Saturday, June 11, 2011

AC/DC to King's Park


'Twas the night before the exhibit and I hardly could sleep.                                              
Rain and 'Thunderstruck', 'Shook Me All Night Long'..... I hardly got a peep.  
We drove the "Highway To Hell',
but the gps told us to go 'Back (in Black)', oh well.

'For Those About To Rock', this history about the band is a must. 
With old concert posters, albums, loud music, memoralbilia, it sure wasn't a bust.
As we wondered 'Who Made Who?', 
the curator had said you are now through.

But not before we played 'TNT' on the rock band. 
With Caleb on the mic and Jackson at the drum stand.
The Museum of Western Australia was our mission
to go to the AC/DC Family Jewels Exhibition!

And no trip to any museum would be complete without a dinosour roaring fiercly.  What does make this museum in Perth different is a stuffed Australian marsupial wolf - Tasmanian Tiger a.k.a. Thylacine.  The last known 'confirmed' sighting was in 1930s Hobart zoo.  They were once abundant in mainland Australia thousands for years ago as the WA museum has bones of one discovered in a cave near Margaret River.  Plus, the Australian Aboringinal art, culture and history is also very well told.
 

During the June long weeknd we also meet up with another teacher exchangee, the Neufeld family from Ontario, Canada.  We played in two playgrounds in Kings Park, had a bbq, and climbed the DNA tower with Perth city and Swan river views.


750 year old Boab Tree that travelled 9 days from Kimberly to be transplanted in Kings Park in 2008.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Perth Zoo


Merkat
 Perth Zoo visit was an excellent way to spend a Saturday afternoon.  We drove from Harvey and arrived around 11:00 am.  We toured the Reptile House, Australian Bushwalk, Asian Rainforest Animals, African Savannah, and Noctural House (no flash photography allowed!) until 4:00 pm.  We guessed that we walked 4 to 5 km that day.
Mud bathed rhino.


Pygmy Marmoset..looked like 1/3 monkey, 1/3 bird & 1/3 rat
 and could fit in the palm of your hand

Just like a human child...give it a present and will play with the box for hours!


Red Panda

Sun Bear

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Potpourri, Odds & Ends, and Bric-a-Brac

The month of May was a mixed bag of new and old experiences.  Our Australian adventures continued a little closer to home in Harvey as we caught up on some rest from our busy, busy Easter break.

We are impressed with the early education system of Western Australia,  as our two sons turn down Saturday morning cartoons to get in another game.

Out perch fishing at Harvey dam after school one smoky day.  None for me :(



The boys have been invited to two birthday parties of classmates so far.  Aussie b'days are full of sweets and treats, cake, face painting, fairy bread (white bread with margarine and coloured sprinkles), pass the parcel, and hip hip hooray after the Happy Birthday song.  Spot the butterfly and the owl (with eyes open/ eyes closed). 


Parliament House of WA visit.  A staff member ask if I was interested in giving a talk about my exchange and my home province of Saskatchewan for the local Rotary Club.  I said I would and as a bonus I also got the opportunity to go the the capital, Perth, for a tour of Parliament House with the Rotary Club. We were toured around by the local politician and had a wonderfully tasty meal in a room reserved for dignitaries.  A special surprise was when the premier, Colin Barnet ate with us.  So I can say I met the premier of WA, but have no photographic proof, as shortly after I snapped the pic of the state's emblem, the black swan, in the hardwood timber flooring the security guards brusquely asked that no cameras be used inside.


Saturday, May 28, 2011

FOOTY

Every country has a sports passion and Australia is no exception.  It is Aussie Rules Football!
The Exchange Teachers Club organized for us to watch a professional AFL game;  Fremantle Dockers vs. St. Kilda (from Melbourne, Victoria) at the Subiaco Oval in Perth.  Along with some  35 483 fans, we cheered on the home team on a warm sunny Saturday afternoon.
End Score
Dockers 56 - St. Kilda 102

The game has evolved from its origins in Gaelic football from Ireland to it's own professional Australian League. The purpose of the game is to kick the football through the middle upright posts to get 6 points - called a goal.  If you miss the middle uprights, but get the football through the outside post it is worth one point.  Tackling and rough play are an essential part of the game.  Hand passes are punched, not tossed.  Players can run 15 steps before bouncing the ball.  Players (and referees) are super fit because they run, run, and run up and down the 200 metre oval playing field.  Kicking can also be used to pass, score or get rid of the ball.  Marking is where you cleanly catch a kicked ball  (usually by jumping higher than your opponent). You then you get an open kick from your marked spot, hopefully through the posts.

http://www.afl.com.au/video/tabid/76/default.aspx#playvideo#playvideo#playvideo
To see the first quarter of the game click on the AFL website to view live footy in action.


Collin and Becky - self-potrait in the stands.  Chaos and Poety in Motion - Aussie Rules Football.
We loved the game, it was unfortunate that the home team was soundling beat by the visitors.  Great seats - fourth row from the front and 26 degrees in the sunshine.

 Dockers player kicking a goal; above the St. Kilda player is the ball.  The four posts to gets your points.


Sorry for the quality.  Our camera is not the greatest for video taking, but it does get the atmosphere of the stadium right.  The second video has a goal attempt and you can see the ball hitting the posts.

 A special thank you to our next-door neighbours for being with the boys for they day.  Caleb and Jackson are already asking when we will go away again so they can hang out with the girls!

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Rottnest Island

http://www.rottnestisland.com/en/pages/Home.aspx
Link to the Rottnest Isalnd Website.

Rottnest Island
Rottnest Island is Perth's beach island getaway.  We did a day trip back in January and soon realized that it wasn't enough time to explore.  The 45 minute ferry leaves Fremantle 10:00 am and leaves the island at 4:00 pm.  With so much to do and see we knew that when our parents came during Easter holidays that we would have to spend the night to get the full effect.  We stayed in one of the Governor Cottages on the old army barracks turned youth hostel grounds.  Great spot to spend the night.  Our cottage had 9 single bunks (oops, we forgot our own bedding, but lucky woolen blankets were in the wardobes) a bathroom, kitchen and dining room... and plenty of quokkas. 


QUOKKA, Quokka, quokkas... are everywhere!  These little marsupials in the wallaby/ kangaroo family were once mistaken by Dutch explorers in the 17th century for rats, hence the name ROTT (rat in Dutch) NEST Island.  History bit - the island was also used as an aboriginal prison, army barracks and WW 2 lookout, salt store, lighthouse for navigation, and vacation destination for more than 100 years.

The first day we took the bus that loops the island.  The island has a whopping total of 60 beautiful and diverse sandy beaches.  Great for a swim/ surf/ body board or sun bathing  or even snorkelling over the reefs. No personal cars are allowed on the island, so bicycles are king!  We hired (rented) a family of push bikes (pedal bikes) to go for our own tour.  Boys were very proud of their bikes and were sad to give them back.

 Clockwise from top left to bottom left. 
1. Biking around the island was fantastic!  2. Army barracks was used up until the 1980's.  3. Reefs and rugged shore line with contrasting colours. 4. Great views from a lookout hill over looking a few salty inland lakes and lighthouse.
  

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Big Elephant Rocks to Big Gloucester Tree

Elephants Rocks & Greens Pool near Denmark, Western Australia. 
On  calmer days the beach is full of people, but the swells were up and the surf was rough.  It is still a magical place.  We came to this spot via a wooden staircase leading to a narrow (arm span width) gap between two rock walls.  The boys and I had to time the water coming in and out in order not to get wet.  Unfortunatley, nobody told Becky or Pa this and they got soaked up to their knees.  (Note:  We are posting the last half of our Easter Vacation pictures a little late.)


Denmark tours included a petting zoo - complete with animals not native to Western Australia!?
Like, koalas (native to Eastern states), foxes (Europe), bison (North American) , alpacas (South America), llamas, camels (Africa/ Asia), Scottish Highland cattle, guinea pigs, chickens, pigs, and the list goes on.  After all, Australia is a multi-cultural country and accepts all sorts animals (and people) of many origins into their cultural mosaic.
Grandpa Walker gets his wish - to pet a Victoria/New South Wales/ Queensland Koala.
Other Denmark tours include a meadery (honey wines) and scenic highway. 

A little further down the road - a scenic viewpoint.  Up the hillside looking out towards Walpole Bay.  We stayed one night in a cabin along the shores of Walpole Bay.


Giant Tingle Trees.  A type of eucalyptus tree native to the forests of the southern coast.  These trees are giants!  Up to 100 metres tall, tingles are the third tallest trees in the world playing in the same field as the redwoods and sequioas.  They live for hundreds of years surviving droughts and forest fires.  Often hollowed out by fire/ growths/ decays/ and damage - as long as tingle trees have some root system left they will continue to grow to great heights.


TREE TOP WALK  - Between Denmark and Walpole
One of WA's top tourist attractions.  The Tree Top Walk was built so visiters could come upclose to nature without the damage that constant fooprints/ tire tracks cause.  The gently climbing catwalk takes you up to the canopy of the forest.  Fantastic views, a little freaky when it began to sway and swing in the wind and bounce with walkers behind us, but so worth it.  Wonderful forest board walk explaining the difference between Karri, Marri, and Tingle trees.  All are tall eucalyptus trees sought for their beautiful hardwood.                                                  
                                                        Grandma Hughes ponders the amazing view as the grandkids run on.

Historic Pemberton Hotel and Pub
What unites us?  Is it sitting in a pub in another Commonwealth country, with my children and my parents, drinking Aussie ale, whilst watching the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate with a bar full of loyal royal spectators cheering on Sir Elton, Becks and Victoria, the Queen and laughing at the cousins  'hats'?   Had to laugh, because when will it ever happen to us again?

Click on the picture to see the Queen arriving on the TV.

Pemberton steam trains of old.  But, today we'll travel on a diesel tram.

Trestle bridge crossing.


Pemberton Tramway Tour.


Saturday, May 14, 2011

Albany's Whale World


http://www.whaleworld.org/
 Albany has had a long history with whaling. Starting back in the early 19th century whalers hunted southern right whales, humpback whales, and sperm whales (picture on rightside) to near extinction.  Whales were processed into an abundance of products - lamp oil, transmission fluid, ambergrise in perfumes, fertilizers, meat for animal and human consumption, baleen products, cosmetics, aircraft engine oil, ivory and bone products.  The last company ceased operations in 1979 and now the facility is an outdoor museum.  The old oil storage tanks are now turned into 4 theatres with 4 distinct visual presentations - 3D whale movie, sharks film on a thin screen with artifacts behind, a whaling story watched on the floor, and a unusual spectravision with stationary pieces and 3D talking hologram narrators.  Well worth the visit which included a hour long tour guide walk and talk.
A Canadian connection - explorer Captain George Vancouver set ancor in Albany bay in 1791. 
In the background the whaling ship - Cheynes IV.

Below are some photos from around the whaling station from top right moving clockwise:
1. A baby Blue Whale skeleton.
2.  The water front dock where whale carcasses where pull from the sea and onto the flensing deck.  A little rock spit a few hundred metres off shore that was used to tie the whales to until the previous whale was processed was a shark haven.  Shark hunters would sometimes see up to 200 sharks feasting on the bloody carcasses floating. 
3.  Heavy machines and derricks used to lift whale and cut them up (flensing).
4. A stinking, bloody place during flensing and boiling down of blubber into whale oil.