20th September:Margaret River
The Margaret River Region hassuch a variety of things to explore.
There are the wineries, oodles of them – half a dozen or more down
every side road – and the dairy farms producing milk, cheese and
butter. However, as well there are the forests, mostly protected now,
and the beaaaches which are beautiful.
We drove to Busselton this morning. There is a very long jetty there
– 1938 metres long, extending into Geographie Bay. No longer used
as a port, there is an underwater observatory there and a little
train that runs out to the end. But it all costs: $14 to ride the
train, $6 for children and $4 to walk out! (Even the cost of camp
sites around here double in school holidays which start in a week's
time. So unfair for families!) But the beach is free and it is
lovely and the parks are great! We said goodbye to Murray and
Lorraine today as they were taking the Bitz van back and flying home
on Sunday – Murray's birthday.
We then drove down the Caves Road to Augusta, calling in at Mad Fish
to buy something I had decided I wanted and some of the beaches. We
stopped at Gracetown which is on a little protected bay, and given
that a fierce wind was blowing, it was lovely to sit at a picnic
table that was buried up to the seat in sand in the sun. People were
swimming and snorkling; the waves were crashing on the cliffs to the
north and south but not here. It is quite a sizable village with a number of larger weekenders I think!
Then we went to Hamelin (through the beautiful forest of karri trees at Boranup) where there
had been a jetty to export timber, karri, in large quantities to
England and Europe. Did you know that some of the streetgs in iknner
London are still paved in Karri from these forests here! What a
waste! The jetty is gone now but it is a pretty place with Foul Bay
around the corner behind protecting hills. People were swimming
there too. It was a bright sunny day – if you could get out of the
wind.
The Boranup Karri fores
We then went to Augusta and Cape Leeuwin. We had afternoon tea in a
little park beside the Blackwood River where we learnt that a pelican
is called the Pelicanus conspictulatus and the Black Pacific Duck is
a Anas supercilliatus!! We then went on to the Cape. It was
stunning there but so windy, I was nearly blown off a rock! I wanted
to photograph the meeting of the Great Southern Ocean and the Indian
Ocean which I did by climbing around the rocks outside the fence.
You have to pay here too even if you just want to walk to the
lighthouse to take a photograph. They say it is for the maintenance
of the grounds etc but $10 just to take a photo is a bit much! So we
climbed around the rocks! We didn't get to the end but I was able to
take some photos!
The meeting of the oceans.
Cape Leeuwin from a distance!Flinder's Bay - the start of the Great Southern Ocean in Australia.
We drove home then and battened down the hatches as thunderstorms,
high winds and rain are predicted as a cold front moves over early
tomorrow morning. I hope it is not as bad as the one we had at
Gingin but we are more protected here!








It is indeed a spectacular coastline but wind is a constant companion. We had an amazing day at Mt St Helens volcano yesterday but as we got home at nine pm the blog has not gone up yet.
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