Rolling into
Kalbarri without a booking in the school holidays is like turning up to the
beach without your Mankini. Strangely, things worked out rather smoothly as we
claimed the last campsite in town, and it had a view.
Forecasters
were proved correct with strong southerly winds buffeting the little fishing
village. The kind of wind that has you wondering if your tent will be standing
when you return from a day out. The kind of wind that could see a Jayco take
flight and a Retreat Caravan, well, retreat.
As we
approach the populated south west things like libraries and Op shops are coming
back into play. Lissa has taken the kids school work down to the tiny Kalbarri
Library for a change of scenery.
It is a
pretty little town set right in the Murchison River which cuts through the national
park. Most boats stay in the river with plenty of waves at the river mouth. It
seems that the town remains very much a tourist haven with masses of retirement
developments hidden behind.
Our time in
Geraldton coincided with the annual “Airing of the Quilts” day in Northhampton.
As you can imagine, one of us was busting to get there. I had to drag Lissa
along. The town was alive with quilt lovers poring over hundreds of quilts. A
fashion parade on the steps of the convent proved to be great entertainment
with gowns from the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s on show. The compare was the most
glamourous woman in the Shire who described the final outfit: “Dianne is
wearing another one of Mrs McDonald’s frocks that she wore to the wedding of
her eldest son. You will notice the genuine fox fur, which I must say it looks decidedly better than the one my grandchildren shot this morning.” Top Shelf!
We pulled in
at the sleepy coastal towns of Dongara and Jurien Bay on our way past Geraldton.
Kael and I caught some live bait and cast them out off the breakwall at
Dongara. Our preparation was rewarded with a little Mulloway (me) and a Banjo
Shark (Kael).
From Jurien
Bay the road passes through stretches of sand dunes which appear like snow
capped peaks in the distant sun. One of these dunes strewn with a vast
collection of pointy rocks emerging from the sands. The drive through the Pinnicles
is quite magical. It is a striking scene for photographs, rather subline.
This is also
the land of wheat fields. Neat rows of grain and bales of hay. Fishing shacks which
cluster on the calm shoreline are reminders of a time when this coastline was
anyones, literally.
Detouring
through Yanchep NP for lunch we were pleasantly surprised to find 11 resident
Koalas waiting to be spotted in the trees.Our descent
into Perth was moved forward to allow Lissa to fly to France for the Funeral of
her much loved Pappy. It was a shock to the system to drive into the big smoke
after months of town and country. Perth is the real deal. It looks like a city,
smells like a city, I bet the coffee even tastes like it should in a city. It’s
a good looking city too. The Swan river system provides plenty of waterfront suburbs
to live in or just enjoy the waterside parkland.
With the
tent all set up by the beach we dropped Lissa at the airport, leaving us set a
week near Fremantle. Sounds like an adventure for everyone.
Before I go,
it’s time to hand out the annual awards for bathroom excellence.
And the winners
are:
Coogee: hot
water then cold. Best portrayal of a bipolar shower.
Jurien Bay:
instant bathroom renovation. Paint over everything: Tiles, cabinets. Heck, why
not paint the urinal.
Geraldton: Shower
stalls so narrow that you need to eat desert after you get out lest you won’t
fit in.
Honourable
mentions to all those shower blocks with sticky floors, big peeking gaps around
the doors, impotent showerheads and stale smokey aromas.
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Hi Haz, wow what an adventure! Well done for creating life long memories and making the sacrifice, you are the real deal my man. So awesome to see all the piccies, my how your kids have grown! Miss you stacks, keep living the dream!
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