Thursday 5 December 2013

Mini Adventure Series No.4 (10th-12th May)

Melbourne, A Day at the Races.

Firstly, I'm very sorry Julie. The car was only borrowed for a trip to Canberra, not the extra 800km. Though I'm pretty sure Casey's intention had only ever been to go to Melbourne, having mentioned it previously and being too stubborn to change his mind.

We actually had the full weekend away this time, leaving Friday afternoon. We went as far as Seymour, just outside of Melbourne that night, and found absolutely nothing to do in the town. The motel was miles (exaggerating slightly) out of the main town but it was the best quality motel we've stayed in. No, I have no idea which it was but had I been making notes of all we've stayed in I could probably have done a post about where to, and not to stay.

Saturday morning we ventured into the city. It is incredibly hard to find anything in a city when you don't even know what there is to find. It normally turns into hours of wandering around, getting lost and finding very little. It's much easier to find things in the middle of nowhere, such things always seem to want to be found. (I am not a city person). What we did manage to find was the oldest European building in Australia, built in 1755. Which you may or may not know was 15 years before Australia was actually discovered...

What we found was Captain Cook's Cottage which was shipped over from Yorkshire in 1933 and rebuilt brick by brick. (Thank you once again Jenny's book)
Somehow what I didn't manage to get was a picture. =(

After our somewhat aimless wanderings, we decided to go to Caulfield race course and to the horse races. Now I've always imagined going to the races as a fun day, plenty to do and everyone dressed up. Maybe that's the case back home but in Australia races are no big deal. They happen everyday. There can be a dozen race courses running a day. And to do there... there's a bar, betting and nothing to do between races, which can be up to an hour apart!
While the race is actually happening, it's quite fun. Choose a horse, even if you don't put money on it and get very enthusiastic about it anyway. I liked the grey horses that day. Even picked a winner at one point.

That evening we managed to find possibly the worst accommodation we've stayed in. It was in or near St. Kilda, right on the beach. It really wasn't very good. But we did find a little hill park next to the beach, which had a great view of the sunset over Melbourne and some really good live music from a youth group or something similar. And afterwards a good night out. Okay so we had to walk a fair way to find any trace of a night life but we got there eventually, and despite St. Kilda supposedly being a 'rough' area, it was a great night. We did get a bit lost trying to find our way back to the motel, then had a 2am wander down the beach, brilliant.

Since I had been given some idea of where we were going this time, I had actually had a chance to find something I wanted to do. I'd found an animal sanctuary just outside of Melbourne. Well it turned out that Healesville Animal Sanctuary was slightly in the middle of nowhere, and a fair drive away.





You could get right up close to the 'roos, even if you weren't actually supposed to (tut tut Casey). The pelicans just wandered wherever they wanted to. And the echidna!!! This was the first time I'd come across an echidna, even the first time I'd heard of them. They are the most adorable things ever!! I want one!!
There were dingos and emus and a koala experience. There aren't many places where you can actually hold a koala, unless you go find one in the wild, which would be extremely difficult anyway, and having seen their claws I wouldn't advise grabbing hold of a wild one.

Unfortunately Healesville wasn't one of the places you can hold one, but with the koala ex. you do get right up close and I did stroke one (shh don't tell).I still want to cuddle one though.
The wombat and the Tasmanian devil were no shows, but that's okay. I've seen a wild wommie so that's okay and I did get a peak of a tassie in Sydney.
What I did get to see was... a platypus! No picture 'coz it was a dark room with no flashes allowed. Platypuses are nocturnal. But at least I've seen one.

All in all it was a brilliant weekend. And I even got a lovely fresh loaf of olive sourdough bread to munch on the way home.






















Wednesday 4 December 2013

Mini Adventure Series No.3 (28th April)

Koorawatha Falls

This little trip was only a day trip, or even really an afternoon trip. Koorawatha is only about 50km out of Young.

To get to the falls you turn off the main road into a little village. The word that came to my mind in this village was 'hill-billy'. It was all really ramshackle wooden houses. Nothing really looked like it had been taken care of at all, and there were chickens or dogs in nearly every garden.

To get to the waterfall, you go down a dirt road out of the village. Really you need a 4x4. There are places where the bottom just seems to have fallen out of the road. Rather a rough drive.

Now just like the snowfields we went to the previous weekend that had no snow, the water fall had no water. That's what you get when you do these trips just after the summer. The views were impressive though, as was the erosion all around the top of the falls. Lucky it was late enough in the season to go exploring without having to worry about snakes.



I'm told that when the water is actually flowing it's fun to jump off the top, that is if you don't mind a few leeches at the bottom.












Well there may not have been water at Koorawatha that weekend, but what it lacked in water, it definitely made up for in wallaby!





Friday 29 November 2013

Mini Adventure Series No2 (21st-22nd April)

The Snowy Mountains (minus the snow)

So off we went for another weekend away. Well Saturday afternoon and Sunday. Shearing Saturday meant I had to work the morning. I was given a warm clothes warning. I soon became very skilled at packing a very small 'any eventuality' bag. This time though we ended up in the Snowy Mountains.


We got to Tumut, our main destination in time for a good night out. Turned out there was a rodeo in town that weekend so despite it only being a small town, the night out was very good and memorable. Casey unfortunately is not a fan of rodeos, so when wee headed off on Sunday morning he didn't stop at the rodeo, but promised if it were still on when we came back later, we would stop. No such luck.












Our day started off with a quick stop at Blowering Dam, which was basically just pretty views. Did start off my roadsign pictures collection. Original I know!






Then on into the Kosciusko National Park and spectacular mountain views and Australia's highest peak.




Somewhere along the way we stopped off at Yarrangobilly Caves which were beautiful and surprisingly free. While it wasn't deep caving or anything like that, the features were quite beautiful. Lots of stalagmites and stalactites and crystals. We had a really nice wander through anyway!

Onwards to brumby spotting, though we actually failed to spot any, and we didn't get as far as the ghost town but we did go up to the snow fields, that didn't have any snow. Generally we had a nice day just wandering around the Snowys.


And though we didn't get back to Tumut in time for the rodeo, we did stop off at 'Dog on a Tucker Box', a little highway service village that seems to exist solely because of that statue!







Fire!

Or Burning Paddocks.

Basically the stubble on a paddock doesn't decompose here. It's not wet enough. So to get rid of it, it gets burnt. Obviously this is only done in the right weather conditions. There's a fire ban over the summer and you have to take into account the wind direction and
such.


So, with the fire truck on standby, you go around the edge of the paddock, with the wind blowing inward, spreading a small amount of petrol which you then light.

It is a little bit more complicated than this but I was just sat in the fire truck, ready to rush in where needed. I only burnt stubble in rows myself which was much simpler.




After the whole paddock is burnt, the fire truck then goes around and puts out any remaining fire, old tree trunks and the like. Simple as.













Thursday 28 November 2013

Little Red Tractor

So part of, well really a lot of my job, when it didn't involve sheep, involved driving the tractor, sometimes for 11hours a  day! That is a Case III, 220hp tractor, with wheels taller than I am.


Actually it's quite easy to drive a tractor, you just put it in gear and steer. if you want to go faster, you click it up another gear. Simple!






I started off with the harrows. A 32ft piece of machinery which basically breaks off and flattens all the stubble in a paddock. you drive up and down, up and down all day. The thing you have to remember is, you have a width of 32ft behind you. That's quite a turning circle at the end of the row. You also have to lift it to go over rocks, and you can't reverse them, so no getting stuck in corners. Really you do have to just go quite slowly. these particular harrows were also pretty twisted so untangling them every so often was also necessary, and quite annoying.

Then there were the harrows that didn't just break and flatten the stubble but gathered it up to be dropped in rows. Not only do you have to look out for rocks and other obstacles; not get stuck in corners; watch your turning circles; but you also have to watch your rows to ensure you're lifting the harrows at the right moment to drop the stubble in perfect lines across the paddock. Eventually one of the hydraulic rams started leaking and that was the end of the harrowing, left out in the middle of a paddock, probably for years to come.

But not the end of the tractor work. Once the paddocks had been harrowed and burnt (next entry) then they had to be sown.
The seeder here was a horrible machine, well maybe not really. It was actually quite straight forward: 2 seed bins, one for grain, one for fine seeds; a bin for fertilizer (or supa); a series of cogs and chains to release the seed at the right rate (which was determined by an equation I can't remember); a row of oscillating disks at the front to dig the furrows; double disks behind each furrow to guide the seeds in; and a press wheel behind to cover the seed. In theory, quite simple.
The horrible part was how many little things could go wrong: A disk fall off; a press wheel fall off; a seed tube fall off; a seed tube get blocked; bearings in the disks disintegrating; one disk sowing too deep; a disk sowing too shallow; the release rate too fast or too slow. Just loads of little things. You have to stop every 15mins just to check everything was working okay. Luckily it was all easy enough to fix and if it wasn't, there were enough spare parts around to just replace the offending part.
The machine itself (for anyone actually interested) was a Great Plains Seeder from Texas. Apparently a load of them got dumped in Australia quite cheap when a deal with Japan I think, fell through. Just a little trivia for you.
Actually using the machine was quite simple. Things to remember with this one were... you can't go around corners because it bends the disks. So you have to lift it up at the end of rows, and every time you want to go around anything. The paddocks really do look like obstacle courses for tractor drivers!

In my time at Wallendbeen I must have sown just about everything; oats, wheat, conola, mustard, mixed grasses which I had the fun of mixing beforehand. I really did get quite skilled with the seeder; fixing it; judging the depth to lower it to; the width of the rows so they lined up nicely on each pass; judging how many hectares I could do before needing a refill; backing up to the grain bin. That was the fun one. Going from having never backed a trailer before to backing a huge tractor and equally big piece of machinery to a very exact spot next to the grain bin. There was very little room for error and I always had to do it myself. I'll confess... despite mastering that bit of backing, I still can't back a pick up and little trailer at all.

I managed though, and I really do not know how many hours I did in the tractor or how many acres I covered. I do know that some paddocks I did were 100acres a paddock and I did dozens of them, well at least a dozen. what with harrowing and sowing I probably would have covered at least 800acres at Wallendbeen, which is one hell of an introduction to tractor driving. And despite it normally meaning ridiculously long hours on my own, it was probably some of the most enjoyable work I did there. At least I felt I'd achieved something at the end of the day!



Thursday 21 November 2013

Mini Adventure Series No.1 (5th-7th April)

Bateman’s Bay

My ‘Mini Adventure Series’ will be my weekends away from Wallendbeen with Casey, from Young. Generally exploring little bits of NSW, interspersing them with bits of working I guess.

So Bateman’s Bay, or as he tried to make me believe, just Canberra. In fairness we did start off on Friday by going to a house party in Canberra. However at about midnight we decided to set out for the coast, 2hours away at least. The original plan I think, had been to head straight for the coast and not stop at the house party but there’s nothing wrong with spontaneous changing of plans, except the original plan hadn’t involved sleeping in the car. Now I really don’t mind sleeping in cars, I’ve done it enough before and since, but in the middle of Autumn, in the Great Dividing Range, with nothing but one small, thin blanket is rather chilly and doesn’t make for a very good night’s sleep.

When Casey decided it would be a good idea to stop, he had a nice plan of a particular town about halfway along, with a nice view of the river when we woke up. After which we could tackle the windy mountain road by daylight. Unfortunately Casey’s memory wasn’t that great. Nelligen, the town he was thinking of was in fact on the other side of the mountains. Having worked this out we searched in vain for a rest area, instead having to pull into Buda Wang National Park. It was actually great waking up after the little sleep we had to a covering of green trees and even better as we pulled into the park we were greeted by two wombats shuffling  across the road.
 
The drive down the mountains in the morning was brilliant. Roads as twisty as a rally stage, and we did finally stop in Nelligen for breakfast.



Our time in Bateman’s Bay consisted of beaches, lots of beaches. Yellow sand, clear blue water. Casey even decided to go fishing at one point, having brought a new fishing rod just for the occasion, not thinking to bring one with him. I gathered shells. His fishing amounted to no fish, I gathered many shells.






And after pizza and a lot of sleep in a proper bed, Sunday was yet more beaches, there seemed to be no end of them! But not before breakfast. I got to have pancakes for breakfast! (it doesn’t happen as often as it seems to from this journal).
The water was a gorgeous temperature. I’m not sure I’ve found any that perfect since.
And then back to Canberra, by way of Braidwood sweet shop and to sightseeing, more specifically the Telstra Tower, from which you can see all of Canberra, and then Sunday evening back to Wallendbeen.

Puppies (2nd April)


Somewhere in the middle of the night, I believe it was about 2am, I was woken up. Now waking up in the middle of the night is nothing new to me. I normally just fall straight back to sleep but not this night. The dogs just would not stop barking, so I get up to investigate. No torch, in my pjs. Lucky it was warm and the moon bright.

So up to the yard I walk and I hear what I think to be a possum trapped in the back of Mitsy’s kennel. On closer inspection 2 puppies. Poor Charlie then gets woken up at 2am to help me organise a separate cage and kennel with a rug and a high protein bowl of food for Mitsy, ie. Dog biscuits, bread, milk and egg.

By morning there was 5 puppies. That’s what you get if none of the dogs get the snip. Only one was kept in the end. A crazy, hyper, fat little thing that after many name changes was called Rea.





Yummy Eats!

 Nobody seems to know what Australia’s traditional dish is, well other than the ‘barbie’. Apparently people like to argue that Pavlova is an Aussie dish though. I can’t say I’ve tried much in the way of new stuff but I’ve had a fair few bbqs. An interesting point, for me at least, if I were to say sausage to anyone at home they would think pork, unless otherwise specified. A sausage in the UK is generally pork. Not so here. A sausage here is beef. And I meal I would 9 times out of 10 cook myself if I were alone at Wallendbeen?- Honey Sausage, Soda Bread and salad with sea salt and balsamic vinegar. Simple but delicious.

I love my soda bread. A loaf would disappear at dinner. Any left overs would be eaten, by me, with honey. There was a bucket of honey in the office/study at Wallendbeen. When I say bucket, I mean an actually bucket. There was a local guy who would come out and put his bees on your property for a couple of months. In return for which you would get a bucket full of your own honey. Yummy!

Anyway, returning to bbqs. I said I haven’t tried much in the way of new or typically Aussie foods. Maybe that’s not quite right. I have tried a kangaroo steak. It was delicious. Nicest stake I’ve ever had. Very lean, absolutely no fat. Simply falling apart. A little bit gamey but not too much so. Completely melt in the mouth yummy!

Since I’ve decided this is a foody entry, I’ll slip out into the veggie garden and the orchard… starting with the fig tree. It’s a really old tree, in full fruit shortly after I arrived. Very full fruit, I was picking a mixing bowl full of fresh figs every day. There were more than anyone knew what to do with. I ended up trying a multitude of figgy recipes from syrup baked figs, which were incredible with ice cream; to fig jam, which was my biggest success. My fig jam was beautiful. It worked perfectly. So good was it that the full batch had been eaten long before I left Wallendbeen but unfortunately all the figs were long gone too.

About the same time, the veggie garden was throwing out equal quantities of zucchini (courgettes) and cucumbers. More than anyone knew what to do with. Apparently though you can’t gift these as well as you can figs so the chickens got a lot of them, but not before abundances of grilled zucchini, stuffed marrow and cold cucumber and tomato soup were served with dinner. From that you may realise there was then an abundance of tomatoes, and the veggie garden became my little pet project. I would go pick all the ripe fruit and veg every morning. I even tried making sun-dried tomatoes with the extras. It probably would have worked but the weather was cooling off a bit, so that was one failed experiment. Never mind.

What else did I have in my little garden? I planted rows of broccoli, leeks, broad beans and peas. Don’t think the peas will make it, particularly with no one looking after them. They went in a bit late and only a couple had poked their heads out by the time I left. Everything else was flourishing though. Unfortunately I won’t be there to eat them but they were looking brilliant. I even created my own bird netting to protect my little seedlings!


Then there were the fruit trees. They had two fully fruiting pomegranate trees, heavy with fruit and they never even ate any. Okay so pomegranates take a bit of time to eat but they are definitely worth it. But no one there bothered. Pomegranate trees were for ornamental purposes only apparently. I bothered and they were messy and delicious, though I never worked out how to tell when they were actually ripe.

Then there were the apple trees, pear trees, plum trees and peach trees that weren’t in fruit when I was there. The crab apple tree was though. This was my second preserve attempt. It failed. I attempted to make crab apple jelly but somehow managed to set it almost rock solid. It was delicious when you actually managed to warm it enough to spread it, which was very difficult.
There was also a persimmons tree. I haven’t managed to work out exactly what a persimmon is. It’s bright orange, a soft fruit, has a smooth skin, slightly bigger than an apple, roundish with a slightly pointed end, texture quite like a mango, and I’ve never seen one before. The taste was nice but the texture was too slimy for my liking. A new discovery for me though.

But yeah, FOOD! And to finish off… Milo!!!! It’s not hot chocolate and it’s not chocolate milkshake, but you can treat it like either. It’s a chocolate flavour malt powder or something like that and it’s yummy!