NIGHTS 288 -
293. SAMMIE’S PLACE, ST KILDA
Christmas in trendy St Kilda.
We arrived to a decorated and festive townhouse with a
fridge full of party leftovers – food and bevvie.
We mingled with
millions of Melbournians in the Vic Markets at 6am on Christmas Eve. We had a seafood lunch and a roast pork
dinner on Christmas Day.
We zipped around town in Sam’s little black car.
We walked to the
beach and the bay and watched penguins wedge between rocks. We watched kite-surfers catch the wind.
We went to Ackland Street twice, sampling different cakes
each time.
We trammed it to the
city, trammed it home, left the ‘bago parked in the arsiest spot possible – a
double parking space right outside the front door.
We hired DVDs from a local machine and watched movies we’d never
pay cinema prices to see.
We put our jumpers on, took them off, put them on, took them
off…seemingly ad infinitum.
Thanks Sam, Tanya and Briony.
We sure did like your funky cool pad.
NIGHTS 294 -
313. COBURG HOUSE SIT.
The travelling trio of Shana, Moz and myself stayed put for
a while and swelled in number. We’d
organised a house sit in Coburg for three weeks, agreeing to look after a few
animals while there. It seemed easy
enough; a whippet, a kelpie, a cranky old cat, a six week old kitten, and three
chooks with unclipped wings and a non-roofed pen.
The first 21 days were the worst.
Except for the chooks, they were all inside pets. The whippet was cool. She’d lay on the lounge. Moz was trained enough to be manageable. The cranky old cat was absent most of the
time, not too happy about the strangers in her house. It was the kitten and the kelpie that nearly
drove us crazy.
On her own the kitten was gorgeous; funny and friendly and
purringly soft. On her own the kelpie
was a schizo. Acquired from a shelter,
she’d been subjected to abuse and now had ‘trust issues’. The kitten teased the kelpie. The kelpie chased the kitten. The kitten would jump on the lounge then on
to the table. The kelpie would follow
her. The kitten was tiny and caused
little commotion. The kelpie was a
large, destructive force.
It would happen every night, whenever we let the kelpie
inside. Things would be crashed into; things would be knocked over. The kitten
led the way. The kelpie followed. It was never pleasant.
Menagerie aside, Coburg was good. Todd came down for a while and we went on a
short road trip to Lorne, drinking bourbon and beer and eating late-night
sausage sangas at a sneaky free camp along the Great Ocean Road. Shana’s friends – Louise and Sharelle – came
down at the same time. It just worked
out that way. They hit Melbourne, ‘melted
the plastic’ as they say, shopped up a storm.
We met up with Graham (ex-boss, ex-brother-in-law) and Jo, a
couple who I trekked around Europe with.
We hadn’t caught up for a while.
They’re living in Melbourne. Naturally we rehashed the past, embellishing
where possible. We also discovered
each-others present.
But we were all glad to get back on the road. Moz, who probably had nightmares that we
would leave him there, jumped into the ‘bago and wouldn’t budge. There was no way he was going back into that
yard.
By the time we’d left one chook had died. We couldn’t pinpoint an individual culprit –
we think it was a peer group thing. The
chook must have been still roaming in the morning, out of sight among the
bushes. We gave all three dogs a terse
talking to and cleaned up the mess. Shana
had to do a nightime dash on the Vespa, a trip to the dump-bin beside Coburg
Markets. There she disposed of the
carcass as if posting a letter.
Only losing one animal amongst three weeks of chaos – we call
that a success.
See ya Coburg.
NIGHTS 314 & 315 -
PENINSULA HOLIDAY PARK, DROMANA
We are in the middle of a Melbourne heatwave. This is the third day in a row above 40
degrees. We finished our Coburg
house-sit and sought refuge by the coast – any coast would do, as long as it
accepted dogs during the school holidays.
We opted for the Mornington Peninsula as both Dromana and Hastings have
dog friendly caravan parks. Of the two,
Shana chose Dromana. She’s got an aunty
who was born there. That’s as good a
reason as any.
The park abuts the main freeway and, as we have come to
expect, the ‘dog section’ abuts the fence that abuts the freeway. It’s 11pm and still too hot to go to
bed. The air conditioner is blasting but
throwing cold air as weekly as a toddler blowing out birthday candles. It roars loudly into the night, but not loud
enough to drown out the sounds of passing traffic.
Today we went to Portsea back beach – another futile attempt
at seeking rideable surf. Portsea is
spectacular. It’s part of a national
park so dogs aren’t allowed, ‘not even in your vehicle’ the signs proclaim. We snuck in anyway, and ate lunch perched on
the bluff overlooking Bass Straight. The
sun seared onto the ‘bago and I had to at least get wet. Shanzie understood, volunteering to stay with
Moz. It was just too hot to leave him in
the ‘bago alone and we couldn’t let him out at all. I negotiated the steep decent to the water’s
edge and joined the throng between the flags.
A quick dip makes all
the difference.
We then left Portsesa, searching for a dog friendly beach,
without success. During summer, the
Mornington Peninsula doesn’t even pretend to be dog friendly. If the sun’s out, then take your dog and piss
off the beach.
But nothing breeds anarchy like over-regulation.
We saw a spot alongside Port Phillip Bay that was set back
off the water in a grove of trees. The
grass was long and uninviting, but it offered shade and a quick dash to the
water. Out came the camping mat and the
folding chairs, our current books and Moz’s long wire. We spent the afternoon beneath the trees or
in the water, including Moz. There was
no outrage from the other people present.
Nobody screamed at the sight of a small wet dog on the shore. If anything, he brought smiles to faces. Parents and children alike couldn’t resist patting
his happy panting head.
The next day was just as hot but less frustrating. We’d chosen a remote place to go and simply
decided to ignore any dog regulation signs.
The place we chose was Flinders, along the bottom unpopular edge of the
peninsular. Unlike the jostle of
Mornington’s bay suburbs, Flinders carpark was half empty. During the day we countered the furious sun by
lolling about in the cold water ocean.
The cool change arrived about 4pm, after we’d had a little sleep on the
soft grassy verge that led up from the shoreline. We stretched, sleepy but refreshed. A
lovely day was topped off by a Weiss bar on the way home.
We give the Peninsula
Holiday Caravan Park two stars out of 5.
To access the amenities block was like a maze and, somehow this was
their fault, beside us was a young oppositionally defiant boy who took a liking
to the door of the ‘bago, wanting to swing on it and crawl through it
continually. He kept escaping the watch
of his parents to do so. Ahh, but we are
teachers who didn’t take a shine to his mischief at all. The teacher death stare soon sent a message
that a sharp “no” or two reinforced. We
kept him at bay but would have preferred his parents to put Morrissey’s lead on
him every evening.
NIGHT 316 - HANN
RECREATIONAL RESERVE, BALNARRING.
Spent the day killing time as much as anything. We are booked to go to Tassie on Monday and
want to stay away from Melbourne until then.
We’re trying to save money. As
such, we are hanging around the peninsula until we can spot a dodgy free camp
for the night. It’s overcast and grey
so, unlike the last few days, the water has lost much of its attraction.
It doesn’t stop me trawling the beaches though, hoping to
jag a wave. But the song remains the
same – Rye, Sorrento, Port Leo; all of them possibilities, none of them any
good. Over then to searching for
off-leash dog areas, our other primary motivation on the peninsular.
We knew of one at
Hastings. We hoped we might do the dodgy
there. It turned out to be a large
expanse of grass, recently mown and clumped with clippings, lying forlornly
along the mangrove fringed bank of the Western Port Inlet. And mangroves, as you may well know, make for
a rich ecosystem but are unpleasant places to hang around. We threw the ball and Moz chased it until he
was ready to collapse. We then drove
off, toward Hann Recreational Reserve, at the bottom of the barrel and a place
where we joked I might get lucky.
Hann Recreational Reserve has a fenced dog run and a
half-working amenities block. The female
toilet is fenced off, a sign warning of the presence of asbestos. I’m not sure why it’s only the female toilet that’s
supposedly dangerous as both sides look the same to me. But the male door is open and welcoming and,
according to various net sites, it’s a popular place to cruise and partake in
male homosexual acts.
I think I got cruised.
There I was, cooking kebabs on the barbie provided. It was clean and, importantly to a cheapskate
like me, saved using our own LPG. There
were two wheelie bins next to the BBQ area, the toilet block was about 30mtr
further down the hill. As I cooked a guy
walked (sauntered) past me towards the bins.
I heard the lid open and looked up. “Nice evening” the guy said. “Yeah” said I. He looked directly into my eyes and then
walked to the toilets. He had a small
bottle of orange juice in his hand (perhaps it was mango, maybe
passionfruit). That seemed odd to
me. Why would anyone take a drink with
them to the toilet?
Shanzie was assembling salad in the ‘bago. As soon as he turned the corner I rushed over
to her.
“Didja see that?”
She had, and she was amazed at how unpleasant the guy
looked. It wasn’t just the greasy mat of
brown hair, the flabby white face or the man-boobs juggling beneath his dirty
blue t-shirt. It was as much the track
suit pants and the thongs and the fact that he looked like he’d just finished
mowing the lawn. “I doubt he’d be
appealing to either sex” she said.
Now, I’m not sure how these things work, but he was back
before the kebabs had cooked, and they cook quickly. His juice bottle was about a third
empty. He walked past quickly, said
nothing, eyes downcast.
We figured he must have struck out, but we remained confused
as to how it all works. Does he turn up just
in case, on the off chance that someone like-minded would also arrive? Did he think that was me? Or is there a
pre-determined time to meet that is somehow broadcast to all those interested? All we know was that he was there too long to
have just gone to the toilet and that he’d had a slug or two of juice.
Funnily enough, about an hour later, another guy arrived who
seemed to be loitering with intent. He
had no juice but he made a bit of a show when heading to the toilet. He also hung there for a while, and looked
disappointed upon return. Again we
speculated. Maybe the two were supposed
to meet up but he was an hour late. Or maybe
the other guy was an hour early. Or
maybe, like its ability to fade curtains and confuse cows, daylight savings
plays havoc with the timing of homosexual trysts.
As it was I waited until the bright light morning before I
went back in there.
If the guy was trying
to hit on me I give the Balnarring Recreational Reserve 4 ½ stars out of
5. The guy was mistaken and had no
chance, but the offer was understandable.
I’m at my most entrancing when cooking kebabs. If he wasn’t hitting on me I give the place 1
star out of 5. Why? What’s wrong with me?? I can be cute in the right light.
NIGHT 317 - THE
ROAD BESIDE SANDRIDGE LIFESAVING CLUB, SANDRIDGE.
The ebb and flow of the dodgy free camp continues.
One more sleep until we catch the ferry. It leaves early in the morning though so we
need stay somewhere nearby. We need
quick and easy access.
We were not alone in this logic.
Wikicamps, our all-knowing real life equivalent to the
Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, provides the information for all who seek it – go to the Surfridge Lifesaving Club
carpark. It’s totally illegal to stay
there overnight but it is safe and close to the ferry. People risk it.
We thought we might sneak in.
We thought we could somehow make the ‘bago blend in with the
surroundings. Escape notice.
We had no idea.
When we arrived, there were at least a dozen campervans already
there; several little Jucy type vans, a Coaster bus or two, three full blown
motor homes like us. There was even a
4wd motorhome that sat so high on its tall skinny wheels that it looked like
the spawn of a shed and a monster truck.
We just parked on the side of the road, blatant and open in
our illegality. If we were to be moved
along at least we’d be part of a convoy.
I give the side of the
road 5 stars out of 5. It was a
well-constructed side of a road. It had
no potholes. It was wide enough so that
cars didn’t slam into us. As far as
sides of roads go, it was perfect, so full marks to whoever built it.
NIGHT 318 - ABEL
TASMAN CARAVAN PARK, DEVONPORT.
The Spirit of Tasmania is a large red vehicle ferry that
travels 360kms in 9 hours.
It’s not quick.
For people, that’s nine hours to read or watch TV or fill in
time somehow relatively comfortably. If
you’re a little ginger dog, however, its nine hours of being shoved in a cage
barely big enough to stand in, alongside motors that groan and howl continuously
as they propel the ship forward. From
behind the glass, when I got bored with my book or just wanted a stroll, I
could choose a different deck to visit or go outside for air. Poor Moz could only lay cramped and yelp,
adding his voice to those of the other seven dogs caged around him. We hated to do it but there is no other way.
Thankfully the sea was flat; the trip pleasant.
We humans could have been in a train for all the rocking we
felt.
We arrived in Devonport, collected our drained and
distraught little dog, and drove straight to the caravan park. We made not a single detour, instead
following the request given when we booked.
“Please come straight from the ship” they had asked, not wanting to
extend their office hours for too long.
We complied, even though we had no food to eat.
We had no food for two reasons. First, everything fresh gets confiscated at
Quarantine. In an ‘up yours’ to healthy
types everywhere, it appears that ‘fresh isn’t best’ because it possibly
harbours pests and mites and agricultural nasties. What‘s best is frozen. If it’s frozen then it is safe. This brings us to reason two.
The second reason we
had no food was because LP Gas is highly flammable so LPG bottles must be
totally deactivated during transit.
However, the fridge (and freezer) require LPG to function. No LPG means no cold air. So things defrost and spoil. (Or so we
though, but it turned out that, because the fridge door remain closed for the
duration, nothing defrosted much at all.
Live and learn huh).
Anyway, once booked in, it was out of the park and off for
our first Tasmanian excursion – straight to the nearby McDonalds. Here, sat beneath the golden arches, we
consumed our last meal of the day, thereby continuing a day of food ‘treats’
over substance.
I give the Abel Tasman
Caravan Park 2 stars out of 5. I hope
they got home in time for their evening meal.
NIGHT 319
- PRESERVATION BAY, PENGUIN.
Seriously, how could you not want to stay at a place called
Penguin? It drew Shana and I to it as
soon as we read a map. It was only a
waddle from Devonport and had a legal free camp right on the water’s edge. For us, there was no decision to be made.
As you would expect in Australia, a town with the name
‘Penguin’ must surely be home to a big, fibreglass penguin. And so it is.
There are also many smaller penguins throughout the town – we counted 33
just along the main street. Penguins
hold up bins and wave from shopfronts and spin in the wind from rooves. Apparently there’s real penguins here to, but
we didn’t see any. Secreted in rocks
along the foreshore, they only come out at night.
Also along the foreshore, between the beach and almost
anything else, winds a train track. For
most of the day this track lies dormant, as if a relic from the bygone
past. But sometimes you hear what sounds
like thunder rumbling in the distance, then sound gives way to movement as,
seemingly from nowhere, a freight train grinds and shrieks and shudders past,
10 mtr away from the ‘bago window.
Tranquillity is torn aside for 50 or so container lengths. Five minutes later the track lies dormant
again, as if it hasn’t hosted a train in years.
This occurs about four times a day.
It scares Morrissey in the middle of the night; makes him jump up onto
our bed and bury his snout between us.
It scared the crap
out of us also.
If only.
Preservation Bay is
idyllic and beautiful. As our
introduction into free camping in Tassie it is almost perfect. Almost.
If only it had a toilet. If only
it didn’t have a freight train heart. 3
½ stars out of 5.
NIGHT 320 - BOAT
HARBOUR BEACH CARPARK
There’s enough people camping here to indicate that it’s not
a secret, but I don’t know how well known it is in broad terms. It’s a sanctioned dodgy free camp, if that
makes any sense. Technically Boat
Harbour beach has never been officially recognised as a ‘free-camp’ area, but
the locals are okay with RVs filling the grassy verges beside the
foreshore. In fact, not only will they
not make a fuss, they send a welcoming committee, pamphlets in hand, informing
of businesses in the area and their opening hours. They want tourism and
understand that even though nobody has paid for the camping space, people spend
money when they feel welcome. We felt
welcome. We spent money.
The place is spectacular.
Shana was pointing excitedly as we negotiated the skinny
downhill road into Boat Harbour. I
followed the line of her finger and saw immediately the source of her
excitement. Like a jewel between the
trees turquoise water glistened, almost as magically as it did in Esperance.
(Esperance has become our gauge against which all other beaches are now
measured). This was unexpected. While still beautiful, the ocean so far
hadn’t been startling.
It was now.
We almost prayed that there’d be a camping spot available
(but we couldn’t work out to which deity we should address our request).
We snuck in next to the fence, the furthest camper from the
unofficial ‘okay’ area. Possibly we were
encroaching upon day visit spaces. We
didn’t care. We were a bit in the open
and out in the wind but we were happy to be slotted in. We weren’t going to move. Nope. It
would take a tow truck and a couple of Schwarzeneggers to pry us away. We’d duke it out if we had to.
Of course we didn’t have to.
The evening sparkled as beautifully as any evening I’ve ever seen. The wind dropped completely and the waning
sun still coddled us with warmth. It was
a great time to be outside talking with the neighbours. The day gentled away
and the stars quietly appeared.
Breathtaking.
I give the Boat
Harbour car park no stars out of 5. (But secretly it’s fantastic). It’s just a
carpark. (It is possibly the most scenic carpark in the world). You’re best going elsewhere. (Get there even if you have to raffle of a
kid or something).
NIGHT 321 -
MARRAWAH BEACH CAMPING AREA.
I’m still easily lured by possibility. I guess most surfing types are. You have to be when the promise of perfection
is totally out of your control. It’s the
thought that you’ll arrive somewhere and all the conditions needed will align –
the swell, the wind, the tide, the weather.
It’s the thought that you could pull in somewhere and, through pure
assed luck, score a break at its absolute best, a day the locals will talk
about for years to come.
I’m sure it happens.
It was these thoughts that whistled in me as we drove toward
Marrawah, a rugged surf town on Tasmania’s north west coast.
But it’s yet to happen to me.
The day shone with clear bright sunshine and the breeze blew
lightly off-shore. Lovely. There was absolutely no swell though. The thunderous Indian Ocean that was supposed
to charge angrily into Marrawah piddled meekly onto the sand.
Whatever.
We still swam like cold water salmon and enjoyed the sun on
our towels. We took Moz for long walks
along the beach. Things could be much
worse. So what if the wetsuit stayed
dry…again.
The camping area had way more vehicles and tents than people
to fill them. It took us a while to
discover why. The surfers in the know,
we discovered, left before sunrise.
Carloads of them. They went to a
beach called ‘Lighthouse’, about 10 minutes away.
We didn’t know it existed.
Lighthouse Beach, so the legend goes, catches all
swells. It’s a rare day when it doesn’t
have a wave. We heard about this when
the surfers returned in the afternoon, filling the tents and vans that had
remained empty all day. They lay on the
grass exhausted and spoke of a day of clean waves with few people out. I didn’t want to hear it. In fact, I think I’d rather talk to the grey
nomads and discuss the merits of inverters versus solar panels or compare fuel
consumptions. I’ve had lots of practice
doing that and I’ve never come away from those conversations as deflated and
envious as I did from talking that afternoon.
I give Marrawah Beach
Camping Area 3 stars out of 5. It’s
really just a tar cul-de-sac before the main carpark, with grass verges off
each side and a grassy hill at the end.
Cars generally park along the road, tents are erected on the grass. It’s functional but feels too utilitarian for
the wild and natural environment surrounding it.
NIGHT 322 - ROCKY
CAPE TAVERN CAMP GROUND, ROCKY CAPE.
Stanley’s a weird place.
The ‘nut’ overpowers everything and seems to make the town hunch down
beneath it.
It has many beautifully
restored weatherboard buildings (many of which are B & Bs) but it doesn’t
feel welcoming, or at least it didn’t to me.
Maybe it stemmed from our breakfast experience - here I quote Shana on Trip Advisor:
But I had a surf here, which was totally unexpected. There’s not a surfing site I’ve read where
Stanley gets a mention. But there it
was, at Godfreys Beach, rolling in to the base of the ‘nut’, just under a metre
of swell, groomed by an offshore breeze.
It wasn’t powerful but it offered a ride, and there were only four other
guys out. You’ve got to like them odds.
The water wasn’t as cold as I expected. I had the full steamer on but it didn’t feel
any colder than Newcastle in winter. It
is the middle of summer here though.
Rocky Cape is a town back towards Devonport. It has a large tavern on the highway, your
usual low slung blonde brick beer barn.
Behind the tavern is a grassed area set aside for camping. It’s free if you forego having power or a
shower but a powered site is ten bucks.
Showers are three bucks each.
We forked over sixteen bucks and did so happily. We’d been three nights freecamping – cheap
and grotty. We never went into the
tavern. It was the last thing on our
minds. Instead we scrubbed ourselves
clean and, smelling like our bodywash of choice, stir-fried chicken and watched
James Spader taunt the FBI during a manhunt or two.
I give the Rocky Cape
Camp Ground 2 stars out of 5. It
exists. It’s okay. It’s not near anything to look at.
NIGHT 323 -
SHEFFIELD RV AREA.
Apart from opium, and by extension heroin, does anybody know
why poppy flowers are cultivated, because Tasmania has vast fields of
them? Could it be for the seeds? I think orange and poppy seed cake is
popular. Aldi used to sell orange and
poppy seed muffins. I loved them so much
I’d be covered in crumbs before I’d left the carpark. Would acres of poppies be cultivated solely
for the seeds? I’ve seen them sometimes
on bread too. Are poppy seeds that
popular?
Whatever the reason, North West Tasmania grows the same
poppies as used to make heroin, I’m sure of that. The ‘Keep Out’ signs are a good indicator,
including print that says ‘prohibited area’ and a further warning to the casual
passer-by that ‘illegal use of crop may cause DEATH’. But these signs are tied onto rusty slack
lined fences that wouldn’t keep out a kid (child or goat). I wonder whether these signs create the opposite
effect to the one desired. Instead of
warning me away from the crop, I now find it compelling. If I’m honest, without the signs I’d have no
idea what was being grown in those fields and wouldn’t have cared. I’d have driven straight past. Now,
however, I’m wondering just how it is that poppy flowers are turned into
heroin. Just what do you have to
do? I’m tempted to reach through the tight
security provided by three sagging strands of ten gauge wire and acquire myself a few
poppies. Surely the internet will tell
me what to do next. I could say I was
just trying to bake a cake.
In the midst of the poppy fields, Sheffield is a scenic town
below Cradle Mountain. It sells itself
as a tourist destination by decorating its buildings with murals depicting its
history. There’d be about 30 of them
throughout the town, full of farmers and horses working the land. Some depict the local flora and fauna. The
quality varies, depending on your viewpoint I guess. I saw maybe fifteen and that was enough. I think it’s a good idea. It did feel like an outdoor art gallery. However,
a little more variation on the theme wouldn’t go astray.
The RV park is a flat fenced off area across from a cricket
ground. Cool bevy beside me, I sat in
the front seat and watched for an hour.
It was park cricket exactly how I remember it. Wickets fell quickly, out-fielders couldn’t
catch, and anything that hit the pads was generally given as LBW. It was like watching 20/20 without any big
bash.
I fell asleep in the
sun, my head against the window.
I give Sheffield RV
Park 1 ½ stars out of 5. I’m thankful it
was there. It offered a free place to
legally park and that’s about it really.
If the cricket field had a scoreboard I’d have known what was
happening. That would have earned
another star.
NIGHTS 324 &
325 -
CAMPBELL TOWN RV AREA.
Happy Australia Day.
Our Australia Day started multiculturally, with a 70 year
old Northern English herbalist giving us Chinese herbs.
He was parked next door and was having trouble with his
phone. I volunteered Shana as an
expert. Death stare toward me aside,
Shana tried her best to fix his i-cloud dilemma. She couldn’t, but he rewarded us anyway. “Here, you’ll love these” he called out in
lieu of knocking on our door, “I bring them in myself. From Bejing”.
The smell of what he held in his hand is indescribable. It’s a concoction of Chines herbs infused
into a stick-on patch, like nicobate patches if they’d been rubbed through a
series of things that shut your nose down and make your eyes water. “Wear them for three days and they’ll stop
any pain” he assured us. We thanked
him.
I didn’t need them then but I think I do now. I keep getting pains behind my nose and my
eyes from the funk they create in the ‘bago.
It’s like smearing the inside of your head with dencorub.
As the day unfolded we chanced upon what surely must be the
big three of all Australia Day celebrations – raspberries, topiary and craft.
At the Christmas Hills Raspberry Farm we ate chocolate
coated raspberries and raspberry ice-cream and raspberry muffins. It was a good breakfast. Shanzie toyed with buying a pair of raspberry
scented socks but I think she was afraid I’d eat them. I do like raspberries.
Next stop Rialton, the topiary town. It’s really only a quick stop type of
place. The main street has topiary
sculptures of various complexities.
There’s little hedgy trains and elephants and people. In the spirit of Australia day we took a
picture of a topiary boxing kangaroo.
Oi, Oi, Oi.
Then on to Deloraine, a gorgeous little artsy town.
In Deloraine, the appropriate way to celebrate Australia Day
is to line the streets with local craftspeople; let them do their crafty thing
while we tourists watch. So I watched
yarn being spun on a spinning wheel, a landscape take shape with oil paints, and
a woman crocheting using wire and beads.
They were each very clever and I must admit to being drawn to this type
of place. I’m not anti-technology but
I’m always more impressed by things made by hand. I’d have liked to be on the street making
something.
I had a pie instead.
Admittedly it was a gourmet pie – venison and red wine – but
I demonstrated my hand to eye dexterity by eating it one handed and
successfully avoiding drips landing anywhere on my body. I did, however, refuse sauce. Shana’s from New Zealand. She had a sandwich.
Aussie, Aussie, Aussie.
We ended up in Campbell Town, a place chosen mainly because
it’s Shana’s brother’s name (Campbell, not Town). That’s how random our life has become. It’s another RV park; another flat expanse of
land near to a town. There’s no toilet
of any kind but it’s beside a beautiful little river with a historical
bridge. Very colonial.
Our Australia Day ended with us sitting beneath a tree,
beside a river, eating BLTs and listening to the last 20 of the Hottest
100. Shana was cheering for the Grammy
nominated Lorde but I was happy that Aussie singer-songwriter bloke won.
Oi Oi Oi.
Even though I’d never heard the song before.
We woke up and decided to stay another day. We are meeting Shana’s mum in Hobart in two
days and we’re not far away. It’s only
two hours drive from here. Another day
and night beside a slow running river with ducks, grass and tranquil shade is
as fine a place to wait as anywhere. We
might even shower in the ‘bago before we meet up. I’m sure she’d appreciate that. We can wash the Chinese herb funk away.
I give the Campbell
Town RV area 3 stars out of 5. Ducks are
funny and ducklings are cute but slow running water creates urges – urges that
aren’t that conveniently satisfied in a place without a toilet.
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