Paradise Exists

Upolu Cay and Clear Waters

And it’s in tropical North Queensland.  Now that’s a tourist slogan if I’ve ever heard one.  Of course, in order to get to said paradise, you have to fly to Cairns (call it Cannes or no Aussie will know what you’re talking about) acclimatize to the potent humidity, fight the urge to jump right into the ocean from the beach, lest you get stung by a jellyfish or eaten by a saltwater crocodile, and then take a boat at least an hour off shore through the fame-worthy Great Barrier Reef.  But once you’ve arrived, the postcard perfect beauty melts away any wear from the journey along with any of your concerns about all the things in the ocean that might kill you.   Hey, true beauty always comes at a price.

Cairns

The trip from Sydney (made shockingly easy by the non paranoia driven security procedures and continued belief in customer service) takes you over the coastal cities and then a long stretch of lush green emptiness before you arrive at Cairns, a tiny blip of a city in the center of a tropical wonderland.  Once at our ridiculously luxurious apartment in Bellevue at Trinity Beach we found managers Jim and Doreen as helpful as could be in planning out the next four days of our trip.  And despite the shocking omission of swimmers (bathing suits) from my packing, I was able to find a swimwear shop just a block away.  Cairns is a city clearly supported by tourism as much as by its surrounding hectares of sugar cane.  We couldn’t go rushing into the deep blue coral sea just a few steps away from our hotel due to an increase in Irukandji (a nasty little jellyfish that essentially gives you the flu) but our first day in Cairns, spent drinking a Bundy and Coke on the beach and watching the distant lightening from our hotel balcony, as the tree fogs chirped and the geckos laughed, was a great way to get into the tropical rhythm.

Trinity Beach

The Reef

The next day we took an all day ocean adventure on the Ocean Freedom, a cruise company that provided a truly pleasant day supported by a staff of sun bleached young Aussies, willing able and eager to get you swimming amongst the wonders of The Reef.  Our timing for the visit was perfect.  We had arrived on a crystal clear day at the tail end of Jellyfish season, making stinger suits unnecessary (which is good considering the one I tried on had several holes in it) but still during the tourist off-season, which meant our introductory dive, normally over $150, was only $20!  So after our trip through increasingly clear waters out to the first docking point, and an easy talk through the need-to-knows of diving, it was time to don our gear, duck walk to the edge of the boat and take a leap of faith off into the water.

For me as a first time diver, this was a surreal experience.  Not only are you breathing underwater, an odd sensation in and of itself, but you’re doing it through a curtain of bubbles with a Darth Vader-esque rasp to your every breath.  I had a little trouble adjusting, probably more than I realized since my instructor had to pry my hand off the security bar in order to get me swimming.  But once you start to swim around the reef you forget all the odd sensations of diving and get lost in the odd beauty of the reef itself.  There are fish representing every color in the rainbow and every shape suitable for swimming, some in schools so large they look like curtains of glitter in the water.  There are cartoonishly large giant clams, with alien insides that seem to glow in the sunlight.  The sandy bottom is littered with bright starfish and gelatinous sea slugs, which only move when your back is turned.  We even saw a huge spotty eel, winding his way between the points of coral.  And at the base of it all, is a huge forest of bright coral in every shape nature can conjure.  I did spot a jellyfish or two, but luckily they were harmless kind.  Gabe spotted a reef shark, which I was glad I didn’t see.

The dive was only a part of our adventures for the day.  We also snorkeled, an easy way to see just as many wonders as you can during a dive, took a glass bottom boat tour with an informative guide who confirmed my belief that every form of life in the ocean is just plain weird, and we took a trip out to Uplou Cay.  This little sand island, surrounded by nothing but bright blue reef waters, is officially the coolest place I have ever been.  The sand was as soft as sand can get before turning into vapor, the water, just lapping at the edge of the island, was clear for miles around and almost the same temperature as the air.  I would have been very happy to set up a hut in the middle of this tiny cay and content to share it with the flock of migrating terns running along the shoreline.  Alas, we had to return to the boat.  It seems tour companies have given up the habit of leaving people behind.  At least while we were on the trip back I could be grateful that I wasn’t among the tourists now bearing brightly sunburnt backs.

Best Beach Ever

Daintree

The next day a long drive through a lot of sugar cane, and a car ferry across the most certainly croc infested Daintree river, got us to Daintree National Park, a stretch of rainforest surrounding the famous cape tribulation.  The time you spend in your comfortably air conditioned car, winding through the dense green tree cover, past all the signs warning of possible cassowary crossings (although we didn’t see any) and occasionally sighting a bright blue Ulysses Butterfly, leaves you ill prepared for the conditions you step out into.  To experience the humidity in Daintree is to experience what it must be like to hike through soup.  Even with a palpable layer of bug spray on, you’ll be quickly surrounded by a gang of mosquitoes.  And they were a minor concern compared to the acid spraying Green Ants, or the possibility of running into a Golden Orb Weaving Spider, a harmless but enormous bug.  I thought the spiders in Sydney were large until I saw these sombrero sized monsters.  Gah!

Welcome to Australia

But the beauty of the rainforest quickly removes your concerns about its insect residents.  And though I could never live next to a beach you couldn’t use most of the year, jellyfish (stinger) infested waters make for a pristine coastline.  Instead of being inhabited by tourists the beach is a playground for sand crabs, whose little marble-like piles of sand remain undisturbed.   And even with a storm rolling in and booming it’s thunder across the mountains, Daintree was a truly magical place to visit.  Between the afternoon downpours, we managed to make one last stop at the Daintree Ice Cream factory for a little blueberry, banana, soursop and wattleseed ice cream.  I don’t know what the last two are either, but they were delicious.

Crab Holes

Kuranda Railway

For our last day in Cairns we decided to let the tourist industry chaperon us around, by taking the Kuranda Scenic Railway and Sky Rail.  You start the journey at a historic train station with a small museum dedicated to the making of the railway during the areas gold rush.  A quick read about the difficulties they experienced while constructing it, makes you wonder why anyone ever wanted to build a railway in the first place.  Nonetheless, I’m glad it was there for us to take.  The journey winds up the mountains offering stunning view downs into the lush green valley and past some amazing waterfalls churning out iced coffee colored water.  The trip ends at Kuranda, an artsy little mountain town that somehow manages to remain quiet as can be, even with trainloads of tourists getting off at half hour intervals.  I wonder if that was a consequence of it being the “off season” or if such places simply encourage a hush in their visitors.

Gushing Waterfalls

To get back to the base of the mountain we took the Skyrail, a series of sky buckets like the kind you might find in a zoo, but which soar you over the lush canopy of rainforest, and offer two view points to stop along the way and take a quick tour through the trees.  We may have gotten stuck at the second view point when some lightening forced them to stop the buckets for a while (lightening + steel cable = bad combination) but our holdover gave us some extra time to appreciate our surroundings.  And an informative ranger took the time to teach us why Cassowaries have bony helmets on their heads (scientists suspect it’s to pick up on low frequency noise) and that most of the fruits in the rainforest can kill you.  Yet somehow the aborigines in the area figured out how to cook and eat them anyway.  Who did they get to test those recipes?

There’s always room for Magic

Eventually we made it down the mountain, which included another beautiful view on the way, and were left to seek entertainment for our last night in Cairns.  We decided to hit up the one show that had its brochures stuffed into boxes in every tourist office, Extreme Illusions.  Our tickets included dinner in the Cairns casino, another surprisingly sleepy place.  Once again, I wondered if it was a consequence of the off season.  But the show attracted a decent audience, probably because of all those brochures.  Magician Sam Powers is a cute Aussie, whose 90′s era flame covered poster doesn’t do him justice.  He puts on a fun show full of classic illusions complete with a scantily clad assistant.  Very entertaining.  If he ever makes his way back to Sydney, I’ll happily be his volunteer from the audience.

The next leg of our journey took us from the Tropical North to the Red Center, a place vastly different from Cairns in more than just complimentary colors.  Stay tuned for Part II of the journey in my next entry.  Till then, just sit back and enjoy the view.

Lonely Coconut

But do try to stay out of the water, for your own good.

Marine Stingers

The Natural State

Happy Hikers

The license plates don’t lie.  Tasmania really is Australia’s “Natural State.”  That’s not to say that a great deal of Australia isn’t untouched and hardly populated, but when you consider Tasmania’s size compared to the rest of the country, you realize just how beautifully empty it really is.  Its lengthy stretches of picturesque farmland, massive amounts of untouched forest and completely untainted coast line make it the perfect place for a couple of nature lovers to take a nice long holiday.

Launceston

Hotel view

Is where we started our trip.  When I heard we were flying into Tasmania’s second largest city, I certainly didn’t expect urban sprawl, but I also didn’t expect to see pastures full of fluffy sheep I could practically count as the plane was landing.  Nor did I expect to meet an actual retired sheep farmer on the plane, nor have him offer us a ride to our hotel.  Aussies say Tasmania is like one great big country town, and considering the lax security at the airport and the friendly locals, I could already see that was a pretty accurate assessment.

Launceston itself is an odd sprinkling of features you might find in a city, rather than a well planned urban environment.  There was certainly a charm to the historic style of the buildings and the town center, which included a practically empty seaport and was a short walk from our hotel, a rather lovely converted convent.  We decided to launch into our vacation by eating at the restaurant recommended by the friendly locals.  However delicious the fresh seafood (and I mean really fresh) was at the local gourmet selection Stillwater, the place was a tad too pricey, even for Oz.

Getting to the Mountain

After going through a painless car rental and obtaining our oh-so-essential Nav system, we set off early for Cradle Mountain, a famous peak near the center of the island.  Tasmanian weather was quick to remind us that we were significantly further south than Sydney, by giving us a cold sprinkling of rain and lots of moody mist throughout our drive.  But, if anything, I think it made the rolling green hills, acres of farmland dotted by sheep and cows hiding in the veil of mist, and artistically stripped gum trees (eucalyptus) look that much more like something you’ve only ever seen in a painting.

The mist was so thick in fact, that the mountain itself snuck up on us, suddenly appearing like a wall of rock.  Its jagged edge was the only thing that made it look more like a mountain than a rain cloud.  Then we found ourselves boxed in by the trees, tall straight gum trees lining either side of the road, with nothing visible beyond them.  The way up quickly became windy and the last 8 kilometers over unsealed (unpaved) road to the our lodge were probably the most fun.  Other travelers had reported the road to be much more of a challenge than it was.  They’ve probably never driven the 1 through Big Sur in California, but I’m still glad we got the full car insurance.

Our destination was well worth the journey.  The perfectly located Lemonthyme Lodge is a self proclaimed wilderness retreat, located deep in a forested portion of the mountain.  It boasts being the largest log cabin in the Southern Hemisphere, which I don’t doubt, has acres of private land with hiking trails and what turned out to be an excellent restaurant.  That’s a big plus considering that guests would have to face a steep drive for about an hour to get food anywhere else.  We took up residence in one of their “treetop” cabins (appropriately named the Wombat cabin), which had a raised balcony over the lush forest floor.

The View

We spent the rest of that day and the next day hiking the trails around the lodge.  That’s where we learned a valuable lesson for the rest of our journey.  When Tasmanian maps say “medium” or “moderate” hike, they don’t mean the mildly aerobic, muscle warming hike you might find in a US park.  They mean you will climb up and down repeatedly, over rocks, tree roots, through mud and over whatever might have fallen across the path.  These particular trails (maintained by the same staff that worked in the restaurant) usually took us through forest so overgrown and so very untouched, that fallen trees were on top of fallen trees, moss was growing on every surface it could attach to, and Man Ferns (yes that’s really what they are called) provided good umbrellas from the mist.  If either of us had stopped paying attention to the occasional reflectors marking the designated path, we easily could have been lost deep in this ancient feeling forest.  That explains why you have to register before you go on a hike in Tassie.

Hiking down

As you can imagine, the area around the Lodge was also the perfect place to meet some local wildlife.  Our cabin was surrounded daily by Superb Fairy Wrens, a beautiful bird so tiny and so fast that it might by mistaken for an overgrown bug (I could never even find one in the aviaries at the zoo).  I saw one small Platypus for a split second before it swam under rock and disappeared into the mud.  Damn elusive monotreme!  And we were introduced to yet another marsupial that I had never heard of before, the Pademelon.  Australia certainly doesn’t run short of animals with pouches.  These pademelons, which are like wallabies but smaller (which basically means a really tiny kangaroo) would munch nightly on the kitchen scraps tossed out by the lodge staff.  We even got to pet the lodge’s tame adopted pademelon, Sniffy, a soft little fellow indeed.  And when night came we were introduced to the sound of a Tasmanian Devil shrieking, which is like something out of a horror movie.  Who knew such little animals could make so much noise?

Sniffy the Pademelon

Cradle Mountain

We also took a day to go up to “The Mountain” which is what everybody calls the state park at the peak of Cradle Mountain.  If the misty green forests halfway down the mountain are the kind of environment that inspires fairy tales, then the landscape near the peak would inspire gothic poetry and romance novels.  There is a sort of post apocalyptic feeling to the twisted naked trees surrounded by low bushes, and of course here too it was windy, cold and very misty.  Dove Lake, where we started our day, most certainly has a monster living deep within its reddish water.  But he probably only eats the tourists that don’t register their hikes before taking off.

Lakeside Beach

After making the lengthy circuit around the lake and hopping over the various creeks running down the hiking path, we decided a nice level boardwalk hike along Ronny Creek was in order.  The sun had finally come out and we were treated to our first wild Wallaby sightings.  And since the distinctive square wombat poop was all over the boardwalk, and there were visible burrows everywhere, I kept my eyes peeled for more furry friends.  Unfortunately, no wombats, echidnas or other animals seemed to be around, despite the fact that we were surrounded by so much animal poop, that I decided the Tasmanian license plates should read “Tasmania, there’s poop everywhere.”

Wombat poo (everywhere)

It wasn’t until we got onto the bus back to our car that I finally saw a nice fat wombat, looking like a big fuzzy rock as he munched his way through the grass.  And on the car ride back we saw two echidnas awkwardly waddling, as they do, along the side of the road.  Maybe these particular Aussie animals are only visible through windshield glass.

From the Mountains to the Coast

The next day we left the mountains for the East Coast of Tassie and the town of Bicheno.  Unsurprisingly, we passed a lot more farmland and many more sheep and even a group of dairy cows being escorted across the road.  The road itself was almost as empty as the landscape and motorcycling is clearly a big recreational sport in the area.  All you have to look out for is the possums, wallabies and other animals that evidently cross the road with some frequency.  Eventually farmland became vineyards, vineyards gave way to more gum trees, and finally we were at the sunny coast.

Our hotel, The Bicheno Hideaway, was no less than awesome.  Consisting of a few private chalets on a beach adjacent plot of land, you feel like the only creatures you’re sharing your stay with are their pet peacocks and the adorable family of Bantam chooks (chickens) running around the property.  We decided to head straight for the beach that was just a short walk away from the chalets which, like all hikes in Tassie, proved to be a bit more challenging than advertised.  But this totally private beach, with it’s beautiful tide pools and sand that was literally covered in seashells was worth the bushwhacking journey.

Rocky Beach

The town of Bicheno itself is very much a fishing and resort town, with not much more than the essentials to offer and endless places to stay which advertised ocean views.  The recommended place to get seafood was the local Sea Life Center, which seemed a slightly odd combination.  See it in tanks, then eat it off your plate!  But the food didn’t disappoint and it was the perfect place to buy some cheesy souvenirs.  After dinner we took a walk on the beach, which required keeping a sharp eye out for the washed up jellyfish all over the sand.  We also attempted to take in one of the tourist attractions, Fairy Penguins.  These miniaturized penguins come to Aussie shores during their breeding season.  Despite finding the burrows where they clearly lived, and left their notable fishy odor and messy white poops behind, it was still too early for them to be out and about.  Why must everything in Oz be nocturnal?

Jelly fish mush

Freycinet Peninsula

The next day we went to the nearby Freycinet National Park to see the famous Wineglass Bay, voted one of the best beaches in the world.  It wasn’t until we started our hike up to the viewpoint that I finally felt we had found where all the other tourists had gone.  Nonetheless, after the steep hike of supposedly over 600 stairs both up to the viewpoint and then down to the beach, we found the white crescent of sand practically empty.  Unfortunately, the water is a tad frigid in Tassie, but the sand was still the perfect place for lunch and a nap.

Wineglass Bay

We decided to take the long way out, which proved to involve a great deal more climbing than advertised and a lot of hopping mud puddles while crossing the boggy forest in the center of the peninsula.  But the hike took us to an even more beautiful destination, Hazard’s Beach facing the Great Oyster Bay.  This stretch of sand had probably no more than ten fellow hikers on it, and the huge bay it faced was shockingly empty, with not a boat in sight.  The bank of sand was also covered with muscle shells and oyster shells, which were probably not recently discarded, but most likely the remains of a massive Aboriginal shell midden that had once sat on the shore.  Being on this beach one could truly imagine what it must have been like to be an early explorer who set foot on an undiscovered foreign shore for the first time.

Bay colors

Despite the wobbly state of our legs after we came out of that five hour hike, we decided there was one more destination we had to explore.  Honeymoon Bay had advertised warmer temperatures in the afternoon because of it’s shallow water.  And despite the amazing views and the totally clear glassy water it had to offer, this rocky little bay was once again practically empty.  The water was warmer, yes, but still a temperature I would prefer for a drink rather than a swim, but I had to get in at least once.  It was probably good for icing my sore muscles anyway.

Honeymoon Bay

Back in Bicheno, we managed to stay up past the sunset (a big accomplishment after that day) and made one last attempt to see the Fairy Penguins.  Not only were we successful this time, but we got so close to them that I almost got pecked by one.  He made quite a loud squeak as he rocketed out of his burrow to get my foot of his front lawn.  We observed them for a while, listed to their odd little squawks as they called to each other and watched them plan each hop across the rocks with great care.  When you are that small, the crevices between the rocks must feel like canyons.  When one audibly squirted out a poop nearby, we decided that was an appropriate time to leave them to go about their business.  Seriously, there’s poop everywhere!

East Coast NatureWorld

We set off the next day for the capitol city of Hobart, but couldn’t leave all our furry friends without a quick visit to the nearby East Coast NatureWorld.  This sleepy little zoo seems to rely a great deal on the fact that visitors to Tassie must know a thing or two about the local wildlife, and how not to piss the animals off.  The Wallabies and Kangaroos roam free and they encourage visitors to buy $1 bags of food so you can get up close and personal with them (although you are instructed to keep the bags hidden if at all possible, to keep yourself from being rushed by a nice big roo).  Most of the “cages” are nothing but low walls, so the Tasmanian Devils (an animal with something like 3 times the jaw strength on an American Pit Bull) could take your fingers if you were silly enough to reach down to them.  The baby emu in the petting zoo tires to undo your shoelaces (and pecks you in the butt if you’re not paying attention).  And once again, there’s poop everywhere.

But being so up close and personal with the animals actually gave us the the rare opportunity to pet a cute little Tassie Devil.  This eight month old female, being held by a zoo keeper of course, was very soft, and so sleepy in fact, that she not only tried to fall asleep in his arms as we were petting her, but actually curled up and went to sleep right where he put her down.  Yes, everything is nocturnal.  In fact the one wombat we were able to find outside of a burrow, was not only asleep, but the gyrations of his paws lead us to believe that he must have been dreaming of digging. But the devils definitely woke up at feeding time, and we were treated to some of their characteristic squabbles over food, some nice bone crunching noises, and an odd little spitting noise they make as they eat, which I think means “Mine!”.

Hungry Devils

Hobart

The journey to Hobart consisted of, you’ll never guess, more farm land and more sheep (this time with amazing ocean views) a couple of sleepy coastal towns and then suddenly you find yourself in a city.  Hobart definitely feels like the “big city” in Tasmania, but we still found ourselves able to walk around the town center without completely wearing our legs out.  Once back in the urban grind, we thought we might have some civilized fun, but our timing seemed a bit off.  There was no cruise to the Cadbury factory that day, no Tall Ships doing lunch cruises until the weekend, no “Taste of Tasmania” festival until after Christmas, and even the famed Sydney to Hobart race (which the city seemed to be gearing up for) wasn’t due to end until well after Christmas.  Oh well.

So we opted to head to Mount Wellington, a peak which looks out over the Derwent river.  I was prepared to be unimpressed by this city adjacent natural wonder, but Tasmania hadn’t finished pulling out the stops.  The drive up the the peak is steeeeeeeeeeeep and what seemed like only mild cloud cover in the city below became a thick fog toward the peak.  The television transmitter right near the parking lot would disappear and reappear with the passing of the clouds.  At the top, the mountain is a lunar landscape.  Too windy for trees, all you see are oddly shaped rocks sticking out between low purplish bushes.  And the silence was so resounding that the loudest thing we could hear was the buzzing of the flies.

Mount Wellington

After walking through the clouds a bit, we decided to drive a ways down the peak so we could take a hike to a view point we might actually be able to see the city from.  And once again, through the windshield glass we spotted an echidna.  I didn’t know those little guys could climb so well.  I guess ALL Aussie animals are tough.  We took a short hike through a nice green, wet forest, an environment that was starting to feel very familiar.  And we made our way out to a rock shelf where we could just barely see the harbor below, and the clouds practically made a ceiling above us.

We returned to the city and after an hour long search for cheesecake (everything decided to close at 4pm that day) we went to see Avatar, a surprisingly appropriate movie to see after running around in the trees for a week.   We ended the night by eating some fish and chips and a taking walk on the docks between the fishing boats which, no doubt, had supplied our dinner.

Celebratory Fishing Boat

And In Conclusion

I feel incredibly privileged to have seen the amazingly beautiful and, at times, very weird island of Tasmania.  Despite the fact that many Aussie’s can’t imagine what we reason we could possibly have to go back, or how we even managed to fill nine days there in the first place, I would jump at the opportunity to go back.  I still have the whole West coast to explore, fur seals to lounge on the beach with, and more elusive wild wombats to find.  And now I know the most valuable piece of information I think any traveler to Tassie should know: wear shoes that you don’t mind getting a little poop on.

My Beach

It’s a Good Life

I have been told many times over that I need to take more picture of the places I visit and write about.  I normally carry a camera with me so I started to wonder, especially after multiple requests, why I don’t seem to photograph everything around me constantly.  But I realized that it’s because some of the most beautiful and most interesting things I see here, are now just a part of my everyday life in Sydney.

Harbor View

The classic harbor view is always right outside my window (except when obscured by a large dust storm).  I walk under the Harbor Bridge and past bus loads of tourists taking photographs of the iconic Sydney Opera House almost every single day.  I watch bright rainbow lorikeets eat out of the neighborhood trees during the day, and then watch droves of massive gray headed flying foxes cross the harbor every night.  I have an almost 360 view of the city from my rooftop, and my choice of multiple beaches to go to every weekend.  So why then would I photograph something I see all the time?

But don’t think that I have started to take these things for granted.  Far from it.  With the Celsius rising here and the Fahrenheit dropping in good old NYC, I am more grateful every day for what changes this new hemisphere has brought to my life.  Now instead of angry (and occasionally very happy) drunks, the loudest things outside my window are the baby magpies on the front lawn and the flying foxes squabbling for fruit in the fig tree.  Although, the cruise ships do honk rather loudly when passing by, and the firework shows sound like the start of a war, but those both have a much more entertainment value than any 3am argument between your neighbors across the air shaft.

Hiking Path

Within half an hour I can be anywhere I want in the heart of the city, or on a hiking path that seems miles away from any metropolis, marveling at the size of lizards and the spiders, which could probably hold their own against the lizards.  I commute by ferry at least once a week, which offers a far more pleasant view than the graffiti in the subway tunnels.  And every time I go to the beach, my favorite thing to do is just to sit back and take in the beauty of my surroundings.  It still amazes me that the water is so clear, and so full of life that I can watch fish swim underneath me and hermit crabs scuttle around me feet.

But you complainers are right.  The best way for me to share these amazing experiences with other people, is to photograph them.  So I hijacked the camera for a good portion of our hike our around the Bradley’s Head Reserve today.  I think the photographs pale in comparison to being able to hear the birds in the trees, smell the clean air and feel the ocean breeze cooling your skin against the powerful sunshine, but they are the next best thing.  So I pledge from this point forward to diligently document my daily appreciations.

Bradley's Head View

You can see the rest of the photographs from today’s hike on my flickr set.  And I DO have other recent photographs on my photostream, so don’t forget to check those out.