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Australiana (6/4/2023)

I had a lovely run on a quiet Sunday morning in Canberra before we went down for our free hotel breakfast. Then we headed out to explore some of the free museums and government buildings, which we only looked at from across the river yesterday. It has been a mostly overcast day with highs in the upper 50s.

Our first stop was the National Library of Australia, which was about a 40 minute walk from our hotel. On the way we passed the Civic Library, which wasn’t open, as well as some other municipal and territorial government buildings.

The Civic Library

The National Library of Australia is one of many free national buildings in what’s referred to as the Parliamentary Zone. Only the ground floor was open to the public, although we were there too early to get in the Reading Room. However, we still got to explore their current exhibit from which we learned quite a bit about Australian history.

Walking across the bridge towards the National Library
The entrance to the library
The exhibit hall

The following are some of the important dates in the formation of Australia and its government that we learned from the library’s exhibit. 1768 — James Cook’s Endeavor voyage charts the eastern seaboard of Australia. 1788 — Sydney was formed as a penal colony. 1804 — Hobart formed, also as a penal colony. 1828 — Western Australia provincial government formed followed by South Australia in 1836 and Victoria in 1851. 1901 — Australia becomes a federation after application to and approval by Queen Victoria.

After leaving the library, we headed towards Parliament House. On the way, we passed the Old Parliament Building which has been converted into The Museum of Australian Democracy. Parliament met in Melbourne from the federation’s establishment in 1901 through May of 1927.

The Old Parliament Building,
which served in this capacity from 1927 until 1988,
when the governmental work moved to the new building below.

The Parliament House opened in 1988. It is one of the largest buildings in the southern hemisphere, 300 meters by 300 meters and has 4,500 rooms. Australia has had 31 Prime Ministers since 1901, one of which has been female, so ahead of the US in that department.

The very unique looking new Parliament Building built into a hill.
The lobby of the very understated capitol.
The chamber for the House of Representatives
The Senate chamber
View of the Queen’s Terrace, front lawn, ANZAC Parade, the War Memorial, and Mount Ainslie from on top of the roof of the Parliament Building.
A statue of Queen Elizabeth II that she unveiled at the opening of the building.

From the Parliament Building, we headed to the National Portrait Gallery, which not surprising, didn’t have many portraits of people we knew.

The High Court building, located next to the National Portrait Gallery
The National Portrait Gallery building
The one portrait we recognized, although we still enjoyed perusing the others

Heading back into town, we walked along the waterfront where there are a number of flags displayed as well as an Australian of the Year Walk that honors Australians in different categories.

A rivers edge cafe and some of the many national flags
displayed throughout the Parliamentary Zone
The waterside trail with the beautiful fall-colored leaves
and the Captain Cook Water Jet in the background
The commemorative stand for the 2012 Australians of the Year recipients. The awards were first given in 1961, and the walk was opened in 2006.
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Canberra Another Post? (6/3/23)

Yesterday, Bob and I spent much of the day on planes flying (and losing a couple hours) from Perth to Canberra via Melbourne. We are pretty proud of the fact that we left Perth having spent no money on food or drink due to the free breakfasts and canapé spread in the evenings for Marriott Bonvoy Club members.

We arrived at the Midnight Hotel, another Marriott hotel, in Canberra, the capital of Australia at about 7:00 last night via cab from the airport. Our visit to Canberra brings us to the Australian Capital Territory, which means we have at some point briefly visited each of the 6 states — New South Wales (Sydney), Queensland (Brisbane), South Australia (Adelaide and Barossa Valley), Tasmania (multiple towns), Victoria (Melbourne), Western Australia (Perth), and 1 of its 2 territories. We have not yet visited the Northern Territory.

Bob having fun with a video screen at the airport after we arrived

Canberra has a population of approximately 450,000, which makes it Australia’s largest inland city. We had a good walkabout today to get an initial overview of some of its most prominent sites. We hope to explore some of those further tomorrow.

First, we headed to the Australian War Memorial, which seems to be in the midst of a pretty comprehensive renovation. To be honest, we weren’t as interested in the memorial as accessing the trails behind to climb Mount Ainslie for the overlook, but we did look at some of the sculptures on the grounds.

A view of the War Memorial from the side
not enclosed in construction fencing
Bomber Command by Neil Dawson in honor of the Australian Air Force
Sandakan Memorial by Anne Ferguson
commemorating the 1,787 Australian prisoners of war
who died in the Sandakan death marches in Borneo
at the end of World War II.
A memorial to working dogs in war, first used by Australian forces in 1918.

The trail to the top of Mount Ainslie begins behind the War Memorial and is 1.8 miles with a 525 foot elevation gain.

The path up, through the white barked trees
that we have seen throughout our trip. Maybe eucalyptus or gum trees?
View of the ANZAC Parade (wide street)
that lines up with Parliament House across the river
View of the city center

After descending the mountain, we walked along the ANZAC Parade to view some of the memorials that line both sides of the road. ANZAC stands for the Australian and New Zealand Army Corp.

Looking down ANZAC Parade
One of the many memorials that line both sides of the street

Finally, we made our way down to the lovely trail along the Molonglo River, which was quite active on a Saturday, to get a little closer view of some of the national museums located there.

The High Court of Australia
Walking along the trail towards the Captain Cook Memorial Water Jet.
National Capital Exhibition Building
Captain James Cook Memorial across from the water jet
The National Museum of Australia
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It was a G’Day Mate (6/01/23)

Today was a gorgeous, sunny, too many photos kind of day. The best kind of day to have! We walked the amazing 6.5 mile trail around the Swan River but also added on a walk onto Heirisson Island to look for kangaroos and a walk up to Kings Park to see some of the beautiful, large park and enjoy some great views of the city. We just kept saying how beautiful everything was. Feeling very blessed.

Walking past Langley Park,
which runs about 1k along the Swan River
and hosts a number of annual events
Looking across from Perth city center towards South Perth
One of many restaurants along the Swan River
On Heirisson Island, looking back towards downtown Perth
Found 2 shy kangaroos hiding in the woods, as we were heading off the island thinking that maybe the kangaroos had all been moved
due to ongoing construction of a pedestrian bridge over the causeway.
On the south side of the Swan River
looking back at downtown through some beautiful palm trees
Three of many black swans that we spotted
Some helpful signage along the trail
R/evolve sculpture by Ben Jones, Angela McHarrie, and Tony Jones, 2021.
It is located in Sir James Mitchell Park
(another lovely large park along the Swan River)
near the Mends Street shopping area
Some fun meerkat sculptures also located in the Mends Street shopping area
A sculpture and fountains in Kings Park.
Kings Park is an almost 400 hectare park on Mount Eliza
overlooking the Swan River, South Perth, and the CBD.
Looking at South Perth from Kings Park
A unusual (for us) bush/tree in the botanic gardens in Kings Park
The impressive war memorial atop Mount Eliza in Kings Park
An attractive pedestrian bridge in Elizabeth Quay in downtown Perth
More beautiful buildings and sculptures along Elizabeth Quay
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An Initial Peek at Perth (5/31/2023)

We started our first full day in Perth with separate activities. I worked out in the hotel’s impressive gym, and Bob went walking down by the waterfront (the Swan River) to see what he could see in the dark.

Looking back into town from the waterfront.
Red arches over a pedestrian bridge, which we’ll cross tomorrow when we’ll circle part of the Swan River on a 10.5 km loop.
An art piece titled Spanda down by the waterfront.

We enjoyed a great (and free!) hot and cold spread for breakfast before venturing out for mostly indoor activities due to the forecasted rain. We walked through Murray Street Mall to get to Perth Station, the main train/tram station for the city center. Yesterday, we took the tram from the airport into the city and got off at Mciver station. Bob wanted to see this station as we could catch our tram here back to the airport on Friday. We were assisted by a rail official who had lots of helpful information. We have been very impressed with the customer service here.

A pic of Murray Street Mall.
A beautiful building between the mall and Perth Station housing an H&M in the former General Post Office Building.
A cool green sculpture (The Big Cactus) across the street from Perth Station.
The main entrance to the Perth Station.

Next, it was on to the Perth Cultural Centre. The Centre is composed of six institutions, 1) the State Theatre Centre of Western Australia (WA), 2) Art Gallery of WA, 3) WA Museum of Boola Badip, 4) State Library of WA, 5) The Blue Room Theatre, and 6) Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts. We focused on the library and art gallery.

Entering the Perth Cultural Centre from the walkway from the tram station
Situated around the Cultural Centre were statues of animals
with information to help educate you about them.
The outside of the WA Museum Boola Bardip,
which tells the stories of Western Australia. The building appears to be a modern build but incorporating an older structure.

The WA State Library was a bit of disappointment. Architecturally, it wasn’t very interesting, and it only had a small exhibit called Stuff that showed the range of items that the library collects, seemingly a bit of everything. The library did have a good film playing that talked about their work as well.

The outside of the state library.
We learned inside that the striped sculptures out front
are part of the library’s collection.
The inside ground floor of the state library.
Part of the Stuff exhibit

The Art Gallery of WA was a popular place today. There must have been at least 5 school groups there while we were there. We were most impressed with the current exhibit, that featured a number of big heads, the exhibit by Year 12 high school students, and the views from the top of the building.

The main hall of the art Gallery of WA.
The traveling exhibit was by Yoshitomo Nara.
Bob counted 8 Big Head Sculptures in his work.
This is a painting by Ricard Bell called One More Hour of Daylight.
I read the complete description that accompanied this painting,
and it haunted me. Not worth a bullet — see below.
We need to stop othering people.
Not worth a bullet?!
One of the Year 12 student exhibits.
We were impressed not only by the artwork but the message behind them.
The walkway from the train station to the cultural centre,
as seen from the middle of the art gallery.
A view of the Perth Station from the art gallery.
The art gallery had a rooftop sculpture walk and bar
(though not open until Spring).
Another view from the rooftop.
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A New Side of Australia (5/30/23)

Bob and I enjoyed our wine tasting Monday afternoon at the Seppeltsfield Winery. It was a quiet day there, as we were the only visitors, so we were able to have a good chat with our pourer.

Driving to the winery past the 2,000 palms that line the road to the site.
We learned from our pourer that these were planted
during the Great Depression to help keep their employees working at a time when May wineries were forced to lay off their staff.
Walking from the car park to the cellar door
A fountain outside the cellar door
Inside the attractive cellar door

This morning we left Tanunda to drive back to the Adelaide airport to fly to Perth in Western Australia. We left Adelaide a little late, at about 12:30 p.m Adelaide time and arrived in Perth about 3:40 p.m. Perth time. Oddly, Perth is 1.5 hours behind Adelaide.

Perth is the capital and largest city of Western Australia with a population of 2.1 million. It is located along the Indian Ocean. For our Scottish friends, it was named after the city of Perth in Scotland, a town that Bob and I are not familiar with. It is the regional headquarters of several mining operations.

We have moved beyond the marathon and are back in Bob 60th birthday celebration mode. We are members of the Marriott hotel program, so have free hotel stays in the Westin Hotel in Perth while we are here, but Bob had requested (and we got) an upgrade to a suite. We are now feeling quite pampered and may end up having a relaxing stay in Perth by spending some time in the hotel .😀

The free Prosecco on offer at check in
A welcome gift in our suite
The living area
A view from our room
A different view
A view from the pool on the 5th floor
A view from the pool lounge
One of the hotel’s restaurant where our free breakfasts will be served
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Still wet and chilly (5/29/2023)

After a pretty good post-marathon dinner last night and a night of sleep, we started our third day with a visit to the laundromat across the street from our hotel. We hadn’t washed clothes since our time in Janesville, Wisconsin. The laundromat was bright and clean, although no seats, and the cost was $4 Australian to wash and $6 Australian to dry (for 30 minutes).

I didn’t ride the horse, but I wanted to sit to read while we were waiting.

After folding and storing the washed clothes, we decided to go out and about even though it was dreary out. First, we hit the Barossa Sculpture Park by an overlook. The fog/mist/dew didn’t allow for any view to speak of, but we got to check out a few sculptures, including a big head sculpture for Bob.

A view of the sculpture park from the overlook car park
A marker detailing what we would see on a clear day
This is a memorial in the car park to celebrate
British and German immigrants to this part of Australia.

Next, Bob had found a cheese shop he was interested in, so we drove a short distance to the nearby town of Angaston. The cheese shop was nice to look around and Bob was going to do a cheese tasting but the place seemed to be staffed by only one employee who wasn’t able to get to all of the potential customers. Beth did a quick walk through town while Bob was in the shop.

The cheese shop, which offered standard and customized tastings
and sold cheeses and related cheese accompaniments
A statue in a park across from the shop
A war memorial in the same park
A pretty walkway in town
Another park behind the walkway
A trail through the park
Sheep grazing on the hill behind the park
A small cemetery
An impressive tree!

Next, we drove a short distance to a chocolate shop, the Barossa Valley Chocolate Company, that also had a cafe and a cellar door.

The chocolate shop
The pretty water feature beside the shop
Helpful labeling and color coding of different types of chocolate
Chocolate koala making in progress

Lastly, we returned to our hotel in Tanunda to explore the shopping district near our hotel. We started in a next door gallery and made a surprising discovery behind in the back of the building.

This is an 1877 Hill and Son grand organ.
It was originally placed in the Adelaide Town Hall.
It was placed in Tanunda when it needed restoration.
It is now fully restored and tours are conducted on Wednesdays.
A woven tapestry representing the Barossa Valley
in the same room as the organ
A memorial to the Lutheran pioneers that came to South Australia in 1938.
The Tanunda library.

This afternoon we’ll be doing another wine tasting that we had scheduled online. This one will be at Seppeltsfield.

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Barossa Valley and a marathon (5/28/2023)

Yesterday, we left Adelaide by bussing to the airport to pick up a rental car which we drove up to Tanunda, one of the four main cities in the Barossa Valley wine region. Bob always gets a little anxious with driving on the left, but he picked it back up with no problem.

We were able to check into our hotel room early and just hung out after we picked up groceries at the local Foodland right across the street to give my legs a rest before the today’s marathon.

I have been stressing about the marathon, as the forecast was for rain and wind — two elements that I avoid in my training runs. Such is karma. The run started at 7:30am this morning, and as forecasted, it was windy, chilly, and rainy. I survived and finished second (out of only 9) in my age/gender category. Bob drove me to the start and met me at the end.

This winery was the sponsor for the marathon.
The small race village at the start and end of the race.
All runners (5k, 10k, 1/2 marathon, and marathon)
started and ended at the same place.
Bundled up spectators at the finish line.
Me coming through the finish chute
Getting ready to head back to the hotel with Bob

We had made wine tasting reservations online prior to our arrival for a 2:00 pm tasting at Jacob’s Creek, a brand we’re familiar with. It was a nice (not spectacular) facility and good wines with a friendly pourer. They had multiple tasting options for $10 Australian (approximately US$6.70), but if you visit the Barossa Valley and have limited time, there are probably more impressive cellar doors.

The outside of the cellar door
The lovely surroundings
Inside the cellar door. Our tasting was at the bar.

After the tasting, we stopped at Chateau Tanunda since they sponsored the marathon event. We wanted to at least see the grounds of the Barossa Valley’s first winery. Bob and I split a glass, the nice hostess poured it in two glasses for us and stoked up the fire.

Driving from Jacob’s Creek to Château Tanunda.
Chateau Tanunda
Views of the valley from the terrace
The lovely fire and our wines
The wine tasting station inside the Chateau
More of the cellar door
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Indoor Adelaide Activities (5/25/2023)

We expected a rainy day today, and we got it, so we headed down North Terrace Street (where our hotel is also located) to visit some of Adelaide’s free indoor attractions. On our way, we saw a few statues of important individuals from South Australia as well as an impressive war memorial and Anzac Centenary Memorial Walk and Wall.

Meet William and Lawrence Bragg, father and son,
who shared the Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1915, Australia’s first in that field.
The National War Memorial for WWI, side facing the street.
The opposite side of the Memorial.
You can walk inside to see the names of South Australians
who died in the Great War.

Our first stop was the State Library of South Australia. It was created in 1834 and their collections are focused on South Australiana, family history, and special collections. Parts of the library are under construction, but we still got to see a number of exhibits, including an interesting one on old menus.

The State Library of South Australia.
Part of their collection.
A blown up version of the oldest menu in their collection. This was the meal provided for a dinner in honor of the first visit by a member of the British royal family to Australia, Prince Alfred (son of Queen Victoria).
More of the library’s collections

From the State Library, we walked down the block to the Art Gallery of South Australia. The gallery has one of the largest art museum collections in Australia, comprising almost 47,000 works of art spanning 2,000 years. We thought it might be focused exclusively on South Australian artists, but that wasn’t the case.

The Art Gallery of South Australia
A sample of the variety of the collections.
The canoe is by Johnny Bulunbulun from the Northern Territory.
It’s stitched bark and filled with hand painted snails shells.
This painting and the one below were done by Dušan Marek from Czechoslovakia.
This one is titled, The Equator.
It was completed on the boat sailing to Sydney in 1948,
as his family immigrated to Australia.
This one is titled Perpetuum.
I can’t blow up the card enough to determine the artist and title of this piece,
but based on its contents, you could say he either nailed it or screwed it up.

Our final stop was at the Migration Museum. This museum provided a good overview of the evolution of migration to Australia as well as the changing national migration policies. It celebrates cultural diversity and the contributions of the different immigrants to Australia.

Entrance to the Migration Museum
In starting the Migration Museum, they reached out to various ethnic groups to create a banner to represent them in the museum.
A number of banners currently hang in the museum,
and others are presented via a slide projector onto the wall.
Settlement square outside the museum.
Each of the orange tiles contains a name or names of immigrants from over 90 countries who have shared their immigration experience.
A statue representing the immigrant experience
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Adelaide Adventure (5/24/23)

There are six federated states in Australia. Adelaide is the capital city and most populous city of the federated state of South Australia. With a population of almost 1.4 million, it is the 5th largest city in Australia. It is 654 km northwest of Melbourne, where we’ll be doing our housesit. As opposed to many other areas of Australia, which were originally populated by convicts expelled from England, Adelaide was a freely settled city.

There is an incredible Parks Land Hike/Bike Trail that circles the entire downtown area of Adelaide. I ran just a small part of it this morning and hope to run more tomorrow.

Bob and I had a good walkabout today to take advantage of the great weather (as in no rain, which is in the forecast for most of the next few days). We saw a lot and took way too many photos.

We began by walking down Hindley Street, a main shopping street, which ends with the pedestrian only Rundle Mall Street.

Haigh’s Chocolates are made in Adelaide and started there in 1915.
This is the start of the art-filled Rundle Mall Street pedestrian area.
Art on Rundle
Malls, plazas, and arcades were plentiful on both sides of the pedestrian mall.
Another art installment on Rundle.

We checked out the National Wine Centre of Australia, which allowed us to learn more about the Barossa Valley wine region that we’ll be visiting this weekend as well as virtually explore some of the other 65 wine regions in Australia via a virtual reality headset. The wine centre was next to the beautiful Botanic Gardens that were free to explore.

A children’s learning area near the entrance to the Botanical Garden.
Stumbled upon this structure in the gardens.
The Botanical Garden was on the edge of downtown.
This building focused on cacti and succulents, inside and out.
A colorful cactus plant inside the building.
This was our lunch spot.

We then walked along a trail by the River Torrens that runs through town. It is bordered by parts of the University of Adelaide as well as theaters, the convention center, a stadium/concert venue, and casino.

Along the serene river, evidence of the city’s continued growth
The brown building on the left is the convention center.
A pic of the Adelaide Oval, a sports stadium which hosts, among other events, Australian Rules Football.
A closer photo of the Adelaide Convention Centre
and the nicely landscaped lawn.
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Hello from Tomorrow Down Under! (5/23/23)

We have completed our long journey to Adelaide! We are currently 14.5 hours ahead of our friends and family in the Central Time Zone of the US.

A quick review of our travel. We flew Air Canada from Chicago to Vancouver and then Vancouver to Sydney. We were not terribly impressed with the airline. On the plus side, we left and arrived on schedule and the staff were friendly. However, they provided only barebones amenities for 2 international flights, and they left the lights up for the entirety of the flight to Sydney. Surprisingly, Bob and I slept the most that we have on any international flight in along time. We then switched to Virgin Atlantic for the flight from Sydney to Adelaide. Again, pretty basic but friendly service.

In terms of the airports, the Vancouver airport is designed to create feelings of calm, with lots of water features, artwork, a big aquarium with fish, etc. We were impressed. The Sydney airport, on the other hand, lacked good signage for the customs process and due to our domestic transfer, required us to pick up our luggage and then take a 15 minute bus transfer to the domestic terminal to check our bags onto the next flight. A process that would have made me crazy stressful if we hadn’t had such a long five hour layover.

The Adelaide airport was cute and bright. We were off quickly and our luggage was on the carousel by the time we got there to pick them up. We grabbed a bus into the city (about 20 minutes at 2ish this afternoon) and then had a short walk to our hotel.

A Dali sculpture outside the Adelaide airport
A view of the Adelaide airport as we pulled out on the bus

After checking in and getting settled, we walked to the Adelaide Central Market that we had read about. We loved it. It’s a good mix of restaurants and vendors of various goods — produce, cheese, wine, ready to go salads, meats, bulk goods, flowers, etc.

Some medical buildings across from our hotel
A theater across from the market
Adelaide’s Central Market
Some of the produce stalls
People shopping in the market
Seating for restaurants in the market

We always love to find examples of the varied uses of the English language around the world. See below. In the US, this site would have been marked as a bus station.