A Day of Caves and Zoos, well one of each! – Day 304 – 18 November

After last night’s eating excesses we awoke with quite full bellies so decided not to bother with breakfast this morning. This meant that we were able to get off to something of a flying start and we quickly enough head out towards ‘Rocky’. On the way there we took a bit of a stop off to have a look at an attraction called the Capricorn caves. This was to be a guided cave tour so we had to have a bit of a wait but a quick cup of tea and we were soon enough being called up for our tour.

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Quite a strange ‘cave through a hole’ photo! 

The name of the caves comes from the fact that the caves and Rockhampton itself lie close to (or on?) the Tropic of Capricorn. We have already passed over this imaginary line round towards the bottom of the Earth three times now so it is becoming a bit like an old friend on the Australian leg of our trip. The caves were quite good, perhaps not exactly full or stalactites and ‘mites as the cave visit that we had already done on the Western coast of Oz but very good just the same. At one point, in the Cathedral cave our guide put some opera music on in order to illustrate the quality of the cave’s acoustics. Throughout the caves there were a good few bats about the place the ones we could see were the Micro bats but Ghost bats also inhabit the cave system albeit infrequently. The Ghost bats are quite strange as they are whitish in colour and their wings are almost transparent, so you can see their bones giving them their somewhat gruesome name.

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Cathedral Cave – maybe the Ghost Bats are here and we just can’t see them!

Here at the caves you could also go adventure caving but I am not so sure that my good wife would have thanked me if I put our names down for it. Like a good many of the cave systems you come across, in all parts of the world, what you see is just the access that the public are given, many of the caves stretch very much further in some cases miles and miles of caves even lay undiscovered but this does not particularly impress my wife so it was time to be heading on … lol!

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Light through a cave opening – quite atmospheric!

So we left and continued on towards the coast. First stop was a place called Rosslyn Marina and here we had a bit of a wander about taking a couple of photos of boats we would like to own before we came across a little fishmongers selling fresh fish, so here we bought ourselves some fresh mackerel for tea … mmmmm – and put that in little our ‘fridge’ (aka the icebox)!

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We did not know which to choose so bought ‘his’ and ‘hers’ matching boats! 

From the marina we drove the short distance to Emu Park where as we went on the War commemoration walk we came across some rosemary so I picked up a bit. On the walk we saw a memorial to Captain Cook called the Singing Ship, very novel!

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The Commemorative Walk

Going back to the van we bought ourselves some food and had an impromptu picnic by some trees where the Black Parrots roosting in them were kicking up quite a fuss, noisy bleepers!

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Black Parrots, very noisy dining companions!

 

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The ‘Singing Ship’ – when the wind blows it sings!

Once nourished we made another drive to Rockhampton, one of the bigger towns in the area and we had come here to visit the town’s zoo. Now for some strange reason – possibly our good selves – we found the zoo quite difficult to find as Australians seem to use ‘the force’ (or GPS!) to get everywhere we however had to use their roadsigns which are nonexistent and somewhat crap! It turned out that their zoo was within the Botanical Gardens, signs that we had obviously not followed, but when we did get there it was all very nice and colourful with lots of birds flying about and kicking up quite a din.

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The ‘Singing Wife’ – when her wind blows she also sings!!!

The zoo was quite small but it was also well within our budget being that it was free! Here we saw the Chimps being fed and the zookeeper here really seemed to have an affinity for the apes. He fed them yoghurt on a plate and some of them ate using a spoon, showing their ability to use tools. We also saw our first Koalas and Dingos too but even better or more unusual or so we thought, were the Wombats. These look a bit like small hairy pigs but with a face not unlike a koala and these little fellas burrow themselves underground – very strange. The one which had come out to entertain us lay on its back with all its legs splayed outwards and having a poop, well I never! It was hardly ‘Britain’s (or Australia’s) Got Talent’ – or was it?

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The Wombat – pre-pooping position!

Our campsite for the night was a bit outside of a place called Gladstone and a bit of a way still to go so, zoo visited, we headed off towards it. Gladstone is home to a huge mining operation and as we drove through the place it seemed that there were industries on all sides of us. When we reached our resting place we got talking to an older fella who tried to explain to us ‘thee best way to experience Oz’, I thought somewhat wistfully, ‘if I had a dollar for every time someone said this’ … lol! Later we dined on the mackerel which I cooked in tinfoil with the vegetables and it was one of the best meals we have had whilst travelling in Oz – simply delicious!

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Dingos another new thing for us to see!

 

 

 

 

Wallabies, a David Attenborough experience and yet another wild, wild campsite – Day 293 – 7 November

The insects had taken their toll the night before and after being attacked by them prior to ‘climbing the wooden stairs to bed’ we awoke today quite weary and possibly somewhat shell (or more appropriately beetle) shocked. Anyhow after a nice filling breakfast we soon enough put all of that behind us, we were now revved up and dying to see more of this beautiful Daintree area. Our plans, such as they were, were to drive up the coast as far north as we could and then work our way back down again perhaps stopping off somewhere a little less insecty for the night this time!

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One of the wee wallabies in the bush!

So we reached Cape Tribulation and here we decided was to be our most northerly point on the east coast so a quick turn around and our next ‘port-of-call’ was Cowie Beach. Once here we undertook the small boardwalk walk – the Kulki Walk – to see if we could spot some of the wallabies the signs suggested were hiding in these here parts. In this we had some success but this was possibly due to the good eyesight of a couple of fellow walkers rather than our own prowess at wildlife spotting but this would not always be the case today! After our stroll we also had a bit of a sit down on the pristine beach and watched the very inviting waters but due to the possible presence of stingers ‘etc’, you could look but you better not swim was the maxim here. It felt like we were sat on a deserted island it was that nice but it was time to move, so that’s just what we did!

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Our deserted bit of beach, well at least until folks turned up!

Our second walk, at Dubuji Boardwalk, was just a short stone’s throw away from the first so two shakes of a lamb’s tail and we were soon enough there. Here the trees and birds were good to see but top spot came about due to us listening out quite carefully as we strolled along! We heard a kind of ‘squawking noise’ coming from the undergrowth just off the boardwalk which to us first sounded like a bird in trouble but upon closer inspection we soon realised that the noise was coming from the ground. Upon scanning the forested area we saw a ‘Tree Snake’ that actually had a wee frog in its mouth and was in the middle of consuming it, this folks was a real David Attenborough moment! I was so excited I even filmed the occasion and although my film will win no prizes, possibly due to me being slightly over-excited something us wildlife cameramen call ‘Carnivore Quiver’, it was till great to see, real wildlife doing real wild things I suppose! The poor frog was not for saving but its end was not entirely in vain!

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The snake even looks a bit sheepish at having been caught!

As we drove away from this latest walk we came across a sign for a watering hole and as we had already seen so much water without being able to have a dip we decided this would be a good place to strip off. We were not the only ones here and there was a bit of a ‘Tarzan’ swing for us to have a go at so not only a great place to cool down but quite a fun place to stop as well.

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My missus looking like a River Dolphin!

When we left the swimming hole we were so buoyed up that it must have gone to my head somewhat for we actually stopped at a roadside eatery to grab ourselves some fish and chips. This place had been recommended to us by a nice German couple that we had met the night before so coming from the UK’s home of fish and chips – Grimsby – we decided it merited further investigation. It was quite a new culinary experience for us as it was Spanish mackerel which I personally thought would never work but it was quite a success really. The secret seemed to be the very light batter and the fish itself was not too oily – it was delicious.

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Yes my face does not exactly look like it is a top fish dinner – but it is!

After such a splendid meal there was only one thing for it and that was to get the camp chairs out and sit like a couple of old folk and let our meal settle whilst having bit of a read at the same time. Thornton beach was a simply beautiful place for our resting, you could never imagine that the waters could be as perilous as we had heard, it seemed a shame not to go for a dip but it was nice just to relax and enjoy everything the eyes were taking in. Time was getting on though so it was time to hit camp and rather than the one from the previous night we found a new one.

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Nothing claims a beach quite like being photographed flying high above it!

This new campsite was one that was run by a guy who really seemed to love his animals. Here we saw snakes and a bandicoot, something which to us looked like a great big rat, who came into the camp kitchen whilst we were talking to a nice German couple who we were actually giving tips to! These two shall be travelling along the coast in much the same general direction as us so who knows, perhaps our paths shall cross once again, stranger things have happened on this trip!

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My wife, taking in the view!