Wednesday, 23 November 2016

Perth and Western Australia

Saturday 12th November.
After meeting up with J and M at the East Perth Terminal, collected my bag and drove to W's where J and M are staying for the weekend. In the evening we went out first to the Lucky Shag Bar, close to the waterfront, and which seemed to be hosting several hen parties, where I tried the 50 Lashes beer. From there we headed to the Reveley rooftop bar which has a great view over the riverfront and was full of mostly young, beautiful people; rather more up-market than the Lucky Shag. 

Perth Waterfront

J&M in the Reveley

View from the Reveley Rooftop Bar

Had dinner in Billy Lee's, an excellent Chinese place, lemon chicken, duck, beef with spring onion and ginger and some vegetables and rice. We finished off the evening drinking bottles of Pinot Noir in a wine bar in the Treasury Building.

Sunday 13th November
Packed up our stuff and had breakfast at a place on the riverfront near the Lucky Shag, where service was incredibly slow and I eventually received a very stodgy raisin toast, nothing like the tasty ones I’d had earlier, and a lukewarm coffee. Then we went up the Bell Tower which was both free and fascinating. It has one of the largest peel of bells in the world, most of which came from St Martins in the Field in London. Being Sunday, the bell ringers were in attendance so we could watch them at work and hear the bells being rung.

http://www.thebelltower.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/Student_Intro.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swan_Bells

Perth Bell Tower

After listening to the bells, we drove to Heirisson Island in the Swan River where we were hoping to see lots of kangaroos but only managed to find one, sleeping under a tree. 

Sleepy Kangaroo
Perth from Heirisson Island

Then headed to J & M's place which turns out to be a large single storey home in almost 1/2 acre of land up in the hills east of Perth. J is a very keen gardener and later showed me some of the various vegetables and fruits which she grows. Stopped off at a local pub for a few drinks with Ly from N Ireland and then had a barbecue in the evening with P and L, the next door neighbours.

J&M's place

Edna the Emu in the Garden


Monday 14th November
J and I drove out to Mundaring weir, originally built at the end of the 19th century as part of the scheme to pump water over 500 km to supply the mining area of Kalgoorlie. It was an amazing feat of engineering, completed in about 5 years. Several display boards tell the story and there is a statue of CY O'Connor who was the chief engineer of the project. Sadly he killed himself a year before the project was completed. 

Mundaring Weir

Mundaring Hotel. Sadly, closed when we arrived

J and one of the pipes to Kalgoorlie


Tuesday 14th November
J drove me to Midland station from where it was a quick train journey to Perth and a short walk from there to the Barack Street Jetty for the ferry to Rottnest, where I met up with W, her partner S and a friend D. During the boat trip from Perth down the Swan River to Freemantle, W pointed out some of the incredibly expensive and massive properties along the river including the site of the “Taj Mahal” an Indian style "palace" built by one of the super-rich who then ran out of funds and left it half built for several years before it was finally demolished. 

The mining boom created huge amounts of wealth for the city but since the price of commodities, particularly iron ore collapsed, unemployment has increased and office vacancies stand at 20%. Further down the river we passed a marina with hundreds of white yachts and cabin cruisers; all the appearance of a wealthy city. Not very impressed with the boat from Perth to Freemantle which was totally enclosed with no open deck, a silly seating arrangement which seemed to be designed by someone who had forgotten that people have legs, and doorways designed for pygmies. At Freemantle, we switched to a much better and faster boat to Rottnest Island where I was surprised to find a Dome Café where we enjoyed coffee and croissants.

Fremantle Port. Maersk gets everywhere

Rottnest Ferry
W S & D had decided to hire bikes while I chose to walk round the island, or at least part of it. The oldest buildings on the island date from the earliest period of West Australia settlement and were established as a prison for indigenous people who were treated appallingly. Today Rottnest is a holiday island with beautiful beaches, turquoise and blue sea and thousands of small, friendly marsupials, quokkas. The island was first explored by a mariner Willem de Vlamingh in the service of the Dutch East India Company in   in 1696, who called it “Rotte Nest” (rat's nest) believing the quokkas to be giant rats. Although there are thousands of quokkas on the island, they are rare and endangered elsewhere in Western Australia.


One of the old buildings on Rottnest
Hotel Rottnest
Bathurst Lighthouse

Friendly Quokka

Friendly Quokka
Beautiful, almost empty, Beach
Another Secluded Cove

Being Watched

After walking round the Northern part of the coast enjoying the beautiful secluded bays and even dipping my toes in the bracingly cold water I headed inland to some salt lakes where, without the coastline to guide me I found the map and signposts to be seriously inadequate. The person who designed the map clearly didn’t communicate with whoever did the signs. The Gabbi Karniny Bidi Trail is shown clearly on the map but isn’t marked on any of the signs which typically show a picture of a bird. Later after looking on the internet I found out that “The Wadjemup Bidi is broken into 5 sections, with each section defined by its own colour. A symbol of an osprey is used to depict the trail and is located on all the directional markers.”


Think the colours had faded and the map didn’t say anything about Ospreys. The sign told me I was at Pink Lake which would have been useful if it had been marked on the map. Similarly the signs told me I was on Darby Drive which was also missing from the map. Finally I resorted to Google maps! Enough of my rant; it was a great day out.

The Man who started it all

Back in Fremantle Port


Wednesday 16th November
Drove to King's Park just to the west of central Perth with J and met up with Wendy and David for breakfast in a café.  King's Park has a world class collection of Western Australian plants, many of which are native only to WA and often endangered. J explained that just as non-indigenous animals such as rabbits, foxes and cats have driven many native creatures to near extinction so non-native plants are having a similar effect. King’s Park also has a fantastic view of Perth and the Swan River. And, I almost forgot to mention, a statue of Queen Victoria, during whose reign “Australia was colonised and federated”.


VR

View over the City

I walked down into the city centre with W & D and then had a wander round on my own dodging the showers by diving into shopping malls. The retail area of Perth is just a few streets, one of which, London Court, claims to be an imitation Elizabethan London street.  

Perth Town Hall,
the only town hall built by convicts in Australia

 Supreme Court of Western Australia

High Rise Perth



"Elizabethan" Street
"Elizabethan" Street

After deciding I’d seen enough of downtown Perth, took the free Yellow CAT bus which took me to Claisebrook where I found an organic café which served me a Phoenix organic cola and a peanut cookie. I would like to convince myself they tasted better than the conventional versions but they didn’t. Took the CAT bus back to Perth main railway station and then the suburban Transperth train to Midland passing through Bassendean, formerly the home of Rolf Harris “entertainer and convicted paedophile” according to Wikipedia
 who was known as the “Boy from Bassendean” but is no longer the local hero. Realised that I was travelling back along the same route as the Indian Pacific on which I had arrived in Perth. Midland grew up as a railway town on the Perth to Kalgoorlie line and was the site of a large railway workshop. The line was originally on a 3’6” gauge but was upgraded to standard gauge while the Transperth trains still operate on the narrow gauge, necessitating dual gauge tracks. 

Had a look round the town which has a few historic buildings and is more cosmopolitan than I had expected with two Pilipino “Pinoy” restaurants along with the expected Chinese and Thai ones, and a Happy Herb Shop. From Midland caught the 322 bus to Glen Forest out through some industrial suburbs and then through areas that appeared to be forest or “bush” but were actually hiding desirable residences.


Midland Memorial Hall

Artwork Celebrating Midland's Railway Heritage
Happy Herbs
Thursday 17th November
Early morning start driving into the city with Mark who dropped me off at W’s where I had a coffee and a slice of toast meeting up with D again and later G for our trip to the Pinnacles. It was about 7am when we set off through Perth’s seemingly endless suburbs stretched out along the coast north of the city for about 40km. A fast expressway took us about 30km and then we were on a two lane highway until we reached the Pinnacles which are about 200km north of Perth, and much closer to the shore than I had expected, just a few minutes before opening time at 9.30. Mark had accurately, if prosaically, described them as “tall rocks in a sandpit” but I was suitable impressed as we followed the walking trail, with hardly anyone else around, through the sand surrounded by these strange limestone formations. The bright sunshine and clear blue sky helps. Certainly beats Stonehenge in my opinion! 

Pinnacles

G, D & W plus Pinnacle

More Pinnacles

More Pinnacles

More Pinnacles
Wild Flower 

They call this a Christmas Tree


Later we drove along a second trail for motor vehicles which didn’t add much to the experience but by now was quite busy with dozens of tourists taking selfies. After taking our fill of the pinnacles, whose origin seems to be a matter of some debate we headed to Cervantes to view the stromatolites in Lake Thetis. While they are scientifically fascinating, examples of one of the earliest life forms to have existed on earth, they don’t put on much of a performance and it didn’t take us long before we drove off to the Lobster Shack in Cervantes town to eat some more advanced life forms. Very tasty!

Stromatolites in Lake Thetis

Lunch at Lobster Shack
On the way back we stopped off for coffee at Guilderton a small seaside settlement with a pretty river.

Friday 18th November
J dropped me off at Midland in time for the 0830 Transperth train which arrived in Fremantle an hour later where I soon found High Street Mall and Richard's Gourmet Sandwiches for a breakfast of coffee and a bacon and egg roll for $8. Freemantle is a lovely historic town with many pretty 19th century buildings, dozens of cafes along the “Cappuccino Strip” and a large covered market. 


Freemantle Station

National Hotel
Numbat
https://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/wa/a/11105053/artist-springs-mural-surprise-in-freo/#page1


After a good wander round I found the prison, claimed to be the best example of a 19th century convict prison in Australia. Much of the history is explained in some small museums. Although Western Australia was not originally a convict settlement, its economy didn’t thrive and convicts were transported to provide cheap, forced labour. Their first job was building the prison. Most of the early ones were young men who had been convicted of relatively minor crimes; many of them went on to become successful citizens. I went on the informative prison tour which started at the reception area and ended at the gallows. It must have been a grim place to be held. It was finally closed in the early 1990’s after a riot in the 1980’s after temperatures in the cell blocks exceeded 50°C.   
Fremantle Prison

Cell Block


Villa for Senior Staff

Exercise Yard

Cell Block

Original Cell (Reconstruction)

Cell when it closed in the 1990's

In the 1990's prisoners were allowed to paint the cell walls

Then went to the shipwreck museum which has a large section of the Batavia, a Dutch East India Company (VOC) ship which sank in 1629 on a reef on the Western Australia coast. Most of the people on board were able to get onto a small island but were subsequently murdered by an unscrupulous mutineer. Definitely not a happy story.

The museum houses many artefacts recovered from the wreck of the Batavia as well as other ships which came to grief on the coast. Most of the early exploration of the area was done by the VOC but it didn’t see any business opportunity in Australia and the rest, as they say, is history.

Part of the Batavia
By now it was time to get a train back to Perth where I met Mark and later went out to their local pub for drinks and a meal with several of their friends.   

Saturday 19th November

Off to the airport and the end of my trip across Australia. Approx 4443km from Sydney to Perth.

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