A Travellerspoint blog

The Glasshouse Mountains to Brisbane Forest Park

Hissing in the bushes.

sunny 24 °C

Monday 24 - Wednesday 26 April

A new week, and at last the chance to escape our beloved Kiss campervan for a few hours and do some proper walking.

Monday saw an early departure from our overnight camp, followed by a short trip to nearby Landsborough for coffee and breakfast before the onward journey to the Glasshouse Mountains. Here, the very helpful couple who run the local knick-knack shop-cum-Tourist Info Centre gave us heaps of leaflets about the area.

Feeling the need to break ourselves in gently we opted for the 2.5km ascent of Mount Ngungun, which offers spectacular views of its surrounding peaks.

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Mount Tibrogargan seen from Mount Ngungun

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Mount Beerwah, also seen from Ngungun

The day was warm and sunny, and the walk was beautiful taking in a steady climb through picturesque woodland and culminating in an easy scramble over the last few rocks to the ridge and summit. Here we met a very laid-back (literally!) local walker, who pointed out aspects of interest from our lofty viewpoint and kindly took this picture of us:

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Scary couple seen on Mount Ngungun

Energised and exhilarated by this walk we decided to press on and do a couple more, this time at ground level. We chose the Trachyte and Tibrogargan circuits, coming in at just over 8km. The warm sunny weather made these strolls through scenic pine and eucalyptus glades very enjoyable; for me at least - Sharon was increasingly worried about seeing a snake...

All went well until we were within 300 meters of arriving back at the car park. A hitherto undisturbed snake, basking on the verge, zipped away into the undergrowth as we approached. Unfortunately Sharon spotted it and instantly freaked out!

We'd planned an afternoon ascent of Mount Beerburrum, but shelved this as soon as we saw that the route to the summit appeared to be an ordinary gravel road. Instead, we headed to the town of Caboolture for provisions before heading to our next overnight stop.

Tuesday 25 April - Anzac Day

Part of the conditions of taking our campervan from Cairns to Sydney was an obligation to call in for a safety-check in Brisbane.

Anzac Day is a public holiday in Australia, and we'd been unable to phone ahead to to confirm that the service centre was open, but after decrypting a reasonably useless map of a secluded suburb of Brisbane we found the place - happily open.

Central Brisbane was closed off for the Anzac Day parade, but we managed to park up and watch for a while.

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We were impressed not only by the huge turnout of forces personnel and spectators, but also by the very tone of the proceedings; never less than deeply respectful, but upbeat - the atmosphere celebratory rather than mournful.

Another freebie rest stop this evening at a place called Petrie. Here our Kiss camper was joined by a Star Wars camper and a Lord of the Rings camper!

Wednesday 26 April

Time for some more walking. We set off early, and after a brief stop for an entirely enormous breakfast we continued on to Brisbane Forest Park

Here we took in another beautiful 8km ground level walk (comprised of two shorter circuits) beside a lake.

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Sadly, this walk became a bit of a route march as Sharon was in no hurry to have a repeat snake encounter. Thankfully we didn't. However, we did get our one and only view of a Duck-billed Platypus here, although it was swimming about in a tank and avoided all my efforts to photograph it. (Apologies Platypus enthusiasts).

In the afternoon we headed back towards Brisbane in order to climb Mount Coot-Tha, which affords a panoramic view of Brisbane and its surrounds.

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Our rest stop this evening was in a camp spot beside another lake. Here we really noticed for the first time that although the days were still pleasantly warm, the nights were becoming increasingly colder...

Posted by andymoore 4:28 AM Archived in Backpacking | Australia Comments (0)

Maryborough

Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious

sunny 27 °C

Sunday 23 April

Sharon's birthday - she asked me if I would still love her when she was old, toothless and incontinent.
I said "of course I do".

The doctor reckons the stitches can come out in about a week's time.

But I digress. Today we had two objectives; firstly, to find a pleasant, historical kind of place to stop and have a wander and secondly - and more importantly - to find Sharon a Sunday roast lunch; something she has sorely missed since leaving the UK.

The town of Maryborough vaguely fitted in with our plans, but on arrival at around 11am everything seemed shut except the local baker. Whilst looking around for the Tourist Information Centre, we bumped into this lady...

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... none other than Mary Poppins. It transpires that Maryborough is the birthplace of the author, Pamela Lyndon (P.L.) Travers. By a spooky coincidence, P.L. Travers died in London, aged 96, on April 23 1996 - exactly 10 years to the day before we unknowingly happened upon her home town.

The Tourist Information Centre was happily (and unexpectedly) open, and a kind young chap directed us to the riverside

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which featured a beautifully landscaped park and river walk surrounded by historic buildings.

And - lo and behold - here we found the beautifully restored Excise building, which is now a restaurant and serves... Sunday roasts! Two excellent roast beef lunches later we took a leisurely stroll around historic Maryborough in the warm Sunday sunshine.

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We needed to find a camp spot for the night beyond Maryborough, and so I suggested that the seaside resort of Caloundra might be a pleasant way to round off Sharon's birthday.

Caloundra is reminiscent of many English seaside towns; nice sandy beach, hotels and restaurants along the front, ice-cream sellers etc. And so, in true-Brit fashion we sat looking out to sea, eating good fish and chips and watching the sun set. Who says romance is dead?

In fact, the only real difference we noticed was that as dusk fell, the sky overhead was darkened by hundreds of noisy, squawking, circling parrots!

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Posted by andymoore 11:50 PM Archived in Backpacking | Australia Comments (0)

Southward Ho!

Eating up the kilometers...

sunny 26 °C

21 and 22 April

Very quickly, it becomes apparent that campervanning (is that a word?) your way around Australia is simultaneously liberating and restricting. You are free to go anywhere, to your own timescale and your accommodation is always ready and waiting when you've had enough of driving. However, finding a safe, legal campsite can sometimes tie you down to places away from cities or areas of interest.

We'd already bitten the bullet and decided to take 'the road less travelled' in Australia, creating our own route from Cairns to Sydney to take in some good walking-country and more 'naturey' (did I just make up another word?)pursuits. The downside of this is that to get to the places we really wanted to see, some days would have to be sacrificed to relatively intensive driving. By Sharon. Wuss that I am, I can't drive.

Thus, on Friday 21, we left Proserpine and just kept going until we found a place we liked the look of to camp at. That place was Marlborough, and as luck would have it the campsite was behind the local hotel (pub) in this tiny town.

By Saturday 22 we appeared to have left the bad weather behind, and another few hours driving brought us to our chosen campsite beside the scenic Lake Monduran.

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Apparently the lake supplies the water for the Bundaberg region and hence its rum distillery, but for the moment we were still content to sample Australia's wine.

I'll leave you with the sunset over the lake:

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Posted by andymoore 11:07 PM Archived in Backpacking | Australia Comments (0)

Hitting the Road - Cairns to Proserpine

'Crazy Crazy Nights' Ahead

storm 25 °C

Tuesday 18 to Thursday 20 April

Today marked a departure from the norm in our travels; no more hostels for a while - time to hit the Aussie roads in our campervan!

Naturally we thought it best to hire something subtle and discrete, so as not to draw attention to a couple of Pommie tourists.

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Note the first appearance of my rather fetching 'Squashie' hat which Sharon bought me at Uluru.

Anyway, all fuelled up and raring to go we set off north from Cairns to the Atherton Tablelands. We had planned a number of walks and activities for this beautiful region. First up was a scenic cable-car ride at Karunda. No chance. An earlier tourist train failure had caused a huge backlog of visitors awaiting the cable-car ride and we were told that we would not be able to get on that day. Bit of Singapore cable-car deja-vu here...

We continued onward to the Barron Gorge, with the promise of a spectacular waterfall and here, thankfully, we were not disappointed:

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We managed to grab some great snaps before the heavens suddenly opened; the downpour was torrential and relentless. Taking our chances during brief lull we sped back to the van and made our way to our very first overnight camp spot at Granite Gorge.

On Wednesday morning it became clear that the severe weather conditions were going to dash our plans of doing some walking around the Gorge (we were getting a foretaste of Cyclone Monica, which was to make landfall to the north of us two days later).

We left the campsite early with the notion of outrunning the atrocious weather by heading south. A brief respite from the rain allowed us to enjoy the scenic route through the mountains from Atherton to Gordonvale, but we didn't stop that day before reaching Townsville. A notable stop for me as the Townsville Brewing Company helped slake my thirst for a decent pint of non-lagerish beer.

We camped that night at a BP truckstop; cost free and with all facilities on hand!

We just couldn't resist the opportunity to get up close and personal with some Australian wildlife on Thursday morning, and so spent an enjoyable few hours at the Billabong Nature Sanctuary just south of Townsville.

Of course, we saw the usual suspects

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and even got to feed a few

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But we weren't prepared for the breathtaking cuteness of one-year-old Nugget (he's the Wombat, not the keeper):

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Less cute were the snakes; whilst I was happy to stroke them Sharon exhibited a previously repressed, but total, phobia of snakes. Could be a bit of a problem if you plan to go bushwalking in Oz...

Camping just south of the small town of Proserpine was vastly improved via the partial consumption of a three-litre wine box of a decent (and exceptionally reasonably priced) Merlot. Well, it'd be rude not to...

Posted by andymoore 10:16 PM Archived in Backpacking | Australia Comments (0)

Uluru (formerly known as Ayers Rock)

Around the rugged rock, the ragged rascals, er, walked.

sunny 33 °C

14 - 16 April

Here we have another entry devoted to one of our dream detinations - Uluru. Australia is big; really big, and Uluru is not the sort of place that you can just jump in a car to get to. So we hopped aboard a tiny twin-engined Fokker for the three hour flight from Cairns.

We'd watched so many programmes on the 'Travel Channel' before leaving for the world tour; we'd seen images of Uluru so many times and yet nothing can prepare you for the moving experience of seeing it in reality for the first time.

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Uluru has it's own tourist resort which consists of five sets of accommodation covering every budget from a camp-ground to a five star hotel. Naturally, we resided at the lower-end of the scale in a perfectly accepable four-bed dorm at the Outback Pioneers Lodge.

Entertainingly, evening meals here are by way of a do-it-yourself barbecue - you choose the meat (including Ostrich, Kangaroo and Crocodile if so desired) and frazzle it to your liking. I stuck to T-bones.

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Only around Uluru for the Easter weekend, we had to make the most of our time, so we promptly booked onto as many tours as we could fit in.

First up was the -obviously essential!- sunset tour:

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The following day, Saturday, we opted for a tour of the nearby Kata Tjuta ('Many Heads' in Aboriginal language) - a formation of 36 massive rock domes, smaller but similar in appearance to Uluru.

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Here we had the option of walking the Valley of the Winds, or taking the less strenuous but equally scenic walk through the Walpa Gorge. Feeling slightly jaded from the previous evening, we opted for the Walpa Gorge:

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Saving the best until last, on Easter Sunday we took the opportunity to walk right around the base of Uluru. Packed lunches were provided and - a nice touch - each one contained a tiny Easter egg! The 9km walk kicked off at sunrise, and as you can see was spectacular.

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Between us we took at least 150 photos of Uluru and the surrounding area - for many more take a look at our gallery here

Just my opinion of course, but an excursion to Uluru should be mandatory on any traveller's Australian itinerary; for me it was the most moving and awe-inspiring moment since our journey began.

One final observation - our cameras weren't capable of capturing the night sky, but here we saw the clearest and most vivid views of our galaxy that you can imagine.

Posted by andymoore 11:44 PM Archived in Backpacking | Australia Comments (0)

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