Saturday, September 7, 2019

Australia: Day Twenty Seven, Twenty Eight and Twenty Nine - Sydney

We left our hotel and flew a few hours to Sydney. Once we landed there was a time change so it was later in the afternoon. We took a taxi to our hotel and dropped off our bags in our room. We walked down to the Harbour and there was a huge boat that looked like a knocked over skyscraper. It was a cruise ship. Once we passed by it we saw the Sydney Opera House and the Sydney Bridge.



We looked for dinner by the water but had to go further into "The Rocks" to find any food Sage and Zaddek would eat. We ended up at a really busy outdoor Italian Restaurant. We got a table and had pasta and pizza for dinner. While we were eating we heard some fireworks going off behind us in the harbour. We weren't close enough to go see it before it ended so we missed an opportunity for some cool photos of the fireworks over the Sydney Opera House. We finished our dinner and headed back to our hotel passing by Christmas lights in the city.


The next morning we headed back down to the harbour and found an awesome restaurant for a crepe brunch. Then we caught a bus for Bondi Beach. At the change rooms we put on our suits and headed down to the crowded beach. There were a ton of people on the shore but not as many in the water because it was really cold so we had lots of room to body surf in the huge waves. After a couple of hours we had to go back because Mom, Dad and Sage were cold in the water but getting sunburnt on the beach. We took the bus back to the harbour and walked to our hotel to rest in the air conditioning while Mom and Dad went for Thai to bring back to us. 


On our last day in Australia we put our bags in storage at the hotel and walked to the harbour one last time. We loved the crepes so much the day before we decided to go back again. (We did the same thing with crepes in Athens, Greece.)

From there we walked over to a local outdoor market to look for Christmas presents. Unfortunately we didn't find anything. After that we headed up to the bridge. From there we had a great view of the harbour.




 We doubled back across the bridge and walked around the harbour to the Sydney Opera House.


The design was really cool but we couldn't go inside so we sat down and took a break after a long day of walking.






After an afternoon around the Opera House we had a few hours to kill before our flight to Hawaii and it was very hot so we went to a movie. We let Sage pick what movie we would watch because she didn't really enjoy much of the historical monuments we usually visit. After the Grinch we picked up our backpacks and went to the airport for our flight. We waited in a big line for baggage drop off just for them to tell us our flight was cancelled and that we were on the next flight in the morning. They gave everyone on the flight a free hotel room and free food for the night but by the time we took a shuttle to the hotel and got dinner we ate at 9 at night. We went straight to sleep after that for our early flight the next morning.

Total buses: 2
Total shuttles: 1
Total taxis: 1
Total miles walked: 2, 5 and 6.5 miles

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Australia: Day Twenty Six - The Great Barrier Reef

We woke up early and rushed out the door. We walked down along the boardwalk to the harbour and soon we were at the docks where we boarded a gigantic boat and started our way to the reef. Originally we had booked a different trip but it had been too hot where we were going to be snorkelling so we got tickets for this one instead. After two hours we got to the reef and stopped in front of a boat platform. We rented an underwater camera and put on our wetsuits and masks before jumping into the water.  Right off the platform there was giant fish and he wasn't scared of us at all. It was a giant grouper.


We continued on to explore more of the reef. We all headed different ways to see all the beautiful corals and fish below. After a few minutes we saw a green sea turtle swimming past us.



We followed him with the camera but he swam a lot faster than us and soon he was out of sight. We split up again and swam around through the ravines checking out the millions of fish.



There were a bunch of parrotfish of all shapes, colours and sizes feeding from the corals and clownfish hiding down in the Anemone. 







There were a few starfish and Zaddek even saw a cuddle fish.





 Kaden and I were exploring the edge of the reef when we saw sea turtles swimming deep below. Kaden swam to get Mom, Dad and Sage who hadn't seen the first sea turtle while I stayed and watched to see if they swam away.



 One of them did but the other one laid down on the ocean floor. As I waited I dove down to get a closer look at her. The first few times I made sure to stay a good ten feet away to not scare her. I dove down a few more times and soon she seemed to know I wasn't a threat and I was able to dive right down until I was three feet away from her beautiful shell. Kaden, Mom, Dad, and Sage got back in time to dive down and see her.



Mom, Dad, and Sage went further into the reef but Kaden and I swam the edge when we spotted a snorkel way down at the bottom, farther down than the sea turtle was. Kaden dove way down to get it and came up gasping for air. While he was catching his breath I was looking around the edge when I saw the fin of a black tipped reef shark. Its tail flicked as it disappeared into the depths. Kaden put his mask back on and we dove down but he was gone by the time we got there. We ventured the reef for another hour before we had some lunch. It was mostly seafood so I ate a bit of salad and mashed potatoes before heading back out to the water. After ten minutes Mom called everybody over to see a tiny green sea turtle lying under an overhang of coral. He wasn't scared of us either so we could swim up close enough to take photos.


 After everybody had seen him we let him rest and continued to explore the amazing reef. After a few hours we got back on the boat tired from swimming all day and headed back to our seats for the ride back. We looked over some of the photos we took and removed the SD card of the photos when we returned the camera. Once we got back to Cairns we walked back to our hotel room getting rest for our flight to Sydney the next day.  

Total boats: 1 huge one
Total miles walked: 3 miles
Total miles swam: a ton

Australia: Day Twenty Five - A Living Dinosaur, A Climbing Kangaroo, And an Egg Laying Mammal

In the morning we went for one last swim in the pool before checking out of the hotel and going to the animal sanctuary down the street. We headed into the Sanctuary and went to the Rainforest Habitat. Inside there was a Jabiru stork and some cormorants swimming in the man made pond and a few in the trees.

We walked across the boardwalk and down below was a huge Cassowary looking up at us. He had huge talons on his feet and a blue neck with a red waddle. Cassowary are quite deadly with a razor sharp beak, talons and huge legs.


It uses its strong legs to pounce on its prey and holds it in place with its talons while it rips them apart with its beak. Cassowaries have actually killed multiple people and are one of the more aggressive animals on the planet. They have been around since the dinosaurs and have barely changed. They are much like crocodiles that way both of which kill anything in their way. We took some photos but it was really hot out so he moved underneath the boardwalk to get some shade. We visited the rest of the Sanctuary Habitats and fed some more kangaroos and wallabies.



We also walked out onto a hanging bridge over the Crocodile Habitat and saw a 20 foot crocodile in the water below before heading back to the Rainforest Habitat for the Cassowary feeding time. Once we got there the female was on her way to her food. Cassowaries eat mostly fruit but also eat snakes, frogs, small rodents, and even roadkill if they need to. We snapped a bunch of photos of the alien like animal as she ate. We talked to one of the staff about where to see platypus and tree kangaroo. She told us to head to Nerada Tea factory and a river where the platypus live.

We left the sanctuary and drove towards Nerada Tea Factory to see one of the strangest animals in Australia - a tree climbing kangaroo. We got to the Tea Factory after two hours of driving. There were huge fields of tea plants and a small cafe. We headed inside and talked to the lady working the cash register. She said they have 8 tree kangaroos that live in the area. Usually they find them in the trees so they can point them out to the visitors but it was too hot to look from them that day. We went out anyways and tried to find them ourselves in the small patch of trees. We looked for a good twenty minutes before Zaddek and I saw a flash of movement in the leaves. We ran over to see but there was nothing there. Kaden came running around the corner and hit his head on a low hanging branch. He looked up to see a tree kangaroo staring at us only two feet above our heads. He scurried up the rest of the tree to have a quick nap. We told Mom, Dad, and Sage and they brought the big camera over to get some good photos. We took a few photos before he decided to have a nap.


Then out of the brush and bramble came a tiny joey tree kangaroo. He started his way up the tree with his super big eyes staring at us. Once he knew we weren't a threat he started playing in the brush and climbing and jumping from tree to tree.


We told the lady and four people from the cafe came out to see them. Once the joey climbed out of view we had some tea at the cafe (Sage loves tea parties) before going to see a platypus.

A couple at the cafe said they had seen one at a stream on the edge of the road so we went there on our way to the river. We got out of the car at the stream and looked around. We didn't see anything there so we headed to the river the guide at the sanctuary had told us about. We parked the car and walked down the path alongside the river's edge. Everybody spread out and found spots to sit and wait for the platypus to emerge. I found a nice spot and soon a bunch of bubbles floated up to the surface. They went on nonstop for a minute until a tiny platypus popped up and floated on the surface. After a bit he turned and dove under the water and the bubbles continued. I ran quietly to get Kaden who was sitting down the path. I grabbed him and soon the little platypus emerged again. Kaden was trying to get a better angle through the branches when he slipped and slid down the hill and almost fell in the river. The platypus disappeared and so did the bubbles so we had to find new spots to sit and wait. Ten minutes later Mom and Sage and saw some bubbles and the platypus came back to the surface.



I ran and got Dad and Kaden and they all went to see but Zaddek wanted to spot one himself so he stayed where he was. We watched the tiny platypus feed on the bottom of the river and float two feet away. He was surprisingly small, almost a foot and a half. We sat there for thirty minutes and he dove down again and again until he swam down the river and around the corner. We left the river and drove back to Cairns to our new hotel which was much better than the hostel and went to sleep early excited for our trip to the Great Barrier Reef.

Total vans: 1
Total miles walked: 3.1 miles