I've just discovered that I can discover the keywords that people have typed in to find my blog. This is interesting and a bit worrying. Apparently the most recent keywords include:
- Humpty Doo + traffic lights
- frogs in trousers
- platypus lock ness
- pretty sheep
- tasmania's big thing platypus
Well! This is even more worrying when you realise that my blog entry comes up as the 9th hit when you search for "pretty sheep" on google. My entry doesn't rate higher than "Want a Inflatable Sheep for your party?", but does come above "I might be buying a sheep What do they eat and need ?".
I've had a fun few days. Ms. M. Mao again turned up. This time brandishing a huge leek. Oh gosh, I do hope that nobody finds my blog by searching for "huge leek". She turned my milk blue. Yesterday I went to the pulsar group beach picnic in Manly. That was fun. We played some beach cricket, had some food and went for a snorkel. It was great ... I spotted a huge, bright blue, groper (oh dear, another word that hopefully doesn't come up in too many google searches) - I found a wonderful photo here. I also swam amongst the squid (they're lovely - they keep changing colour), mados and leatherjacket.
Today, Dick, Justin and I drove to Parkes. Now I have to find a way to stay up until 4am.
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Day 4: Mum better not read this blog entry ...
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I sat around on the beach reading "Gould's Book of Fish" that Faith and Mel sent me for Christmas. What a wonderful book! It's impossible to put down and I've now finished it, but wonder whether I should just start again from the beginning.
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Oh dear, I'm listening to the radio at the moment and someone has just been "taken by a shark". There's plenty of stories in the book about people being eaten by sharks. "Since the shark wouldn't release its grip, they figured they'd have to drag it in. So two of the rescuers grabbed the 2.5-metre shark by the tail and began to haul it towards the shore. One young lifesaver ran into the water and smashed the shark over the head with a surfboard."
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Anyway, after reading the entire book it does seem that there are a few things that you can do to survive in Australia. 1) Don't be "religious" or "spiritual". It seems that if you are then you have a good chance of deciding to walk across the Great Sandy Desert or something equally stupid. 2) Don't pick up animals. One guy picked up a friendly blue-tongue lizard and played with it before realising that it was actually a death adder. Another person decided to let a "blue-ringed octopus" to walk around on his arm. 3) Don't eat a fish unless you know what it is. There's a story of a young couple that caught a fish, ate it and then died. It turned out to be a puffer fish. 4) Get an EPIRB. It seems that almost half of the people in the stories would have survived if they had one. I plan to get one before my next trip. Finally, 5) don't go near crocodiles.
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This isn't a cheerful blog post.
Anyway, I'm planning a new trip somewhere. There are so many options!! Ms M. Mao will be visiting tomorrow and then I'm going snorkelling with the pulsar group on Monday. Then I drive to Parkes.
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Day 3: Not having Christmas in Humpty Doo
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I decided to go for a short drive around Darwin and ended up driving for more than 500km. The scenery was spectacular. I had planned on a day in Humpty Doo (the nearest town to Darwin - according to my map). The web makes Humpty Doo sound particularly exciting. Apparently "The plan [by CSIRO] was to irrigate the subcoastal plain of the Adelaide River and produce a commercial rice crop. The theory looked good. The practice was a total disaster." I arrived in Humpty Doo at about 9:30am and then left again, after seeing all the sights (i.e. the boxing crocodile) about 2 minutes later.
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The driving was fun. Slowly all the radio stations disappeared (the last going was the BBC World Service) until it was just me, the road and wetlands on either side (with a few huge termite nests every now-and-then for company). I passed a car coming the other way approximately once every 30 minutes.
I crossed huge rivers (all called something like "West Crocodile river", "East alligator river", "Large crocodile creek" etc.) and there were signs everywhere warning me that I'd soon be eaten.
Discovering that you could only get into the Djukbinj National Park with a 4WD, I headed on towards the Mary River National Park. This park was beautiful, but again to get into the park I needed a more manly vehicle. So I kept going ... for another couple of 100 km ... and then reached the Kakadu national park. Wow! Because of the amazing (and accessible) waterfalls, termite nests and hikes, the Litchfield National Park was initially the most spectacular, but the Kakadu park just keeps going on and on and on. It's huge (half the size of Switzerland according to Wikipedia).
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A one-armed Aboriginal chap then came up to me and tried to
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I was hungry by this point (having now missed breakfast and lunch), but kept moving East through the wetlands. There were kangaroos and wallabies everywhere. At one point, I felt like I was playing a dodgem game with these small red, furry bouncing creatures. I didn't hit any. I also just missed squashing a huge brown snake that decided to cross the road in front of me.
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I stopped at the Aurora Kakadu Resort on the "South
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I hope that some of the photos can give you a sense of what the walk was like (except you won't get to feel the humidity, flies or mosquitoes). The creature that, on first glance, looks like a black snake (in the photo below) is actually a turtle of some type! The billabong was beautiful and the area around was simply covered in wildlife of all types.
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I didn't make it!! Driving home was dramatic. I kept getting swamped by huge rain storms that reduced visibility to basically zero and the wind pushed my car from side-to-side. I stopped at a road-house at about 3pm for Christmas lunch. All they had to offer me was an orange muffin (which admittedly tasted very good).
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I got back to Darwin in time to visit the fish feeding. This is where milkfish, mullett, catfish, batfish and various rays (I spotted a shovel-nosed ray) come into the shallows to be hand fed. A huge batfish came and nibbled at my toes.
Afterwards I went for a swim in the hotel pool and then decided to have Christmas breakfast, lunch and dinner all rolled into one. I headed out looking for a pub that was open. Unfortunately I failed. I walked all around Darwin to discover that my
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What a wonderful Christmas!!
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HAPPY CHRISTMAS TO YOU ALL.
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Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Day 2: Litchfield National Park!
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I drove to the Litchfield National Park and it was wonderful. I had the window down, Mozart on the radio and the speed limit was 130km/hr on the Stuart Highway (the same road that Joris, Christine and I were on in Alice Springs earlier this year). It was about 130km to Litchfield and took about 1.5 hours.
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I continued my drive through the park for about another 30km before stopping near the "Tolmer Falls". I went on a hike. It was hot. There were cycads (Cycas calicola, if you're interested) everywhere!
I then went past a wonderful, rocky area with views down into a deep gully. There were caves everywhere which you're not allowed to enter because "Tolmer gorge is an important habitat for Orange Horseshoe Bats and Ghost Bats". Apparently there are also big pythons that eat the bats.
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The views in the other direction were just as incredible. At this point the land is very high (a "tabletop") and therefore the views over the countryside beyond
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I'm running out of things to say. It's all a blur now of green! I spotted a few wallabies, a huge wallaroo, some lizards, heaps of birds (I found a snake, but on closer inspection it was a twig - oh well).
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Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Day 1 in Darwin
It's hot ... it's tropical ... I've dipped my toe into the Timor Sea! It's very exciting.
I really didn't know what to expect at all on this trip. I woke much too early, packed and walked to Epping station. On the train I got into a long chat with an elderly lady all about Darwin (she used to be an air hostess) and she was the first person who didn't tell me that I was crazy going in the wet season. We were chatting away so much that I almost missed my stop,
but I still managed to get to the airport about three hours early! I had even checked in 24 hours earlier over the web and so I had nothing to do except buy a magazine and have a relaxing breakfast and watch a Christmas tree walk around the airport playing carols on a saxophone!
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The 4.5 hour flight was as wonderful as ever. I spent the entire time staring out the window at the red landscape below. About an hour out from Darwin it got much cloudier and the landscape beneath became greener. We landed on time, I grabbed my bag, got into a taxi, went to my hotel and then immediately grabbed my camera and went out for a walk. I got lost! But it was wonderful. The temperature was 32C, but it was (still is!) humid. I don't recognise any of the birds! They're stunning (see photos). I walked down to the bay, around the harbour area, into the town, got chatting (for a short time) with an Aboriginal chap about Christmas (he's going back home "to the Kakadu" and needed a permit for something).
Like Alice Springs (and unlike Sydney) there are a large number of Indigenous people around the centre. In fact, I hardly saw anyone else. Darwin is incredibly quiet (at least during the middle of the day at this time of the year). I had an entire, stunning beach to myself where I picked up all sorts of shells and worried whether cone shells existed in Darwin or not (see this page).
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I
then walked through some mangrove swamps (including leaping over a creek which I carefully checked for crocodiles) to the incredible botanic gardens (and rested under a Calabash tree!) before heading back to the City (having walked about 15km in the heat by this point) to have a beer. I must have been dehydrated as the beer went straight to my head, but I did manage to stagger across the road, order another beer and a huge Barramundi from "Outback Jacks" opposite.
I then watched the sun set over the harbour with huge fruit bats flying overhead. Wonderful!
P.S. There has been no rain! I'm very confused.
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The 4.5 hour flight was as wonderful as ever. I spent the entire time staring out the window at the red landscape below. About an hour out from Darwin it got much cloudier and the landscape beneath became greener. We landed on time, I grabbed my bag, got into a taxi, went to my hotel and then immediately grabbed my camera and went out for a walk. I got lost! But it was wonderful. The temperature was 32C, but it was (still is!) humid. I don't recognise any of the birds! They're stunning (see photos). I walked down to the bay, around the harbour area, into the town, got chatting (for a short time) with an Aboriginal chap about Christmas (he's going back home "to the Kakadu" and needed a permit for something).
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I
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I then watched the sun set over the harbour with huge fruit bats flying overhead. Wonderful!
P.S. There has been no rain! I'm very confused.
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