Sunday, October 29, 2006

At Geraldton with Marcus and Tarnishia

Hello all, we are now set up in our little home for a month here in Geraldton. It’s a comfy holiday house not very far from St Georges Beach in a nice quiet area. It’s so good to be spending time with Marcus and Tarni. She’s 4 now and a real cutie (also with plenty of attitude) and Adam and I are having fun with her and catching up with Marcus. We haven’t seen them since our wedding in Fiji about a year and a half ago, when Marcus was Best Man and Tarni was our Flowergirl. :-)

During our first few days here we’ve had a look around, been for a bike ride into town, gone to the beach and I have resumed my fledgling windsurfing career! We picked up a second hand beginner’s board for me (which means it’s nice and floaty and stable, and good for practicing turns etc) and I have been out a couple of times already. So far so good! I plan having lessons too, to speed my progress up so that I can (hopefully) start sailing on a faster short board sooner. Marcus has a short board which floats me easily, so I am able to practice on that too. Adam took Tarni out on the front of the big board yesterday, but despite being excited to hop on the board initially, she quickly became scared and the tears started as soon as the board started moving. Another time maybe. :-)

Marcus and Adam are meanwhile waiting for some stronger wind so they can get out sailing too- it’s forecast to pick up later this week. For those of you who don’t know, Geraldton is a world wide windsurfing hot spot, which is why we are here. Adam and Marcus have been sailing here a few times before, and have both really been looking forward to this extended stay so they can get in plenty of windsurfing.

It’s a relief to be out of the caravan and in one spot for a while- basically to take a break from the road and just live. We’ve even been able to unpack our clothes and things and it’s terrific feeling as though we have a home base for more than a week or so. It also means we can do other things we normally can’t, such as go to a chiro to get our backs back into line etc.

Lots of love,
Emma & Adam xx

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Kalbarri National Park

We had a great day today exploring Kalbarri National Park. We spent the morning on the coast, looking at stunning lookouts of sheer cliff faces, and also did a bushwalk. We then drove into another section of the park which boasts some dramatic gorges, with the Murchison River running through the middle. Very impressive. It was also very hot and unfortunately more flies than we have encountered on our trip so far! Lots of people were wearing fly nets over their hats and we wished we had them too, no matter how uncool we may have looked.

After a full day we came back to the beach for a refreshing swim. Locally caught fish and chips tonight I think. :-)

Hope you are all well. Please stay in touch, it’s always lovely receiving comments on here or emails with your news.

In just a couple of days we meet up with Marcus (Adam’s brother) and his lovely daughter Tarnishia- we are really looking forward to seeing them! We will all be staying in Geraldton in a unit for a month. See you soon Marcus!

Love Emma & Adam xx

Monday, October 23, 2006

At Kalbarri now...

Hi all...after a few more days relaxing and swimming and playing tennis etc at Monkey Mia, we are now a bit further south at Kalbarri. Lovely little town on a river mouth. We'll be exploring here for a few days, doing some bushwalks etc. More news soon. Love, Em & Ad xx

Friday, October 20, 2006

The elusive dugong

Hi all…we spotted our first ever dugong yesterday on our wildlife cruise, so we were very pleased with that! Strange looking creatures, with fat bodies and a tale similar in shape (but much smaller) to a humpbacks. They meanwhile have a big snout for munching on seagrass beds. We saw three, one on its own, and then a mother and calf.

We also saw more dolphins, and some big loggerhead turtles.

Today we drove around the region and explored a few excellent lookouts. From one bluff we could see so many sharks swimming below- a mix of reef sharks and bigger tiger sharks (they don’t call it Shark Bay for nothing). There were also a few big manta rays cruising along too.

Yesterday afternoon we finally put our tennis racquets to use and played for an hour or so on the courts here…we decided to keep a game score tally and at the end of our booking time we were locked at 8-all! Typical of us…we aren’t competitive at all….
We then treated ourselves to a dinner out in the monkey mia resort restaurant. Fantastic food! We shared entrée, then ate mains and a dessert each! I had this delicious chicken and prawn dish, on sweet potato with a creamy mustard sauce…YUM! And Adam had a steak and seafood meal which he also raved about. Then I had this chocolate tart indulgence while Adam had a creamy mars bar sundae. We were so full we felt a bit sick when we got back to the van, but we try not to eat out too much so it was fun to lash out and it was so yummy! I have a bit of a funny tummy today still…Adam says it’s the price I pay for gluttony…heehe.

We are having a tennis rematch today. Bit sore from yesterday, but we figure we need some extra exercise today!

Love and hugs, Emma and Adam.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Look at these lovely dolphins!


I took this pic this morning...five dolphins came in today...Nicky- the matriarch, who is about 30 years old and been coming in since she was a baby in the 70s! plus two other mums with their little ones...awww

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Monkey Mia

We are in a lovely beachfront site at Monkey Mia- a pretty, remote place, world heritage listed, and full of wildlife, most of it found in the Shark Bay Marine Park- dugongs (the world's highest population), turtles, LOTS of tiger sharks, rays etc, and of course, the famous turtles, which come into the beach most days and are fed fish.

We have seen the dolphins on both our mornings here so far- yesterday only one came in and today there were nine, which was great! It's a bit touristy and overrated in some ways, but still a thrill to see the dolphins! We are also heading out on a catamaran on a wildlife cruise to see some of the other marine wildlife here- especially the dugongs!

I've also spotted some new types of birds, for my ever growing bird list.

more soon... xx

Sunday, October 15, 2006

At Carnarvon...

At Carnarvon and have been catching up the past couple of days on washing, shopping etc. and rest! Off to Monkey Mia tomorrow which should be tops.
Here is a pic of wild emus just outside the gates to Gnaraloo Station (tried to upload others but the internet service is too slow today):









Love, E&A xoxxo

Friday, October 13, 2006

Red Bluff and Gnaraloo photos...

The road through Quobba Station on the way to Red Bluff. Amazing cliffs that drop off into the Indian Ocean, with waves constantly smashing them.





Sunset at our Palm Fronded Humpy at Red Bluff.........great little hammock out the front for a first class view with a drink. The surf spot is right in front of where the sun is setting, straight off the bluff.








Scott McKercher.............pro windsurfer.......at Gnaraloo.....executing a backloop the way it should be done....the man threw himself into many a mast high wave (a mast is approx 14ft high), riding as fluently as a surfer.









And here is our humpy at Red Bluff.........rustic! We loved it.







Here is one of Emma's waves at Red Bluff........a gutsy effort to snavel one of these heaving barrelling beasts.....we'll be back!

Red Bluff and Gnaraloo Stations...amazing, rugged, remote

Hi all...it's friday night and we are just back from our camping stay at a couple of sheep stations on remote sections of coastline- been great! Here's the update:


Tuesday Oct 10

The sign leading into Red Bluff, here at Quobba Station (about 100kms north of Carnarvon on a dirt road) says “Welcome to Red Bluff- Nature at its rarest and most beautifully inspiring”, and that pretty much sums up this place. Red Bluff itself rises dramatically from the ocean, the coastline then sweeping around to the north, to create a small pocket protected from the prevailing SW onshore winds. On the point is the famous Red Bluff surf break…bit windy this afternoon, but we can see the waves breaking out there still, and I took a walk out there earlier, and we hope for a surf in the morning perhaps. Will be a bit scary as it’s another heavy reef break- just watching the water sucking back off the rock ledge, which is covered in sea urchins, was enough to make me nervous, but I’d love to be able to have a go surfing here just the same!

Like Warroora this place is wild and remote, with very little development, and lots of emus and sheep about on the drive in on the dirt road. The scenery is stunning- harsh, yet beautiful. I am sitting in the late afternoon sun typing this, looking out over the ocean.

Where we are staying here is another memory and unique experience in itself. We are staying in a “palm frond beach humpie”. As the name suggests, this is a classic beach shack, with the walls actually made from palm fronds, which have been layed over chicken wire. It has a concrete floor and it full of old furniture and beds (a double and some bunks, an old table, some shelves). This now takes the cake as the most unique place we have stayed! We have no power or water, so we have our gas cooker and brought our solar shower and lots of water etc. This is great! We even have a hammock outside. Sigh.

Weds oct 11

Windy, sunny, sadly no surf (swell and waves but too windy). A lovely relaxing day. We feel so removed from everyday reality we could be on an island.
We went for a walk to the top of the bluff and back, had a swim, lunch, red books. Last night I lay in the hammock and gazed at the stars. We plan to return here one day.

This beach shack reminds me of my childhood days playing in our old wooden boatshed on the waterfront on the Port Hacking in Sydney. I guess it’s the rustic feel, all the old furniture, the saltwater. We love it for its simplicity and uniqueness, lack of polish and distance from a town.

Thurs oct 12

Woke up to a light off-shore breeze with the surf looking good! Woke Adam to check out the surf. Sadly, Adam’s cold has freshened back up and he wasn’t feeling well enough to tackle the heavy surf over the reef. I was though, so feeling very nervous, especially without Adam to jump in off the reef ledge with me, and sit with me at this new surf spot- I put on my wetsuit and trekked out to the point. It was Adam’s turn to stand on the shore with the camera. I’ll admit I was really anxious when I paddled out! Some heavy 6t sets were coming through. I sat on the shoulder though and got some great waves which came through more on the outside! So smooth, and so fast, breaking over the reef. It was a real adrenalin rush and I am so glad I went out!

We are now in the wind in our tent at Gnaraloo. So many guys here windsurfing and they are fantastic to watch in the waves. Adam might go out tomorrow if he feels better, or the swell drops a bit- it’s pretty big out there right now!
We both aren’t enjoying being in our tent in the gale!

Fri Oct 13

We awoke to very strong offshore winds and huge surf! Too big for us, smashing down onto the reef. We did see two guys go out, but they didn’t last too long. The sets were BIG..probably 8-10 foot and heavy.
We ate our breakfast in our car at a lookout so we could watch the waves- it was fun- we even took our gas stove so we could have some coffees (fancy latte ones too).
We then packed up our tent, decided we’d drive back to Carnarvon in the late afternoon, instead of spending another night in our exposed site in the strong wind.
There is a lagoon section inside the reef in one area just down from the camping area at Gnaraloo…it’s the most southern point of Ningaloo Reef, so after we’d packed the car we went snorkelling and saw plenty of fish. It was good to do something and the lagoon was partly sheltered from the wind.
Soon afterwards, amazingly, the wind swung right around and after howling in from the SE, starting belting in from the SW (onshore). Once again the windsurfers were straight out- the waves even bigger today than yesterday and the wind even stronger.
Adam and I took photos and watched for a couple of hours this afternoon- Adam recognized some of Australia’s top windsurfers in action (he’s seen them in magazines etc). It was pretty impressive.
Now we are back in civilization at Carnarvon, and back in our little caravan. It was a big job to unpack and repack camping and other stuff once again, but thankfully it’s all done now and we can rest. Here for the next couple of days…
Lots of love to all,
Emma & Adam xx

Monday, October 09, 2006

From Exmouth to Warroora Station

Saturday October 7, 2006
We are now south of Coral Bay, staying on a working sheep station called Warroora (we visited here during our stay at coral bay one day)- it’s amazing being here- so much empty, harsh land which runs right to the coastline. There is the Ningaloo Reef offshore (we are now near the southern end of the reef system) and its dramatic, barren and beautiful. There is noone else in sight- a little further along there are some other vans and campers, but we cant even see them from here. So it’s just us, in peace and quiet (although, the wind is howling onshore right now, so that’s creating a bit of noise!). The full moon is rising now and looks magical over the land- a glowing yellow ball, casting a soft glow over the hills and the ocean. This is a place and an experience we certainly won’t forget. We enjoyed our solar shower again this afternoon and we are now relaxing after a yummy dinner. We’ll spend tomorrow night out here too- hopefully tomorrow we might snorkel or surf if the wind drops off a bit….adam might sail in the afternoon.

Sunday October 7

Windy and sunny today- we saw heaps of turtles swimming just offshore- we watched them while we sat overlooking the ocean eating our breakfast- not another person, building, car (or anything man-made) in sight! Awesome.

We went snorkelling quickly, despite the wind, then had some lunch. Adam then went sailing as the wind was so strong! He said it was one of the strongest winds he has ever been sailing in. I went down to the beach and stood in the gale to take photos of him- got some goodies too. I enjoy trying to capture good action shots, then when I cant take the wind anymore I retreat indoors (which is where we spent the rest of the afternoon, reading books and playing scrabble- our scrabble tournament continues, with Adam still in front, although I have made some ground).

Monday 9th
At Carnarvon now, and have just done a major grocery shop and repack of the caravan and car again ready for four days camping on some more working sheep stations on the coast north of here. The first one is Quobba Station, where we will stay at Red Bluff, a famous surf spot.
Then it’s on to Gnarloo Station, also legendry among surfing and windsurfing circles as a great location- remote and alluring. We hope we might get to surf at either place, but it’s not really the right time of the year for surfing, as it’s the windy season- but that’s good for Adam who is hoping for some more windsurfing. The coastline is rugged and dramatically beautiful, like so much of WA. So we are looking forward to it! Sadly, Adam now has my cold, just as I am starting to feel back at 100%...hopefully he’ll be rid of it quickly, same as I was.
Carnarvon is a nice town and we have a couple of days here when we come back from camping- that’s when we’ll have phone and internet service again and is when we’ll be able to update the blog next!
Sending love and our best wishes….and a big hi to my mum who is currently travelling in Croatia and having a great time- way to go mum!

Friday, October 06, 2006

Hi friends and family- here’s what we’ve been up too the past four days in Exmouth:

Oct 4

The past couple of days at Exmouth have been fun, although it has been consistently windy- it’s always blowing from the SE overnight (offshore), then turning SW (onshore) during the day. Last night it was so strong the van shook with every gust – a little tent set up next to us looked like it was about to be flattened! This was the windest occasion we both had ever been witness to!

Anyway, the wind aside its been warm and sunny and yesterday we had a top time exploring the Cape Range National Park- we saw some fantastic, arid canyons (it hardly ever rains here, not even in summer)- we were surprised by how dramatically beautiful the park is!
Yesterday morning we went for a snorkel at a spot called “Oyster stacks”- despite the wind it was good fun and there were so many fish! Our favourites were all the huge parrot fish- so many different colours, and all chomping on the coral. There are so many large snapper schooled here, in only 4ft of water, that it is hard to believe.

Today we took is easy for the first half of the day as the wind was so still so strong from the SE, even too strong to make surfing pleasurable, plus I have developed an irritating head cold which is slowing me down a bit. Had a swim, got my haircut and we had a nice lunch at the Exmouth Health Food Shop…then on the way home we checked the surf spot here (near our van park, about 17kms out of town at Vlemingh Head) only to find the wind had dropped off and was offshore and the waves looked quite good, 4-5ft breaking over mid depth reef. So, of course, we went surfing –our first surf since the Sunshine Coast! (I figured the saltwater might clear out my head a bit anyway!). I’ll let Adam give the surf report, as he is probably better equipped to give a detailed account than me..I’ll just say we had to walk out and paddle over reef and I was nervous as we jumped in and headed out…plus some of the sets were fairly solid:

Surf report: I knew from the first duck dive that the surf was bigger and more powerful then it looked…giving us both an unforgiving beating for not diving deeper....that special quality that surfing over a rock/reef bottom brings to the table. Anyway, the surf gets through a big space in the reef (Ningaloo reef only starts at Exmouth) at this headland, and has been quite sizey as the wind had blown up 3.5 metere swells over the last week, with all of the surfers, windsurfers and kitesurfers smiling. The waves came in over deep sections of waters and just popped up in front of you, and could catch you out if you didn’t watch it intently……we copped a few more beatings for not paying attention when sitting contentedly on the inside wating for the little screamers that came through. The strong SE wind had dropped the size of the waves to a more manageable 4-5ft today, with the previous days being up to twice this big at the surfable breaks, looking absolutely ginormous when breaking on the outside reef. Anyway, lots of big dark shapes in the water which was not super clear cos of all of the swell, we hoped were large turtles, coral bed and mushroom reef, this was most probably the case. A good surf that got better once confidence was built, after all we hadn’t been surfing for 4 months……We hooted each other on some great waves- fast with little barrelling sections, with emma getting the wave of the day with a 4ft fast peeling barrel which probably blistered the bottom of her boogie..touche….hope the swell hangs around for tomorrow.

Oct 5

We started the day with another top surf- similar conditions to yesterday, only a bit better as the tide was higher and it wasn’t as windy. Clear sunshine as usual.
We went straight from the surf for a drive into the Cape Range National Park and a snorkel at Turquoise Bay- it was much nicer than the other day, due to less wind, thankfully.
Then (no rest for the wicked) we drove further into the NP and saw Yardie Creek Gorge…it has a saltwater creek running into it and is very pretty.
By then it was well after lunch and Adam was considering going sailing (we both felt tired, but if the conditions are right, you can’t not go …)….the wind didn’t get quite strong enough today though, so we came back, showered, bought icecreams and relaxed! An excellent day overall.
Hopefully more surf in the morning.

Oct 6

Yay- more quality surfing and snorkelling today! Offshore winds, which have now turned light onshore. It’s also VERY hot today- 38 degrees!

We leave Exmouth tomorrow to continue south along the coast.

Love and hugs,
Emma & Adam xx

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Vlamingh Head and Graveyards

Sep 30

Emma: We arrived in Exmouth today and this afternoon while Adam played guitar and rested I set off to check out the area. I drove up to the lighthouse near where we are staying and saw some excellent views around the cape. I also saw lots of whales! I then drove to another beach where there quite a few green turtles and I actually saw two mating- with one turtle on top of the other as they were swimming along- never thought I’d see that! They are currently coming up onto beaches around here at night to lay their eggs.
Then, as I walked back to the car there was an osprey sitting on the railing next to the path- it didn’t fly away and I was standing very close…took a few good piccies.
On my drive to another section of the coastline I then saw a wild emu with a little one running along behind her. Then I went snorkelling, saw a little shark, plus more whales breaching out to sea. Quite an afternoon for wildlife!
It’s pretty windy again so we hope it drops off for a morning snorkel, then adam might go sailing again.

1st Oct

Adam: Today we went to Turquoise Bay and did a 100metre drift snorkel over some bombies heavily populated by super colourful fish. Snapper in the marine reserve are so big and couldn’t care less about us snorkeling near them. Parrot fish were in abundance chomping on the coral, some were well over a foot long, and if you stopped and listened closely your could easily hear them cracking the coral with their strong beaks. Nemo fish, clams, Surgeon and butterfly fish all in abundance.

We stopped at the beach where the turtle “rookery” is said to be and saw two more loggerheads going at it……….it’s mating season after all.

Went sailing for a couple of hours at a place called Graveyards, which is a hole in the Ningaloo reef (which allows access to the surf) about 15ks south of where we are staying at Vlamingh Head (most northern tip of the Exmouth peninsula, WA). Was the best sailing I have ever sampled in WA, with the winds very consistent, and some nice waves for jumping and riding. There were some many large Loggerheads and Green turtles here too. After going at it in the surf, they would come up onto the sand on the beach to rest before heading out for lots more turtle sex. It was amazing sailing with them, seeing them rise to take a breathe and hanging with them on the beach, they were so big!

Thanks Emma for spending the time to take so many sailing pics of me.

Loggerhead taking a rest.

Little jump on way out to the reef

Gybe on the inside before heading back out to waves


Back Loop..........attempt.......failed.....dug the nose in on landing, again....and again...and again and got punished every time....maybe one day?