For some cultural uplift, I visited (again) the Art Gallery of NSW. It's not too big, but free entrance, and features a nice selection of classic art, which I like better than the modern art.The rain photo above is (c) by dejan markesevic.
For some cultural uplift, I visited (again) the Art Gallery of NSW. It's not too big, but free entrance, and features a nice selection of classic art, which I like better than the modern art.
Here come some last pictures from Broome.
Then comes a photo of what I think might be Broome's most beautiful beach: Reddell Beach. Peter and I went there on Sunday morning before he dropped me off at the airport.
We also saw nearby Gantheaume Point (with the lighthouse and cliffs). At very low tide you can see dinosaur footprints there, but we were there at high tide, so we could only look at the plaster model of the dino footprints.
Finally we visited the Japanese Cemetery (Japanischen Friedhof) of Broome. The town had a considerable Japanese population because of the pearl diving and pearl farming industry.
My flight back to Sydney went via Perth and took about 8 hours in total. I took this photo just after take-off in Broome, an aerial view of Roebuck Bay.
My Western Australia wilderness adventure continues: Peter and Toni kindly lent me their own car so I could go by myself on a two-day trip to explore the area north of Broome, the Dampier Peninsula.
I enjoyed driving the four-wheel-drive Nissan Patrol! The 2.8 tons car ran smoothly and was comfortable (with automatic gear and air-con) and good fun to drive. I had everything I needed with me for this expedition: water, a tent, air mattress and blanket, a battery-powered refrigerator, food and drink, a gas cooker, a foldable table and chair.
I camped the first night at the very remote Middle Lagoon, a tranquil and picturesque campsite by the sea managed by an aboriginal family. I saw a most beautiful sunset there while collecting firewood, so I hurried back to get my camera!
The second day I reached the very tip of the peninsula, called Cape Leveque, and stayed at the popular tourist resort Kooljaman. I also visited the aboriginal villages Lombadina and One Arm Point (with a hatchery where you can see how they breed fish, shells and turtles).
Look at those marvellous red-white sandstone rocks, eroded by time, wind and water. The weather turned overcast and rain kept coming and going from Thursday on, so swimming and walking was a bit limited. I returned to Broome on Friday because the weather forecast had predicted heavy rains and I've been warned that the roads might then be flooded and hard to drive on. It turned out I was very lucky to have come back in time: today (Saturday) Cape Leveque Road has been closed for traffic, and I would have been stuck up there!
Endlich Urlaub! I took one week off from work and hopped in a plane (6 hours flight) all the way to the far north-west of Australia, to Broome in Western Australia. On the way I had a 2-hour stop in Adelaide, for breakfast with my friend and last year's travel mate Cori!
Another reason why I chose Broome is that I'm visiting my friends Peter and Toni there. The two have taken up a job as wardens of Broome Bird Observatory. The area is a mekka for birdwatchers as hundreds of different bird species live here, or make stop here on their journeys to feed at the nutricious mud flats before going on the long way to Asia (Siberia) for breeding.
Peter and Toni could take three days off from work and we three drove together into the great Kimberley, an area the size of Germany with a total population of 35.000. We passed by the coastal town of Derby, noteworthy for its high tides of up to 12 metres, and made stop at the Boab Prison Tree, more than 1000 years old hollow boab tree that has actually been used as a prison in the wild 1800s.
After a 350 km drive east, about half on bitumen and half on dirt roads, we reached our destination, Windjana Gorge. This gorge, carved by a river, cuts right through the Napier Range, a massive mountainous rock formation that stands as a geological curiosity with vertical walls in the otherwise flat landscape.
The scenery is magnificent. The gorge is also quite lush with vegetation. It's best to start early in the morning for the walk before it gets too hot in the afternoon. In the river we saw about 10 freshwater crocodiles. (They are not dangerous if you leave them alone.) We also saw a gecko and many birds.
We camped for two nights in a campsite just outside the gorge. Peter and Toni have a camping trailer, and I slept comfortably in a little tent. We sat around a campfire in the evening with guitar and songs. This is the real life!
Near that place we also visited Tunnel Creek National Park, where a creek runs through a natural tunnel in the mountain. It is possible to walk through this tunnel, which is 750 metres in length. You will be waist-deep in water (so best go in swimwear) and you should bring a torch (Taschenlampe) to experience this amazing walk -- it was a fantastic adventure! There are bats in the tunnel and stalactites that look like they might break off any minute.
The creek on the other end of the tunnel is very pretty too and perfect for a bath! (No crocs here.)
It's 1st of May, and for me it means: half-time for my six months work in Sydney!
And this is a rhubarb pie that I baked last week.