We're off on our travels again! A few days ago we left Sydney on a five hour plane ride for Perth. We arrived, all very tired, because we had to get up at 6ish in the morning, and headed promptly off for the markets (Karen's idea, obviously). After being dragged around to look at hats shaped like mushrooms and foldable cutting boards, we went to Fremantle Prison, which was built as a convict prison in the 1800s and was operating until 1991. We were going to go on the normal tour, but one of the staff said that Kate was the biggest 8-year-old he had ever seen, so she was allowed to go on the tunnel tour. The tunnels under Fremantle Prison were dug for a supply of fresh drinking water for the prison and the town. We hiked in some parts and boated in others. Gagi and Tess were having trouble, as neither of them had long enough arms to push off both sides of the tunnel at once, therefore pushing off one side, running into the other, pushing off that side, you get the idea. The tunnels had lasted a hundred years before they came. Just as they were getting the hang of it, they ran into the rainwater drainage pipe. At one point, there was a hole in the ceiling where you could yell stuff and the people above ground could hear. Kate shouted "Oh my gosh it's walnuts!" Tess shouted "This is your conscience!" and John shouted "Save big money at Menards!" Karen unfortunately did not want to alarm passerby. One day we went to Rottnest Island and biked the whole thing on tandems. Tess got a large amount of axle grease on her leg that still hasn't come off. We saw some Quokkas, some native kangaroo rat-like things and some great views of the lighthouse. Then we headed off for Exmouth via propellor plane for 2 hours, where two days ago we went snorkeling with manta rays in Coral Bay. It was very fun, even though we didn't see a lot of rays but snorkeled with a large female and smaller male manta (about 8 feet across). Yesterday we went swimming with whale sharks. It was really cool! They're really neat animals - about 15 feet long - so it's like snorkeling with a school bus - they are filter feeders and only eat krill, so you don't have to worry about losing an arm, which is nice - Dad did see several reef sharks snorkeling, fairly large, but they are fairly shy. Also we saw a few humpback whales, dolphins and a sea snake. It was pretty cool. The drives to such places are incredibly monotonus, open scrub land punctuated by the occasional termite mound, with lots of sheep, cows, and kangaroos on the road so the driving is more interesting for Dad than for us. The only good thing is that Kate can't play her "sing everything you see"game. In Sydney, it's usually something like "A caaaaar, and a stoplight and a road and a treeeeeeeeee!!!" Here it would be more like "sand, and a road and some sand, and more sand..." We've also started watching Glee which has been fun, and also slightly annoying, as we are treated to off key renditions of Mr. Cellophane and Defying Gravity by Kate. Hope everyone is well,
Tess
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Birthdays and Mother's Day
Hard to believe that we only have a few weeks left here! Kate's class had a farewell 'play' at the park Friday (though she's still in school this week). Tess celebrated her 12th birthday at Moo with a cadbury creme egg milkshake (oh yeah!) and moo burger. She also participated in the girls qualifying races for cross country and placed second in her age group (clearly not taking after her father, who ran the same miles as the varsity runners, just slower). On Saturday my girls took the train down and met me after a Wollongong shift on my birthday to go have high tea in Royal National Park which is a massive park south of Sydney with many waterfalls that cascade over cliffs into the ocean - the peppermint tea was the highlight. Kate keeps her pinky out properly when drinking (but often has her tongue out as well, ruining the effect). We went to Pompeii, our favorite Italian restaurant a block away for thick Italian hot chocolate (awesome with or without chocolate gelato in it) and pizzas, then white chocolate gelato with melted nutella for dessert. Heaven... Mother's day John worked and the girls joined Ila for her baptism celebration next door. Great excitement (and noise) this morning when excavators and dump trucks arrived and began ripping up the sidewalk in front of our house. We'll have to see what we can immortalize in the fresh concrete... We're getting our cat fix as a large rag doll named Cocos moved in a few doors down and climbs along the back fence and into our yard every few days - he's beautiful, though not as friendly as Hank is.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Philip Island and etc.
Looks like we forgot an adventure! (and a few other bits - like the fact that we made cookies and whoopie pies and Kate sold them from our driveway yesterday during the garage sale day in the neighborhood - made $20 - sold all of them in 1 hour! - and a cool helicopter training picture - I don't get to do the water stuff, just the paramedics get wet - so I watched from shore and took pictures)
A few weeks ago we went to Philip Island off Melbourne which is famous for huge motorcycle races on their speedway (one of which was going on the weekend we were there) and also for the fairy penguins that come ashore on a different part of the island. We took our seats in the bleachers at dusk and watched them raft into the beach and and waddle up to their burrows in the hillsides. They are about 15 inches high and come in in groups of 10-20 that they split up as they get into the trails that lead to the penguin burrows - like condos, really, minus the ridiculous condo association boards and rules that never let you host a proper party or really express your individuality in any way at all... But I digress... we couldn't take pictures at night, but the next day there were some penguins under the boardwalk, so we took a picture of them. They can be out at sea fishing for days at a time and then come back to throw up dinner for the family (a concept that was not well-received by smaller members of our family). We took a cruise to a seal colony (Tess and Kate got a turn steering the boat), went to a chocolate factory (that had versions of famous artworks in chocolate, and yes, that's a waterfall of liquid chocolate behind us), saw the pelican feeding (he didn't eat the gull), went to 'Amazin' Things' that had a lot of cool illusions (and a slide that you drop vertically onto - awesome!), went to the market and a petting zoo, and spent lots of time on the trampoline at the farmstay. Oh yes, and we ate a lot of chocolate...
A few weeks ago we went to Philip Island off Melbourne which is famous for huge motorcycle races on their speedway (one of which was going on the weekend we were there) and also for the fairy penguins that come ashore on a different part of the island. We took our seats in the bleachers at dusk and watched them raft into the beach and and waddle up to their burrows in the hillsides. They are about 15 inches high and come in in groups of 10-20 that they split up as they get into the trails that lead to the penguin burrows - like condos, really, minus the ridiculous condo association boards and rules that never let you host a proper party or really express your individuality in any way at all... But I digress... we couldn't take pictures at night, but the next day there were some penguins under the boardwalk, so we took a picture of them. They can be out at sea fishing for days at a time and then come back to throw up dinner for the family (a concept that was not well-received by smaller members of our family). We took a cruise to a seal colony (Tess and Kate got a turn steering the boat), went to a chocolate factory (that had versions of famous artworks in chocolate, and yes, that's a waterfall of liquid chocolate behind us), saw the pelican feeding (he didn't eat the gull), went to 'Amazin' Things' that had a lot of cool illusions (and a slide that you drop vertically onto - awesome!), went to the market and a petting zoo, and spent lots of time on the trampoline at the farmstay. Oh yes, and we ate a lot of chocolate...
Tess - Australia's got talent...
Today Tess sang (along with several other school choirs) the Australian national anthem at the Roosters National Rugby League game before many thousand screaming fans! Never going to have the opportunity to do that again...
This evening's moon was amazing coming up over the ocean - we walked the sea walk to Bronte for dinner after the rugby game and it's hard to think of a more beautiful moonrise, it looked absolutely huge.
Tess and Kate have 10 days of school left - hard to believe! Then our moms and Karen's stepfather will be here and we'll have 2 weeks of travel prior to returning home in mid June. It's gone incredibly fast - the days are getting very short here now and the leaves are falling off the trees - like most Australians, the leaves are pretty laid back - no blaze of color, just a little brown and fall down... It's been less rainy recently, so we also hit the observatory to look at the sun through their solar telescope, and saw sunspots and solar flares - we'll try to get back at night one of these nights for the nighttime views - at least we know how to pick out the Southern Cross now, which may be helpful one of these days trying to get home on the Sydney roads...
Daddy's still taking surf lessons - every time he gets a little better they put him on a smaller board and he falls a lot again... but it's still fun! Tess and Kate got to check out Dad's work car the other day - they were pretty impressed with the AW139 - it's a machine - more power and lighter weight than a military Blackhawk! They took the train to meet me after a shift in Wollongong, a surf community about 90 minutes south of Sydney where we have another base. We drove down the coast to Jervis Bay and took a cruise to see the dolphins (humpback whales should be coming up anytime now, starting in later May) and stayed on a farmstay for the night. One of the highlights was a vanilla custard neopolitan at the Huskisson bakery which required a stop both days!
This evening's moon was amazing coming up over the ocean - we walked the sea walk to Bronte for dinner after the rugby game and it's hard to think of a more beautiful moonrise, it looked absolutely huge.
Tess and Kate have 10 days of school left - hard to believe! Then our moms and Karen's stepfather will be here and we'll have 2 weeks of travel prior to returning home in mid June. It's gone incredibly fast - the days are getting very short here now and the leaves are falling off the trees - like most Australians, the leaves are pretty laid back - no blaze of color, just a little brown and fall down... It's been less rainy recently, so we also hit the observatory to look at the sun through their solar telescope, and saw sunspots and solar flares - we'll try to get back at night one of these nights for the nighttime views - at least we know how to pick out the Southern Cross now, which may be helpful one of these days trying to get home on the Sydney roads...
Daddy's still taking surf lessons - every time he gets a little better they put him on a smaller board and he falls a lot again... but it's still fun! Tess and Kate got to check out Dad's work car the other day - they were pretty impressed with the AW139 - it's a machine - more power and lighter weight than a military Blackhawk! They took the train to meet me after a shift in Wollongong, a surf community about 90 minutes south of Sydney where we have another base. We drove down the coast to Jervis Bay and took a cruise to see the dolphins (humpback whales should be coming up anytime now, starting in later May) and stayed on a farmstay for the night. One of the highlights was a vanilla custard neopolitan at the Huskisson bakery which required a stop both days!
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