Well – so much for chronicling our Tassie adventures…
We have managed to travel around a bit and see some stuff,
just lacking the motivation/time/feeling in my fingers (cold joke) to update
the blog. So let me rectify that by giving you a brief(ish) summary of some of
the places we've been.
Ben Lomond
Our number one tip for Ben Lomond is not to waste the $24
park entry fee driving to the top on a day when the peak is in cloud. Not only
will you completely fail to see any of the spectacular scenery, you may also be
woefully unprepared for the miserable conditions and will have to listen to
your husband bitterly complain about his frostbitten ears after you make him go
walking anyway so as to not totally waste your money. Just saying…
Same goes for Cradle Mountain. I'm pretty sure it's in this photo??
Quamby Bluff
So blue-sky days mean visiting high places - and we took advantage of the nice weather on this day by finding a random peak to climb close to home.
Quamby Bluff turned out to be a pretty cool (albeit steep) walk with lots of varied terrain from open forest and farmland to dense rainforest to boulder-hopping up scree slopes to the low scrub of the bluff itself.
(Ryan is actually on the track in both these shots...)
The views from the top more than made up for the effort.
And then, to top it off, we encountered this little fella on the way back down who was quite content to snuffle for ants just a metre or so away from where we were standing.
.
Gunn’s Plains Cave and Leven Canyon
This trip was built on a vague plan to string together visits to a couple of interesting-sounding places picked at random off the map. Gunn's Plains Cave is a bit further afield than the more popular Mole Creek Caves and was surprisingly good (once we overcame our initial doubt about finding the place apparently deserted)(the guide was down in the cave with a group at the time). We got our own personal tour (complete with an hour's worth of Dad jokes)(although I do approve of comparing the shawl formations to streaky bacon)(mmmm...bacon). The formations were abundant and spectacular and we would definitely recommend this tour.
We followed the cave tour by a visit to nearby Leven Canyon. A short walk out to a couple of viewing platforms yielded some good views up and down the canyon.
We also did another walk into the canyon floor which culminated at “Devil’s Elbow” which (we think) marked the junction of couple of rivers into the canyon. This walk took in a short section of the 5-day “Penguin to Cradle” hiking trail and was pretty steep and rough.
(I know this doesn't look that bad, but everything AFTER the bridge was steep and rough...)
Woolmer’s Estate
The forecast for the day was cloud and rain, so we settled on an indoor-ish visit to a historic property near Longford. Although the weather forecast didn't prove entirely accurate (see the blue skies in the pictures below) the tour was actually pretty interesting. There were an abundance of outbuildings to look through, complete with a lot of their original equipment (including an impressive double-storey shearing shed). We forked out a bit extra for a guided tour of the homestead itself, and I would definitely recommend it. The house was crammed full of its original furniture and was a fascinating (albeit slightly creepy) look at how (wealthy) people lived in the early 1900’s.
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