life. Good food, conversation, companionship; the very stuff of civilization…

Beef filet with winter root veg…two please….
Pork belly and loin with….other good stuff…
Dim Sum with clover leaf..? I can’t recall….haha

Yes….

Stephanie, in the mood

Pork belly and loin with etc….yes, please..

This is crazy good, Dad…

And a praline sundae to finish…

Too pretty to eat…?

Next morning, up early, a quick brekkie, and off to explore the Yarra Valley before catching an afternoon flight back to Brissie. There was method to my madness, as the Yarra Valley lies only 1 1/2 hours northeast of Melbourne, almost right up to it’s expanding outer suburbs. So we were well positioned to the airport already.

DDU needs his cuppa…or two…!!

Future beef filet at the Healesville Hotel…? Keepin’ it local folks…

The Yarra Valley is surprisingly large and adamantly agricultural, surrounded by low hills, it feels very similar to Napa or Sonoma. Being mid-winter, the vines were dormant and it was quiet. A nice season to visit!

.

De Bortoli Vineyards

Stephanie, my #1 girl….

Yarra Valley Chocolates…amazing, lots of free samples…Every kid’s favorite shop, of every age….go there…

All you can eat, free chips….!

Hell on your wallet, straight ahead….

More free sugar, sir…?

Soon enough, it was time to turn in the rental car, get through the security lines, board the plane and wing it back to Brisbane. Spending time with our growing daughter’s was a priceless bonding and memory sharing opportunity for us all. While very different than a boy’s trip, it was every bit as much fun and memorable, if a tad more calorie intensive…. We hope we’ve shared experiences and memories that will carry them through and help to shape their lives forever. Thanks to all our extended families and friends who might be reading this, for sharing some of these experiences with us. And we hope you are looking forward to what comes next for us during our incredible Aussie adventure, as we are. Who ever knows?  Until then, love and blessings!  Stephanie, Claire, Catherine…and DDU..


Over Cleveland Point and Raby Bay, our Australian home…!

Stephanie, Claire and Catherine..my lovely ladies…

Lower Pool Koolpin Gorge, sunrise. See anything moving…?

Early morning outback selfie…Frightening….

OK, outback adventure, third and final installment, promise…Thanks for sticking it out…Up early, into Koolpin Gorge…Not psyched to climb all the way back up into the third pool, due to fatigue and general bad juju…Water calm, clear…hmmm… inviting….No Crocs evident, anyone up for a morning dip with the Salties…? What are the odds….?  A thousand times safer than the drive out here, statistically speaking, I’m sure….So there we were, feeding up “crumbed children” to the Crocs…(see the attached video evidence…) Some example of a father you are Dr Nolan…….I mean really…! Guards and lookouts posted, a quick dip…. no limbs lost, or even skinned up….Sublime…and a real wake-up, I guarantee…


Now, how can you say no…?
Fresh and baited

A fool’s bathtub…
Some rules are just begging to be broken

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=R482oAWXuFE

(Copy the above link to see shockingly bad parenting…LIVE!!)

The famous Archer Fish, spits water 6 ft to hit prey

Refreshed,  it was time to head back towards civilization, or at least a paved road. Miles to go, and miles to go……

The Sickness Country, sure looks nice to me…

Another oddity, this tree is in full flower, after having dropped all it’s leaves…

On the way out we stopped and saw some remains of Uranium mining, stopped in 1964. The area is riddled with unsafe mine sites and shafts, enter at your own risk…

The road out

River ford

Gunlom Falls

Next stop, Gunlom Falls, famous for having been a scene in the first Crocodile Dundee film, as well as the plunge pools above the main falls. It’s just a drive up to the campground and popular on weekends, but a beautiful spot indeed… Of course, being Australia, it just has to be a bit weirder…We were at the beach here, and I was about to jump in from a rock when I noticed this massive snake under water right below me, four feet long, as thick as my forearm, ISYN! Later, we learned from a ranger that it was most likely a harmless File Snake…but still…I mean REALLY, I think this country is trying to kill me….

Look again….a very large snake, 4 feet, right below….

 It seemed a bit better to climb up above the falls to swim. And it was; perfect cool pools under the tropical heat…

Above Gunlom Falls

Perfect plunge pools

Aussie outback rangers
Future Bogans at play….

Eucalypt savanna

 Back on the road again, out the southern entrance to Kakadu, then turning north towards Litchfield NP and in a few more days Darwin…

Wild Horses, aka Brumbies

Emerald Springs Roadhouse

Outback Art

 After a hot six hour drive, we made it into Litchfield NP. Not as remote as Kakadu, and a popular weekend destination for Darwinians…but the falls are fantastic, as good as Kakadu. We spend two nights camping rough, exploring and swimming…same old same old…

That sure feels good…Buley Rockhole

Cowabunga…!!

Water equals life…

Florence Falls

A monsoonal rainforest pocket
Excellent Aussie infrastructure

Falls approach

Florence Falls morning, all to ourselves

Snorkeling the pools

Wild paradise

A Flying Fox bat colony

River Pandanus Palms

The Lost City, limestone bluffs out in Nowhere, NT

Tolmer Falls; sacred, no entry allowed

Wangi Falls
A Golden Orb spider; huge, scary, harmless

Possibly a Brown Snake; non-descript, but extremely poisonous

Nankeen Night Heron
Carpenteria Palm rainforest above Wangi Falls

Above the falls

My wonderful young men; Luke 14, Aidan 10

Feral Hogs, a big problem wherever they’re found

 Getting closer to Darwin, we came upon a large field of Magnetic Termite mounds. A different species than the Cathedral, they actually orient their thin mounds North to South, keeping one side of the nest in the shade all day long. Internal temperature recordings confirm that this keeps the nest dramatically cooler than a random or East-West orientation…fascinating stuff….!

Magnetic Termite mound

Parap Markets

 After eight nights camping in the bush, and seeing many amazing things, it was finally back to Darwin for a final night. At least we had more markets, Asian food, swimming pools and souvenir hunting as compensation. And no more peanut butter and jelly!

Laotian savory rice pancakes, served with sweetened coconut water as syrup..Nice brekkie…!

Local street buskers
Darwin wave pool

 After all that swimming, the boys were still dying to try the Darwin wave pool…It was OK, but not exactly Florence Falls.

Vietnamese dinner…oh, yeah
East Point bluffs

 Our last day, we crammed in as much sight-seeing around Darwin as possible. East Point has a wonderful park with lots of WW2 fortifications. The Mangrove boardwalk was interesting, especially watching the locals spearfishing. We also managed a quick look at the Art Museum of the Northern Territory and Botanical Gardens ( both highly recommended and free..)

Darwin from East Point

Mangrove boardwalk

Spearfishing success    
                                                                 
Dinner…note the homemade spear, with rebar

WW2 gun emplacement

Glossy Ibis

Returning the Beast

Darwin Airport

 Finally, we were out of time and winging our way back home to Brisbane. It all seemed another world after the remoteness and timeless silence of Kakadu and the outback Northern Territory. After eleven days and ten nights out, I have to admit , it felt good to sleep in my own bed and get back into a comfortable routine. But the memories of unstructured hours in the wilds of the Top End with my two rapidly growing sons will bond us forever, and become the stuff of family legend and tall tales for years hence.  We are truly fortunate to have had those precious days and nights alone together. And our best wishes for you all reading is to be able to share similar time and experiences with your loved ones. The are growing up so very fast. Safe travels!  Luke, Aidan and DDU…

Taxiing

Wings over the Outback

Back home in Brissie

Great trip Dad, whoo-hoo….Where to next….?

 In part two, we are up early and heading for the Yellow Water Billabong sunrise wetland tour. It’s popular, and an excellent way to get out on the wetlands that are so much a part of Kakadu. The tour is part of a hotel and restaurant complex that’s owned and operated by the local “traditional owners” or Aboriginal groups of Kakadu. In fact, they own the park and lease it back to the government. It provides much needed income and jobs, keeping the younger generations providing stewardship and working out on the traditional lands, So, win-win all around. The guides are well versed in all the local lore, flora and fauna, so you even learn something while on vacation. Triple win!

Sunrise on Yellow Water. Yes, that’s a croc’s head floating on the R, 3 o’clock… 

 As the sun begins to rise, the bird life becomes fantastically active. For a brief 30 minutes the air vibrates with the sound of thousands of Whistling Ducks coming in waves to roost for the day. On a two hour tour we probably saw 40 bird species, wetland, waterfowl and some tropical woodland species. Kingfishers everywhere…My cheap little cell phone camera could not hope to catch the intricate beauty of this environment. I think I need to upgrade soon….


Guide Nathaniel, very knowlegable about the wetlands

A nice croc sunning
DDU in my natural habitat
Giant Waterlillies

 A bonus to the sunrise tour is that it comes with a full-on Aussie breakfast; bacon, eggs and fresh fruit..oh, and coffee….coffee…..:-O…. Highly recommended if you ever find yourself in Kakadu NP.

Now it was time to hit the 4WD tracks and get out into the backcountry. Jim Jim Falls, 20 km up a corrugated, red dirt road, then 10 km more down a rutted goat path…Atrocious roads for such a major site… In fairness, it had only been open a few weeks due to high water and croc surveys. Twin Falls down the same road was still closed.

Back Country Beast

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=yg0WPfBPZiw

(Copy the browser link above for some cool Aussie 4WD adventures; short but sweet….!)

Hiking into Jim Jim Falls

After a wild and wooly last 10 km 4WD ride into the falls, you hike the last 1 km with the roaring sound of the falls increasing as you approach, it’s pretty fantastic as it unfolds.

Jim Jim Falls
The Top End has a distinct tropical monsoonal climate, hot and dry winters (May – September) and hotter and extremely wet in the summer (October- April). In fact the local Aboriginals recognize six distinct seasons, with the build up and wind down of the Wet.. Most of the park is closed in the full-on Wet, as roads can be under 6-8 ft of water for months sometimes.  It’s now early in the Dry and the massive torrent that flows over these escarpments has slowed to a safe level. The rangers have been busy putting in temporary bridges and boardwalks that are again lifted out before the Wet begins.


 It’s hard to fathom how large and impressive this waterfall is from pictures. The canyon walls are sheer and 400-600 ft high, crowding in overhead. The base plunge pool is around 150 yards across, the depths coal black and slightly eerie….With a cool breeze blowing off the falls and down the canyon, the 90 degree heat dissolves and you are standing in a shady, glistening cathedral of sorts that is among the most impressive I’ve ever seen…The water is crystal clear, cold and full of schools of fish. Having packed in a mask and snorkel, we were able to explore an intricate word of underwater boulders, timber snags and sandy ridges that felt almost Caribbean.

Almost enclosed by the towering cliffs
Wow!!!
Hard to mistake the meaning…

 Coming back down canyon you see plenty of warnings to be croc aware. During the Wet, these canyons are inundated with brackish water coming upstream in flood. Estuarine crocs (Salties) come up river feeding. As the waters recede, many are trapped high in the canyons, and they get mighty hungry. The rangers have a very precise method of clearing the pools for swimming, but there’s no guarantee…They must do five seperate night floats, shining high-powered lights looking for eye shine. They also set baited croc traps for several weeks. Finally, once things seem safe, they leave behind small bouys which the crocs will attack to drive interlopers out of their territory- leaving telltale toothmarks on the bouy. It all makes for some very spooky pool plunging for sure, but I guess that’s part of the thrill!

A Croc trap, baited and waiting
A Croc buoy, the final line of defense
Hiking out…limbs intact…

 Soon it was back on the backroads, heading through the escarpment country…First stop Maguk Falls, a long aquamarine pool headed by a gently sloping cascade. Crystal clear, cold and full of fish….The approach trail, 1 km through a lush, riperian tropical rainforest pocket in the 90 degree heat only added to the anticipation.

 The open eucalypt savanna that dominates the uplands along the escarpment ridge is an ecosystem that depends on annual fires. The Aborigines have burnt seasonally for millenia, calling it a clean-up…The understory stays open and the grasses thrive. Through the walls of dense smoke Whistling and Black kites, large raptors, are seen diving in groups at the newly exposed meals of snake and lizard…

Maguk Falls plunge

Oh, Yeah….!

Typically excellent Aussie infrastructure, removable for the Wet

Catherdral termite mound

 After a cool dip we encountered a field of Catherdral Termites and their fascinating mounds. They harvest and store grasses inside. These tiny insects, less than a quarter of an inch long, but numbering in the millions, create colonies that last for up to a century. The shell is a hard, rough sandy consistency, strong enough for Luke to climb!

Old Mine Jeep

 Our camp for the next night was the remote Koolpin Gorge, or Jarrangbarnmi, sacred to the local tribes and lying deep within the “Sickness Country” of SW Kakadu. Here the land rises and trees thin out due to poor soils and less rainfall. There are many ancient legends about dangerous spirits living underground and how you must be respectful not to disturb or anger them. Access is strictly limited by advance permit and the final 10 km is by rough, steep 4WD track, after a 40 km dirt road approach. The campground is primitive, 30 miles from the nearest paved road. Fantastic stars…!

Koolpin Gorge approach, way over the next ridge

 The most amazing thing turns out to be that this is the site of one of the richest Uranium deposits on the planet. The earth here also holds major deposits of Mercury, Lead, and Arsenic. When scientists mapped the deposits, the boundries were almost exactly the defined “Sickness Country” of the local Aborigines! It seems there was a strong basis for their ancient legends after all.

Koolpin Gorge, a tranquil oasis
The “Sickness Country”
The trail leads thru Croc waters

Heading up the gorge into the rough stone country was a bit eerie, truth be told. There were Croc warnings in the lower pools, late afternoon shadows lengthening; on high snake alert, we were alone a long way from anywhere. The rocks, jagged and tumbled. Few birds or signs of life…We all shared a subliminal sense of caution, as if anything could go wrong at any time

 We finally got to an upper pool, supposedly Croc-free. It was deep and dark, steep-walled and a bit unsettling. Pale white toes hung suspended; helpless over the bottomless, cold void. It was too easy to imagine a rouge Croc lunging up from the depths and dragging you under… We did a quick plunge to cool off,  but were relieved to be dried off and heading back down the gorge. The overall effect was the antithesis of the fertile, relaxed and welcoming Maguk Falls of the previous day.

The chill isn’t from the cool water…!
Beautiful, yet strange…
Twilight campfire

Sleeping out under the stars that far off in the Outback was truly magical. Luke and I sat up for hours under a flood of southern stars talking of life, family and friends; the strange constellations turning silently overhead, reinforcing our sense of being oddly displaced and very, very far from our home back in New York….. Well, enough for tonight. In Part 3 we will visit still more falls in Kakadu and Litchfield NPs before a final swing through Darwin and the flight home to Brisbane. I hope you are enjoying the trip as much as I am enjoying the memories. Best until then, DDU.

After a few months of planning I was finally ready to take Luke and Aidan on a boy’s Outback adventure. 10 nights, 9 camping rough in a 2 man mountain tent. 1400 kilometers (850 miles) into the bush. All heat, sweat, stink, dusty roads, snakes and crocs. Also Barramundi fishing, gorge hiking and mountain stream swimming. Throw in a nightly campfire and some ancient aboriginal rock art and it seemed like a great time. And believe me it was! The girls, on hearing the proposed itinerary, deferred. They want their own adventure, one without the snakes and crocs….hopefully, coming soon…

Heading to the airport
Queensland And Northern Territory Air Service

Over Brisbane
An iPad with every seat…Psyched Dad!
Anticipation…

Coming into Darwin

Darwin is the capital of the Northern Territory, and has a pop. of less than 100K. Over 50 nationalities make up the population of this small, mellow city; the Australian gateway to Asia. It sits on the tropical Timor Sea, next stop Indonesia… Incredibly, it’s the only population center of any size between Cairns on the far NE coast of Queensland and Perth on the far SW coast of Western Australia, a distance of over 3,000 miles. And it feels at the very ends of the earth too…

Our ride…a fully decked out mine truck, aka the Beast…

Indonesian Chicken Laksa, spicy goodness!  Mindil Beach markets

Weird menu up here….

Weird music too…

A classic Darwin experience is to have dinner among the Asian food stalls at the Mindil Beach markets west of downtown. Only open during the “Dry” between May and October, it’s a free, tropical, open air street fair on Thurs. nights and Sunday afternoons. The fresh Asian food,  tropical fruits, art and crafts are wonderful to enjoy until the sun begins to set. Then everyone walks through the dunes to watch the sun sink into the Timor Sea from the beach. As evening falls and the stars come out, the lights go on and the market pace picks up. We flew in specifically on a Thursday to make sure we got there, a good call…It’s a wonderful, adventurous welcome to the Top End, as the Aussies call this monsoonal upper 1/3 of the Territory.

Easy to feel this way

Mindil Beach
Sunset on the Timor Sea
Mindil Beach twilight

Psi at the hotel pool. Last night of comfort for a while

The next day it was up early, load up on provisions for days in the bush, a bit of site-seeing around Darwin, then off into the wilds. Darwin has a very varied and interesting history. Briefly, it was the only Australian city to be attacked by the Japanese in WW2, and was bombed 64 times with pretty extensive destruction. There are old fortifications all around the strategic points outside the city.  That, however, was only a prelude to the much greater destruction wrought by Mom Nature on Christmas Eve 1974, when Cyclone Tracy scored a direct hit and levelled 80% of the buildings in the area. Many of the old classic examples of tropical architecture were wiped off the map forever, and today’s downtown feels a bit more average and non-descript than one might expect. Natural calamities aside, Darwin retains a very mellow, Margaritaville vibe, like some giant Key West, that is beguiling.

Darwin Harbor and Convention Center

Heritage building, old…

and new…

Road ready…

Out on the Stewart Highway

Drive 40 km east of Darwin and you are really getting into the bush. Things drop off fast… and Kakadu is still 200 km away. First stop, Mary River National Park, where we have a tent space and a skiff rental awaiting. Aidan’s #1 Bucket List for life is to catch a wild Aussie Barramundi; a hard-fighting, aggressive estuarine species highly esteemed by Aussie fisherman. Like Texas bass, for some it’s a religion. I think Aidan just got born-again!

Workin’ it
Heading upriver….getting wilder and wilder….
Success!!!
Aidan’s nice Barra, a dream come true!
Proud papa

Brothers in the wild = lifetime memories…

More crocs….Just before “the mishap”…

As we were intently watching crocs, working our way up this tributary, with dusk falling, I happened to run the outboard motor up onto a rock ledge and stall out, with crocs drifting around the boat, ISYN! After a few frantic minutes, we managed to free the boat and hadn’t snapped the screw or the drive shaft. Thank God to be underway and heading downriver…..It might’ve been a long, hot night; swatting mozzies while waiting to be rescued……(100% true story…and it’s only night one in the bush…whew…!)

Relieved to be underway
Aidan in his element
Mary River NP, dusk

Native bamboo

Next stop Kakadu NP, which is a crown-jewel of the Aussie park system, right up there with Uluru or the Great Barrier Reef for those in the know. It’s very hard to describe briefly, but a few major highlights: it’s one of only four World Heritage sites double-listed in AU for both natural and cultural features. It’s vast, over 7,000 square miles! It’s the largest bird-breeding area in the entire southern hemisphere. With almost 300 bird species, it contains 1/3 of all known Aussie species, and over 10,000 insect species. It has seven or eight major unique eco-systems intact within it’s borders; hundreds of miles of pristine mangrove coastline, seasonal  tropical wetlands, open eucalypt savanna, several entire undisturbed tropical river systems intact from headwaters to coastal estuaries. The park is bisected by a 500 km long, 1000 ft limestone escarpment over which fall some of the most impressive waterfalls on the planet. Oh, and to top it off, it’s the site of the oldest continuous living culture documented on earth. The local Aboriginals, 15 major distinct groups, have been living here for approximately 50- 100,000 years. The limestone escarpments are riddled with an estimated 15-20,000 rock art and sacred sites, less than half of which have been documented. So, all in all, a pretty amazing place to spend some quality adventure time.

Keeping it simple

Near Ubirr (oo-bear)

One less to worry about, Aussie road-kill

Ubirr glade

Ubirr rock art gallery protected by a massive cantilever

Timeless tales, if you know how to read them

Barramundi Xray fish, several thousand years old

A short-eared Rock Wallaby, cat-sized and cute!

Ancient stories painted on rock….

Ubirr is a major art rock site that’s set up and well-managed for the
tourist hordes, an antipodean Sistine Chapel of sorts. It’s set in a stunning shallow valley, surrounded and protected by low limestone cliffs. It’s considered a broken- off outlier from the main escarpment ridge, some 20 miles to the south. This gives it the advantage of sitting at the edge of a vast, flat alluvial flood plain that stretches to the horizon. Another classic Aussie experience, bordering on pilgrimage, is to climb atop Ubirr and contemplate life and time as the sun sets over the floodplain, as it has done daily for eternity. You really do get a sense of the infinite, sitting in a place like this, even though you are unlikely to be totally alone.

Ubirr summit

No place we’d rather be…

Sunset approaches

Sunset crowd overlooking the floodplain
The floodplain below
The wild “stone country” leading back to the escarpment

A golden moment…time, space, eternity….(woo-woo…)

The overall landscape feels alien, exotic. With the heat in this, the cool season, rising to 90+ degrees during the day, it’s reminiscent of the Rift Valley of Africa or somewhere, though I’ve never been. If a herd of elephants came running out of the bush below, it would seem perfectly in keeping with the landscape, oddly enough…But no, only a few foraging kangaroos, a Wedge-tailed Eagle silently soaring the updrafts…a mob of coarsely squawking Sulfur-crested Cockatoos…breaking the enveloping stillness of dusk….
      Well, that was so good, the next day we climbed back up Ubirr to see things in a somewhat different light. No one around; still, beautiful and timeless. Popular, yet still profound..

The Rainbow Serpent…not me, the rock art…

Look up dude…

Overhung cliffs protect the art

Weird rock pattern, not a fossil..
Son-set over Nourlangie Rock, Kakadu NP
Volcanic Rock formation
Aidan in Kakadu

So, that’s a lot of adventure already. I think this trip will require multiple installments to do it justice and not over-tax my readership. Stay tuned for part 2 which will include the Yellow River Billabong sunrise wetland tour and lots of waterfalls. Until then, staying safe and dry in the Outback, Cheers! ddu, Luke and Aidan

Alright, Luke…