Saturday, 29 July 2017

SA Wilmington, Adelaide

29-30 July
332 km from Glendambo to Wilmington where we found an excellent caravan park, Stony Creek Bush Camp, and stayed 2 nights.
Our camp was just behind this wattle

The park was full of beautiful trees
Another flowering gum
This river red gum had survived many setbacks
Female Red-rumped Parrot
We saw many other birds in this lovely place with plenty of tree holes for parrots.
Australian Hobby
Next day we took a neighboring camper with us to visit Alligator Gorge.  We walked to 2 lookouts and may have ventured into the gorge itself but he had a new knee replacement.  Cost of $10 online to drive the road in but we were unaware in advance and paid nothing.

31 July
Drove 318k to Brownhill Caravan Park, in the south-eastern edge of Adelaide.  Cloudy day and rain fell intermittently all the way.  Very rainy, poor visibility in vineyard areas around Clare.  Paddocks of lucerne and other crops were very green; vineyards bare in winter.  Had lunch in a park at Rhynie.  Saw a big rainbow touching the ground at start and end.
The caravan park is neat, clean and edged by lovely hills and creek with some huge trees.
  One in the caravan park, called The Monarch, is a heritage-listed, 400 year old river red gum.
Our site is opposite the excellent Amenities and Laundry.  Few people here and it's very cold.
1 August
Caught a bus to the city, free to all seniors between 9 and 3pm.  Walked along North Terrace trying to find a dry seat to orient ourselves - many nice seats but still wet at 10:30 from condensation.
Aiming for the Botanic Gardens, we by-passed the Art Gallery and University but visited the rather small Museum and chatted with the lady in the Discovery Centre.  The museum has the best Aboriginal artifacts we've seen and an interesting deep sea display on 3 levels, featuring a giant squid.
One of the School Doors
The map was too big for a photo, but most interesting and important.
A meteorite was in the foyer of the Museum.
At the Botanic Gardens I had problems finding South Australian plants and was directed to a small section where few of the plants were specific to South Australia.
I don't know what this tree was. I was not overly impressed with the Gardens compared to, say, Brisbane or Auckland.  We had lunch in a cafe there where a magpie-lark was harassing eaters and a crested pigeon sat decoratively.

2 August
 Drove to Mt Lofty where we hoped to look out from the summit and visit the Botanic Garden.  Both places demanded parking money and it was so cold.  We skipped the Garden and raced from the car to the Summit, took a photo and avoided paying $4 to park.
  Walked down the main street of Hahndorf, looking at all the German handicrafts.  I was interested in the wooden Christmas decorations (made in Germany) but they were very expensive.
At Mount Barker we walked around Laratinga Wetlands and saw many birds: black, pink-eared and hardhead ducks, Australasian shovelers, grey teal, dusky moorhens, swamphens, white-faced heron, white ibis, Australasian grebes, black-fronted dotterels, superb blue wrens, fairy martins, blackbirds.  We were freezing cold and ate lunch in the car.
Australasian Shoveler
Pink-eared Duck
Black-fronted Dotterel
Superb Fairy-wren
 Hakea?
Petrol was cheaper at Mt Barker than anywhere else, 123.9 vs 132.9 everywhere in Adelaide.
Promised rain held off until 8pm but the wind freshened around 6pm and tried to move our awning onto the roof.   David had quite a job fixing all down.
 3 August
Hail was predicted for this night so when things were fairly dry in the morning, we quickly packed up after 3 nights here, having paid for 5.  Rain was predicted everywhere east or south of Adelaide, in Victoria and SA.  I packed differently so we could stay in a cabin overnight.

Thursday, 27 July 2017

SA Marla, Coober Pedy, Woomera, Glendambo

27 July
Left Yulara at 10am and drove 500 km to Marla, where we set up camp, ate in the pub and chatted with a nice Swiss German couple.
Next day, David drove 234 km to Coober Pedy. The number and extent of working opal mines at Coober Pedy were surprising.  There were plenty of above ground homes but 60% of the 3500 population live underground where they don't need air-conditioning. Most of the tourist accommodation is underground.

There are 4 underground churches.  We chose the Serbian one, touted as being the most elaborate, and paid a 'voluntary gold coin donation'.  The others were free.
There were also several choices in mining tours/displays.  We went to this one from 1916 which was rediscovered in 1968.  It had over 30 mining displays plus an actual 1930s underground house. It was well worth the entry price.

 
We passed many salt lakes en route to Woomera. 
Woomera was very spic and span but has few people.  At the museum we bought 2 Cherry Ripes to help the seven school children have a camp in Tasmania.  The museum was interesting, celebrating our involvement in Anglo-American defence missiles and rocketry. David took no notes of what he photographed.

 Interesting exhibits related to Aboriginal life here
 Stayed overnight at Glendambo, having driven 500km today.  So windy that we had to move camp to avoid having the awning fall down over our door.  Nothing else to do so I managed to make a boiled fruit cake inside using the electric frypan and gas ring.
The wind died down overnight.



SA, NSW Barmera, Balranald, Narrandera, Forster

Thursday 3 August Rained all night in Adelaide and hail was predicted for this evening, so when the rain stopped around 10am and a wind sp...