23rd September: Albany
This morning dawned grey and dreary.
But, nevertheless, we packed up to move on. I realised that I had
taken a photograph of the place we were staying at: Fonty's Pool.
It is a really pretty caravan park, 8 kms out of Manjimup. The
facilities are great and it seems it is very popular in the holiday
season as there is plenty to occupy the children with and the parents
can walk to wine and truffle tasting. We didn't: truffles are fungi
and none of us fancied them. But, despite the rain, we did enjoy our
stay here.
We drove, once again, thrrough pouring
rain all the way to Walpole and the Valley of the Giants. Amazingly,
there is no cafe there! We'd have loved to sit in the warm and have
coffee. Glen went back to the car and made himself a 43 beans while
Gail and I had a machine coffee while wandering around the gift shop
which was small but packed with good stuff!
Donning rain coats and taking
umbrellas, we walked through the rain and mist on the tree walk.
We'd been there before but Gail really wanted to do it as she was
held up by bush fires last time! It was really eerie walking through
those giants in the mist but again, really beautiful.
These are
Tinglewoods – Eucalyptus jacksonii. They are very old, some 500
years, and are relics of the ancient times of Gondawana, like the
Boab and Nothifagus in Tamborine Mtns. They are huge – very wide
at the bases which are often burnt out and hollow, but not as tall as
karri trees. They grow only in a small band of country of about 6000
hectares and these days there are boardwalks all around so that
people don't trample on the roots which are fragile and near the top.
Again, I had a sene of the amazing diversity and longevity of nature
and how very precious these things are.
We passed through Denmark. What a
pretty town. I hope it is fine tomorrow and that we can go through
it again.
After setting up camp at Albany, we
went sight seeing – in the rain again. (That just means that we
pull up, dive out and take photos or read information boards and then
jump back into the car and ssit and contemplate!) What a magnificent
natural harbour this is! I was a bit ambiguous about the piles of
woodchip ready for export but I do like my newspapers!
But this is the port from which the
first Anzacs all left, including the lighthorse brigades. As a
consequence they have built a stunning memorial, opened only this
year, on the top of Mt Clarence. It is very different to the
Geraldton memorial but almost as stunning! Not as moving but still
very evocative! The names of many of the WA soldiers are at the
bottom of trees forming an avenue as you drive up to the walk up the
hill through a paved walk with evocative memories on plinths both
sides. Then at the top is a big paved area (all granite of course)
with a large plinth on which is the restored memorial to the
Lighthorse men and horses. (It was originally at Sinai but was pulled
down and almost destroyed during the Suez Canal uprising!) A pine
tree grown from seeds found in cones gathered from the trenches (the
Lone Pine was actually destroyed by shelling!) and almost 100 yrs old
sits there at the side. It is a wonderful memorial!
We came home through town. A really
interesting day!












We love all that area and of course Albany has been well looked over as Steve lives there. On our first visit to Fonty's pool in 1972 we actually met old Mr Fontinie ( not sure of spelling ) On our second visit it was the day Jarred was born.
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