‘Tis the season
24 December 2000, Perth, Western Australia
First of all Seasons Greetings to one and all. Belated Chanukah Greetings to our Jewish contingent and to you all a very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year – we will be thinking of you.
We arrived safely in Perth yesterday and it is just lovely to be staying with friends again; we have not been in a home since we stayed with Wally in Sydney back in October!
As usual we have covered a lot of miles since we last wrote and again been lucky enough to see some fantastic sights – Western Australia is such a huge state with some stunning and varied landscapes, but with vast distances between towns. We have also been managing to stay ahead of the wet season weather and thankfully missed the tropical cyclone ‘Sam’ by 4 days when it hit the north west coast!
Western Australia Highlights
It was very difficult to drag ourselves away from the beautiful Cable Beach, but after a 6 hour drive when we found ourselves camped up at Eighty Mile Beach the hardship was soon forgotten. It was turtle nesting season so at 2am we were on the beach trying to spot the female turtles, but unfortunately saw only hundreds of crabs – it was the next morning when we found out that we were only about 50 yards from where the turtles had laid their eggs. Oh well, maybe there will be a next time!
We had a couple more nights on the coast before it was time to go back inland to visit a highly recommended national park – Karijini (Hamersley Ranges) – we were not to be disappointed and this was yet another highlight of our trip. It was just spectacular – sheer red rocky gorges which we walked, swam and climbed through. We met a couple of rock climbing Aussies who let us tag along with them for a day and we climbed and abseiled through some fantastic gorges.
It was this same hot day when we got back to our campsite and met some Aboriginal guys who shared their beer with us and more importantly gave us their ice before they left so we could have cold drinks in the evening – such a luxury! We spent 4 nights in Karijini at which stage Shaz’s hair was at the dreadlock stage – it was good to get showers (and a steak treat – it was Mrs Brunt’s birthday) at the campsite in the mining town of Tom Price.
We decided to camp a night at a sheep station (Giralia), but found out when we arrived that we had missed the shearing by a week – again maybe there will be a next time! Still we had a lovely evening with one of the stationhands and again were given cold beer – the luck of the Irish was back in force!!
Our next national park was also fantastic – Cape Range National Park on the Ningaloo Reef – we camped on the beach and spent our days snorkelling and reading (oh Dave did take breaks to watch the Australia v West Indies test match). The coral and marine life that we saw was something else – even in knee deep water we saw reef sharks, rays and millions of little fish. The colours were just stunning. Neither of us have been to the Great Barrier Reef on the east coast of Australia, but the Ningaloo Reef and Coral Bay were super impressive and not at all crowded – it is a must for any of you who ever get out this way.
We then visited the World Heritage site of Shark Bay and viewed the stromatolites – apparently the oldest living creatures (3.5 billion years! as visited by Bill Bryson in his ‘Down Under’ book).
Monkey Mia is also in Shark Bay and famous for it’s dolphins that swim to shore everyday, well that is except for the day that we were there (that Irish luck had run out again). It was really, really windy so when the dolphins didn’t show we didn’t hang around, plus we were really keen now to get to Perth. So it was one more stop at the Pinnacles Desert – thousands of limestone pillars standing in the sand – and now here we are in Perth.
Christmas Day will be spent with Alison and James and some of their friends, time on the beach and then a BBQ on their balcony – life is hard!!
We’ll post again next year. Thank you all for your Christmas Greetings and have a great festive season.
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