Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Three Restful Weeks in Toowoomba

July 28, 2015
Dalby, Queensland, Australia

I'm camped in the bush on red pebbles and it got cold enough last night to have a frost. After 12 hours of sleep I woke to the sun warming me up and a raucous bird squawking outside my tent. I'm in the Outback, just barely.

But before that adventure begins, I have to fill you in on my 3 weeks of rest and fulfillment with the Pinwill family. It's the longest time I've been off the bike in over a year and it felt great to take a long break. I didn't plan to be off that long, but a series of events just led up to it. And then, in the end, I had to tear myself away. Got just a bit too comfortable and happy:-)

April and I met Kathryn and Michael while we were walking the Kepler Track in New Zealand on a rainy day in a shelter. Their chipper spirits and warmth connected us easily. The next day we climbed up to the ridge line catching up with them...they'd started early knowing it was to be a long day. And they said that if we ever got up around Brisbane in Australia, to look them up. And I did!

Kathryn teaches Kindy at a private girls school in town. Michael does IT for a trucking company. And then there's Jacob, 5, in his Prep yr in school and practicing his politician's charm...and Lukey (he'll hate that nickname when he's older), who's 2 and loves trains...and bulldozers..."I need that bulldozer." And they all won my heart. Kathryn has the quietest most attentive nature with the boys. And they respond...usually...and sometimes surprising even her. It was a delightful environment. Few tears. No shouting. No crazy rushing in the morning. (Her way with kids reminded me a lot of my children's Montessori teacher and dear friend, Sigrit VanDamme, as she is like this when working with children...it's a wonder to behold.). And I got to play gramma and was in my glory!

As Kathryn was on school holidays when I arrived, she decided we should drive out into the Outback to Bollon, a rural community where she first taught school for 3 years. We would be able to stay with friends on the station, Glencoe, (75,000 acre ranch) they live on and manage. Oh boy!! So off the kids, Kathryn, and I went for 2 nights there. It's a 5 hour drive, 6 with stops. We stopped off at a Pony Club event where Barb, from Glencoe, was helping out all week with daughter and grandson. As an ex-Pony Clubber, it was fun to see all the kids and their horses! On to Glencoe trying to not hit a kangaroo in the dark. That was exhausting to try and see them along side the road. They keep the bush mowed back from roads to make this easier for drivers because roos come out at dusk. Then trying to find the station when it had been 10 years since Kathryn had been back. They moved it closer to town!!



The entry no one uses, most likely. But isn't it cute?



The country kitchen that I loved!



My bedroom, just adorable! Love the bed!!

The old house was so quaint. A step back in time. A wrap-around veranda provides cool shade to the house and it's inhabitants. Tong and grove walls inside. Felt much like an old lake cottage might be. No insulation. Simple cupboards. Windows opening onto the veranda. An old iron bed. I loved it!

And Kev was a sweetheart putting us up while his wife, Barb, was away. We brought all our food so he wouldn't have to do that. And just made ourselves at home.

In the morning, it was an early rise because Kev had planned a shearing just for us. He had mustered a mob of sheep up to the wool shed the day before. His son, xxxxx, is a master shearer, and he was delighted to strut his stuff. The woodshed us centrally located so we had a ride in utes through the station and about 6-8 gates to get there. I was in my glory. Kathryn said I never stopped smiling! It was just like McLeod's Daughters (the Aussie TV show...Netflix). It's winter here, not shearing time, but they did clip 3 sheep just to show us. I wanted them to duct step their coats back on because they were going to freeze!



She doesn't look happy about this...but resigned.



Fascinating for all of us!



Dogs really do walk the sheep.

We got a tour of the where they used to dip the sheep, run them through disinfectant. They shower them now, I think he said. Then off to see the bulldozers. And Lukey wouldn't get out of the ute. Too big. Too scary. I guess. In order to keep the brush down for the cattle to graze, the drag the paddocks about ever 10 years, leaving lines of trees for shade for them. This is a continuous process. They drag a massive chain between two bulldozes to down the trees and shrubs. Then after they've dried, they burn the paddock, getting rid of the trees and refreshing the soil. Grass then grows.



Donny and me in the ute!



This calf was born early...in winter...they were a bit surprised to see him!



Isn't Kev your classic Aussie rancher? I loved meeting him! And the stories he told...



After this station tour, we headed into the sweet village of Bollon which consisted of a school, police station, fire hall (actually 2: they had to build a new one when the new fire engine wouldn't fit into the old one!), a hotel, a cafe/store, and a few other farming businesses. It was an hour's drive to get groceries! But these folks drive a lot! We met another son of Barb and Kev's when he came into town for pizza, an hour's drive one way from his station. Really!! His wife was at the Pony Club meet:)

A tour of the park, met up with old friends, saw the school and Kathryn's old house. Had to be hard to be 23 and living so remotely with not much going on. Gave me a taste of rural Australian life. Thanks to everyone for that! (Especially Kathryn...she had to drive!)



Lukey and me:-)



Big town of Bollon.

The following week turned cold, so I couldn't leave then. I'll just wait for this cold snap to pass. So this week I got invited up to give a talk at Glennie, the girls school where Kathryn worked. It's always a treat for me to meet and chat with kids.



I Aldo spent their lunch hour out in the courtyard and was so busy answering questions I didn't think to get pictures. But I was written up in their newsletter.




I've had a problem with pictures and run out of space. I have over 6000 from this last year and they're all on my iPad and it's filled all 64 gb. I thought when I backed it up to iCloud they were backed up. Silly me. I don't know what it backs up, but not photos. So I started the long learning process of various backup options with Apple. And one: Photo Sharing seemed right. Until it crashed my whole iPad and it got stuck on the Apple boot up screen. Oh No!!!!! I went to bed that night thinking I'd lost everything. Kathryn and Michael had offered to drive me 1.5 hours to Brisbane to the Apple store to see if they could fix it. But I plugged it in all night, as one forum suggested, and it worked! But the Photos app still would not go to the screen I needed to make more Shared Albums. And I must say when it worked, it worked quickly. I thought I could be done backing up in a day. I also decided I needed a hard drive to back them up on so they would be in 2 places. Michael offered me space on his, but when the pictures uploaded they lost their original date. What chaos that would be! Like a big box of 6000+ pics all dumped on the floor. Thanks but no thanks! And I figured out how to back them up to Flickr but that took hours and hours and hours. Sometimes one video would take an hour all by itself. So I spent the last week tethered to my iPad and their wifi. I got everything through June of this year done. The rest will just stay on the iPad and the hard drive. Lesson: take fewer pictures. No one will ever see most of these, but they are my memories.

A few more shots from my stay with this lovely family. A couple of weekends we went hiking. Once to Tabletop nearby. What a scramble up that was!



Jacob, me, and Luke in the back seat:)



The Pinwills! I love this shot!!

And another weekend up to the Bunya Mountains where Michael's mom joined us. It was a treat to meet her. I got to read the story of her and Don, Michael's dad. They settled further north when they were young on a Dry Block, land with no water, supposedly, and what a tough, remote, and wonderful life it was! "Whatever It Takes" by Don Pinwill was a treat to read. Hard times! Happy times!




I also got yo meet Kathryn's dad, Doug, but sadly have no photos of him. He was feeling poorly while I was there and the focus were having a hard time figuring things out. Hope you're feeling better soon, Doug.

So I think that's a quick wrap of three glorious weeks with a wonderful young Aussie family. As I often say "the Universe does a heck of a better job of planning than I do" and this is one example of that!

Thank you Kathryn, Michael, Jacob, and Luke!!!!!



Making brownies with Luke when I was babysitting one day.



Livin' the life!

BagLady

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Gold Coast

July 15, 2015
Wyreema, Qld, Australia
Wow! It's been a month since I wrote the post below. Life's been busy and I've been taking a well-deserved break. I want to capture all the moments and emotions of my travels, and yet sometimes it seems over-whelming and like a one way street. Facebook is more in the moment (as I'm living my life now) and inter-active. But a dear friend told me that my blog has more details...the in-depth story. Well, it used to. And if I find that the more social I am, the less I write. I need to be alone (maybe even a bit lonely) to create my posts. Add to that I'm finger typing with one letter on a massive keyboard on my ipad. All those typing lessons in jr high have gone to waste. What I wouldn't give for a real keyboard to type away on quickly! Sure just sounds like whining and excuses to me:)

Today I have the whole day to myself and I promise I'll get y'all caught up on the terrific month I've had here in Australia!!! Most of the month has been off the bike staying with friends...a break I dearly needed. So let's go back to last month and see what I've been up to, mates!


June 18, 2015
Surfer's Paradise, Queensland, Australia






I've arrived in a new state, Queensland and at the Gold Coast. This is Miami of Australia! Looks like it. Feels like. They just have a fabulous accent here:)) And they have a town called Miami here...imagine my surprise when I saw a sign, from a car or I'd have gotten a photo, that said Welcome to Miami! Did I take a wrong turn somewhere?

I'm staying here a couple of weeks taking a break with a wonderfully whacky woman I met on the Camino, Isabel. And she loves to cook healthy foods. So this should help things immensely. And I'm wearing her clothes...different clothes after 15 months is amazingly uplifting. Nothing special, just different. Ahhh! And I have my own wing of the house. Crazy, huh. And there's a pool and gardens. Very lovely. But best of all is Isabel is crazy funny and has me in stitches! I love to laugh. And she makes that happen.

The first night here she took me to a club, RSL. There are clubs everywhere here. Something else I learned from Bryson's book. This is a Retired Serviceman's League. Then there are bowling clubs, sailing clubs, nationality-specific clubs. That's their community centers. There's food, gambling, games, etc. so we went for euchre. Now, mind you, I haven't played in forever...years we're talking...and needed Isabel to give me a refresher of the rules of play beforehand. There were 4 tables and we played 20 games. Short ones. Up to 5 points. And I came in 2nd!! Not bad, hey? Sunday we're going to play 30 games. OMG. It's so hard to think fast after a year of going slowly, thinking slowly. They don't even wait for me to bid but fly on by. So I "sandbag" a lot. No time to play aggressively. Interesting, that's all I can say.

Then yesterday we we're suppose to go kayaking with a Wednesday morning group only because of a rain forecast, they cancelled. But us three girls went anyways! And it didn't rain. And we had a blast. I even took the kayak out into the ocean and caught some waves! Ocean kayaking would be great fun. A new way of travel perhaps?












We also went down to the Country Music Festival one evening. Ya, Isabel lives within walking distance of the beach and both Surfers Paradise and Broadbeach. Felt like I was back home hearing the foot stomping music!






I joined Isabel in yoga classes and nutrition talks, lots more euchre nights (and I got worse and worse), and the movies at the Casino. So much fun to have a girlfriend to pal around with! And lots of just plain "downtime" which I desperately needed. Thanks, Isabel, for sharing your home and your world with me! Truly a kindred spirit!







Isabel's lovely home. I sat many mornings at this blue soaking up the sun:)





And lots of healthy eating in her kitchen. She's an amazing cook!





Taught me how to make almond milk (so easy) and using the leftover almond meal as "cheese"...the trick is adding spices.

But alas, I had to keep moving. Truly the downside of this life style us all the goodbyes:((

Some final pics from the Gold Coast visit:






Me in Isabel's leather hat and Driza Bone (dry as a bone) trench coat. I look Aussie now!






Wiser words...






City view.






The guys from the bike shop...oh, are they cute or what!! And good bike mechanics too!


Livin' the life,

BagLady

Facebook: Kathryn Mossbrook Zimmerman

Sunday, June 28, 2015

A Weekend in Yamba

Yamba, NSW, Australia

(This was a bit ago...I thought I'd already posted it:/)

I met up with my wonderful friends from Sydney, Carina and Gabby, up in the Yamba area for the weekend. When I left their house three weeks ago, we never thought this might work out. We all expected that we'd just pass on the roadside as they came up here to look at a possible place to live and get out of Sydney some day. And since they'd just heard about Air Bnb for accommodations, they decided to give it a try so they had their lodging booked and I had to figure things out. Ask them if I can camp in the yard, I said. Yes, but we also have a single room. No camping I prefer.

I slowed down a tad or I'd have been past the area before the weekend. Slowing down is never a challenge. Not when I can find spots like this to camp...just before the rain hit.




And a strange bloke came over with a handful of mandarins for me to "keep off the cold"...he later came by with white bread and jam that I politely declined. Then he bent my ear and I didn't understand anything he was saying. I understood the words, but they didn't make cohesive statements...at least to me. I finally broke it off and finished cooking my dinner. I think he was charging a generator off the town outlet at the barbecue.

I got to Gerry and Liz's house (Air Bnb) ahead of Carina and Gabby and Gerry said he'd prefer I slept inside. No worries. It's easier for all, I'm sure.

Friendly, easy-going folks. Felt much like Warmshowers hosts.

I'm not going to bore you with our tours around the local area over the next 2 days. Let me just show some pics.



Strange rocks



Rainbow!


Kookaburra in the yard.



Wallaby in the yard.



Broomes Head.

The following are the amazing sunset we saw over Wooloweyah Lake:





















Gerry and Liz on left...Carina and Gabby on right. Lovely lanai to sit in for breakfast



The Three Musketeers!



Gabby wanted to ride Blaze a bit of distance because they are considering touring on trikes. Was a challenge for this big guy to even fit, much less pedal!





And I'll leave you with this pic of flying foxes. There were hundreds in the trees! Such a strange creature, like many here in Australia!!

Livin' the life!

BagLady

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Nimbin, Hippy Capitol of Australia

Nimbin, NSW, Australia












I cycled through the rolling hills and on again, off again rain into Nimbin, a world of tie-dyed shops, marijuana smoke wafting through the streets. Colorful, whacky, misfits! I fit right in although my clothes were a bit too conventional. The only thing I have near to tie-dyed is this wonderful knitted cap Sonja, the teacher way back at Jerangle School gave me...and I wore it to fit in:)). But seeing as it was pouring rain and I was soaking wet, all I wanted to find was a place to set up my tent and crawl inside to warm up and dry off. Quick. Google campgrounds. There's one right on the edge of town within walking distance. The others are further away. Head there, I tell myself. I did want to wander around a bit, but I didn't feel comfortable leaving Blaze unattended, and I usually do. So I headed to the campground. $17 a night. Not bad. The camping area is basically a swamp. Oh, this ought to be fun. Before I can set up, a woman in a beat up old van with stuff trashed all around calls out "Hi!" I go over to chat with Karen. Inside is worse than outside, from peering in. Can she really sleep in this trash bin? Is it drivable? Food and junk, like a horder, everywhere! But what a sweet woman. She came up here 9 months ago and moves from one campground to another every week or two, depending on their policy. She's got it all figured out. She likes this place because it's clean with showers and an outdoors, fully-equipped kitchen...if you call a toaster oven, toaster, hot water pot, sink, one gas burner, and a BBQ grill fully-equipped.

During breaks in the rain, I got my tent (Big Sky Revolution 2p, you remember...It's designed for easier setup in the rain because the fly says attached and I have to say, it worked!) set up under a tree in the driest spot I could find. In the three days of rain we've had since I've been here, she never flooded so I guess the spot was good.


After getting set up I crawled inside and other than going out to the john and shower, I was tent bound for 18 hours! It rained and rained and rained, rarely stopping the whole time. And I was mostly dry inside, other than some dampness showing up under my sleeping pad. I expected much worse. I even had all my wet clothes and towel hung up and 2 days later, they were dry! It's a miracle!! The only thing still wet is my silk liner that I slip my air mattress into to make a bed. It's right on the ground on the side towards the hill. Could have been so much worse.

So on the next day, Friday, I said "I've got to go touring, rain or shine." Raincoat, umbrella, sandals, pants rolled up (to stay out of the water), a book (for sitting in a coffee shop), a charger ( because I know my phone will die...it always does)...there, I was set for anything.

Lots of shops. Shops selling hippy stuff. Shops selling marijuana paraphernalia. Coffee shops. Grocery shops. Real estate shops. And more hippy shops. A visitors' center and a community center.











And I was early. They didn't open until 10 am. So coffee it is. Let's try a soy latte. OMG! What have I been missing? I loved it!! And without sugar! I was afraid it was going to taste weird, but it was yummy. Great. Now if would just remember to order decaf:). Gotta go back to "home-style" eating and then some. And dairy is part of the and then some. At least cow products. As best I can. I never drank caffeine at home, for years. But traveling, decaf is often impossible to find. So I gave up asking for it. Bad idea.

When the shops opened I started wandering and chatting, as I do. And I met so many of the town folks. What fun hearing their stories. Came here to study. There's a govt uni in a nearby town that offers hippy type courses. Came here because of my friends and never left 20 yrs later.












There's dinner and a movie tonight at the Bush Theater down by the candle factory, which I had toured earlier in the day. $10 for each. "20 Feet from Stardom" is playing. Great. Sounds like that would be fun! And it was. Outdoor venue for dinner by candlelight with a great band playing. Then the movie was in a refurbished theater with the original beach chairs and long padded benches for seating! Was fun feeling like a local with my new friends! I turned down an offer to drive me back to the campground. It's a nice night...and they laughed. Well, it wasn't raining...then. One of the women was worried about me because she thought this guy was sketchy. Don't worry. I'll be fine. When I got to my tent, I realized I'd left my backpack at the theater. Oh no! Gotta hoof it back there and hope someone is still around. It was about a 10 min walk. Not far. And he was. And I got it. And then the skies opened up. And I got drenched on the way home. But it was so nice to be out and about after sunset. Not something I do. It was a lovely night...even with the rain.

Today I wanted to go to an event at the permaculture center, the largest one in Australia I was told. So I paid to stay another night...it was raining, anyways. And after dropping off a book I'd finished at the book exchange and getting the low down on much of the area north of here from the woman there that grew up in Cairns, I hoofed it down to the permaculture center. About a mile away. Feels good to walk. And I learned about a wicking garden, passive solar design, slate splitting, and foraging. The wicking garden was most useful. Lovely place they have there. Courses, tours, classes. Rustic gardens. Bamboo fencing. Paths going this way and that with lots of different gardens and learning stations. Made me eager to get back and plant a garden:)















Off towards Gold Coast in the morning.




And here's a little of my own camera art sitting in a coffee shop on a rainy day in Nimbin!


Livin' the life!

BagLady