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. =(
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.
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.
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.