Our last week of the adventure was spent back up on the Gold Coast, this time at Coolangatta. Why would we travel back up the coast? This year, because we were in the vicinity of MGP we couldn't miss it. MGP is an annual reunion of people who were living in 2 particular houses in London between the years 1998 - 2003 in Bounds Green, The Meeting of Great People!!
Kirra Beach Tourist Park is a great park, secluded but only 5 minutes walk from the beach. As it was still school holidays they had plenty of organised activities for the kids, and this proved to be a hit for all the kids (all 50 of them) throughout the week. Such activities included an awesome magic/comedy show where Glenno was plucked out of the audience to have a steel rod magically placed through his neck, a kids disco, cupcake decorating, a treasure hunt, and something else we have forgotten! For the adults, the blokes were given a leave pass for the AFL grand final and went to a pub to watch it, as it was the first day of the reunion it got a bit messy! The girls were given the Sunday night off to go out and have a civilised meal and a gasbag at a Thai restaurant while the blokes had a quiet one putting the kids to sleep and a few night caps! We spent time at the beach, lots of time at the pool, and a long lunch at North Kirra Surf Club, but most of the time was spent wandering around the van park to the 6 villas, 4 camping sites and 2 van sites that all of the MGP crew occupied sharing stories and remembering other ones from at least 15 years ago. In total there were approximately 90 odd people there! It was a great catch up and one we will remember.
The time had come for the long journey home, pretty sad really and a horrible way to end it by spending two long days in the car, not really having a chance to sit down on a river bank/gorge/waterfall/beach to enjoy the last few moments. We left the Gold Coast at 7am after an early wake up from a kookaburra, Glen even managed to squeeze in a 5:30am jog to wake himself up. 12 hours later on ordinary NSW roads we spent the night in Dubbo (at the RSL club motel, not in the van) A great motel with massive beds, just what we needed but a terrible feed at the RSL!
We had parked Bruce and Nancy in a bus Zone and had to be out of it by 8am so off we set on our last day, another 10 hours in the car (some of which Mel actually got to drive!) via a very interesting stop at 'The Dish' in Parkes which assisted in the Apollo 13 Space rescue. We arrived home (after a quick stop at Tommo's in Gol Gol) where Mel Tommo had a ready made spaghetti Bol for us to tuck into when we got home.
Our home greeted us with a busted hose leaking everywhere under the house, a pool pump which had clogged dried and cooked itself and a cat who didn't care who we were and demanded to be fed. The kids ran straight into their rooms and made a mess of their rediscovered toys while we started the unpacking process.
After approximately 16000 kilometres, (about 13000 towing) we were home, the end of a once in a lifetime family journey with no major hiccups, 3400 photos, plenty of great memories that we are so lucky to have made that will stay with us forever! To the wonderful families we met along our journey, Michael, Sharon, Monique, Hayley and Will Zakic (Melbourne), Kylie and Matt (Mailtland), Craig and family (Musswellbrook), Brendan and Kim (Colac), Jacinta and Jim (Bendigo), Tony and Tash (Dubbo), Steve, Gita, Lily, Emily and Oscar (Melbourne), Mark, Tanya, Cooper and Bear (Caloundra), Shayne and Aeron (Western Australia), Jason, Annabel, Riley, Sebine, Sophie, Regan (Brisbane), Lee, Grant, Lily, Will and Mitchell (Sydney) and the MGP crew, you have all made our trip even more memorable. Thanks to everyone for reading and for those who gave us advice on places to see and things to do! We had a fabulous time and hope that everyone can see how magical Australia really is.
Stevo's on Safari - OZ Style
Thursday 9 October 2014
Friday 26 September 2014
Yamba
We
left the Gold Coast and travelled south to visit our fabulous friends the
Joneses who we met while living in London and travelled through Africa with
fourteen years ago. After a great lunch and a catch up we drove onwards to
Yamba, 2 hours south of the border. We were told Yamba was only 20 minutes south of Byron Bay. For the
record that is Ballina and Yamba is another 1 hour 40 minutes further south of
Byron! Usually Mel ‘the Co-pilot’ checks these things but instead took some one
elses opinion on this so we passed beer-o-clock and were not happy! To top it
off Mel who is usually organised and writes everything in her little camping
notebook had written down the wrong van park we were staying at. When we called
them on the road to inform them we would arrive after reception closed they
told her they had no booking. Mel panicked and started calling every van park
in Yamba to see if they had any accommodation at late notice in the school
holidays (bahahahaha).
Glen pulled over on the side of the road and tried to talk to Mel who lost the plot and told everyone not to talk for one minute. As the awkward silence ticked by in the car Mel had a 'brain wave' and checked the bank account and realised we had a paid a deposit at the Salt Water Big 4. So, off we drove, set up under dark rainy clouds and had our first early night in over a week.
Yamba is a hidden gem and we were told by Glen's brother that if they moved anywhere in Australia, it would be Yamba. Being school holidays we had to choose a town for the next 5 days as most van parks will only let you book for a week. So Yamba was great for our "Theme Park Hangovers" as you could do as little or as much as you wanted. Yamba has 3 main beaches close to the decent size shopping precinct, 1 with no waves and 2 with good waves, a fun skate park and plenty of fishing spots off rocks, from the beach, in channels or the river, but since we are no good at fishing we have no idea where to actually catch them but we could see plenty of people trying!
About 5 minutes south of Yamba is a tiny town called Angourie. It has a "spooky beach" and two fresh water pools 100 metres from the beach created by mining the rocks for the towns breakwall, when in 1899 fresh water began to seep into the deep pits causing the mine to be abandoned. Despite the signs warning of high levels of algae, it was too good an opportunity not to jump off the various size rock ledges. 100 other people couldn't all be that silly could they?
Mel took the opportunity to get a decent massage (from somebody other than Glen) while the kids and Glen checked out the skate park, pools and beaches, then took Mel to the best spots the next day. After Taylah cracked it and wanted to stay in the car, she had a great time at the pools because all of her friends from the van park were there swimming as well!
The van park was great, although 10 minutes out of town, had some great time killers for the kids (as it was school holidays) like "sand art" "scratch art" "movie night", "scavenger hunt" as well as a pool and pirate splash park, flying fox and jumping pillow which Cam and Taylah enjoyed. They also organised a lazer skirmish for the older teens. It had heaps of room, fire pits, boat ramp, free canoe hire, but it did have a few bogans who obviously don't get out much and let their kids yell and scream from 6am and turn their tape player up at night singing the Eagles Greatest Hits until their goon bags run out. Maybe that's the Theme Park Hangover still lingering or maybe we are just over caravan parks a little bit.
We did enjoy some good company here again! Its great to meet like minded families from different parts of the country and share stories around the firepits, eating crackers and cheese, prawns from the local fish market and letting our kids entertain each other. This park was perfect for a few games of "walkie talkie hide and seek" as well.
The last destination on our stevozsafari is back up to Coolangatta for the MGP reunion so we took the coast road through Ballina and Byron Bay. It rained the whole trip so I guess we were lucky not to be setting up in the rain. Along the way we called into bunnings at Ballina where they have restored the big prawn. We had to pick up some sealant for a leaky sunroof as well.
Mel and Taylah got to see a house they saw getting built for $7.1 million on the show "Grand Designs". The owner kept changing his mind, blowing the budget out by $2 million, and ended up selling for $5.6 million and moving back to Sydney. A cool $1.5 million loss!!
Do Not underestimate your theme park stamina, if you go for a 28 day theme park pass you are at risk of TPH! Write down the van park's name as soon as you book it or risk driving to the wrong one. For the record "Hahn Premium Dry 3.5 cans" is the beer in question.
Glen pulled over on the side of the road and tried to talk to Mel who lost the plot and told everyone not to talk for one minute. As the awkward silence ticked by in the car Mel had a 'brain wave' and checked the bank account and realised we had a paid a deposit at the Salt Water Big 4. So, off we drove, set up under dark rainy clouds and had our first early night in over a week.
Yamba is a hidden gem and we were told by Glen's brother that if they moved anywhere in Australia, it would be Yamba. Being school holidays we had to choose a town for the next 5 days as most van parks will only let you book for a week. So Yamba was great for our "Theme Park Hangovers" as you could do as little or as much as you wanted. Yamba has 3 main beaches close to the decent size shopping precinct, 1 with no waves and 2 with good waves, a fun skate park and plenty of fishing spots off rocks, from the beach, in channels or the river, but since we are no good at fishing we have no idea where to actually catch them but we could see plenty of people trying!
Beach option 1, no waves |
Looking over beach option 2, where the surfers enter the water |
Beach option 3, the main beach with rock pools |
About 5 minutes south of Yamba is a tiny town called Angourie. It has a "spooky beach" and two fresh water pools 100 metres from the beach created by mining the rocks for the towns breakwall, when in 1899 fresh water began to seep into the deep pits causing the mine to be abandoned. Despite the signs warning of high levels of algae, it was too good an opportunity not to jump off the various size rock ledges. 100 other people couldn't all be that silly could they?
Angourie Pool No 1 |
The kids mixing it with the locals |
Cam and Taylah enjoying Sand Art |
Fun for the whole 3 families |
Strapping the Big Prawn to the roof: Ballina |
Do Not underestimate your theme park stamina, if you go for a 28 day theme park pass you are at risk of TPH! Write down the van park's name as soon as you book it or risk driving to the wrong one. For the record "Hahn Premium Dry 3.5 cans" is the beer in question.
Gold Coast Part 1: THEME PARKS
Gold Coast
After
arriving at the Gold Coast Holiday Park we quickly set up the van and headed over
to Movie World (literally 5 minutes drive away) and rode on some great rides
for a couple of hours before it closed. This was the start of an exhausting and
thrilling week of roller coasters, water slides, Super Hero’s and dress ups. Mel’s
family (Mum, step-dad, Sister, Bro-in-law and nephew) also met us there and enjoyed
their time with us at Movie World, Sea World and Wet & Wild and were as
equally exhausted by the end of the week but when you holiday with the Stevo’s
you gotta keep up! On our second day our family friends The Thompsons surprised
us. They had secretly planned their holiday to QLD to coincide with our stay
which was brilliant as our kids had a ball being doted on from their daughter
Ruby and the adults had more laughs and people to drink with! During our
downtime from the theme parks we sat poolside, ate, drank and relaxed. Thanks
Dave, Liz and Ruby for a great week.
For
anyone wanting accommodation close to Movie World, Wet & Wild and
Dreamworld we would recommend the Gold Coast Holiday Park (Big 4 for those of
you who are members). As we mentioned before it’s a very close drive to all
three parks and is an easy 22 minute drive to Sea World. For the shoppers,
there is a Harbour Town DFO only 17 minutes away and the surf brand factory
outlets only 11 minutes away (according to google maps). The facilities are
great with two pools and a waterslide, jumping pillow, farm animals to feed, a
poolside café and Cabanas with sun lounges surrounding the pool (which we are hoping
to replicate when we get back home). Oh and the amenities have a massive
aquarium which is so mesmerising that you forget that you were on your way to
the toilet! There is a variety of accommodation ranging from unpowered sites to
villas. It’s expensive but worth it if you want to be close to the theme park
action all week.
There
are a few options to buying theme park tickets and we opted for 28 day passes
(excluding Dream World) for $89 where we could visit as many times as we wanted
in a month and boy did we get our monies worth. We visited all three parks Ten
times, going early morning and late afternoon rather than all day. Movie World
is full of Super Hero’s and Mel and Camo were in their element. The rides were
fantastic especially the Stunt show, Superman and Scooby Doo ride (which we got
Nan Nan and Grandpa on as well). Camo was a maniac with the rides and wanted to
go on anything and everything and threw a ‘Harry Crumpet’ when he was told he
was too short for some of the rides. He even asked Mel if he had grown taller
overnight so that he could go on the rides the next day. The kids were spoilt
by the family and were bought some capes and masks which made them stand out in
the crowd especially when the Super Heros were out and about as they stopped to
have photos and high five them. An absolute highlight for the kids and some
extra eye candy for the adults. Some of the rides were Hell scary and had Mel
screaming but brave Camo kept his cool and just smiled all the way down! Wet
& Wild was fun but the water was cool and some of the rides were closed but
Sea World was a winner with Taylah. For her upcoming birthday her grandparents
paid for a dolphin experience. We couldn’t stop Taylah’s beaming smile and she
learnt a lot from the experience. She was able to pat and feed “RB”, the
dolphin and it was something she will never forget.
We are finally here!!! |
With Green Lantern, Supergirl, Wonder Woman and Flash |
Stunt Riders Show (Movie World) |
Mammoth Falls (Wet n Wild) |
We spent our 10th anniversary at Wet n Wild, not the romantic balloon ride we had always talked about but nevertheless we spent the day having fun with loved ones and watching our kids have an awesome time (yes we had fun as well!) so it was definitely a memorable anniversary. Any babysitting offers when we get home would be appreciated.
Watching the Penguins (Sea World) |
Cuddly Polar Bears (Sea World) |
Riding the Skyrail (Sea World) |
Taylah's Dolphin Experience (Sea World) |
It
was a little disappointing that Movie World and Wet n Wild were apparently
doing maintenance on some of the rides in preparation for school holidays. A
massive kids section was fenced off at Wet n Wild which would have tripled the things
for Camo to do. Then all of a sudden Movie World has extra carriages running on
roller coasters running in the school holidays cutting the waiting time in
half. We are not sure if going in the school holidays would have been any
busier.
Overall,
the week was an adrenaline filled fantastic week and it was great catching up
with family and friends but it is time to move further south and see more of
OZ. We are on our way to Yamba to recover from our Theme Park overdose.
TIP:
BYO your own lunch to the theme parks. Don’t make it and forget it like we did
on one of the days. It cost us $48. Ouch! Get on the rides when the parades or
shows are on as there are no line-ups for the rides.
Buy some prawns from the "Co-op" which is 1 roundabout away from Sea World. At $25 per kilo for medium size prawns straight off the boat, you can't go wrong.
The crew |
Wednesday 10 September 2014
Rainbow Beach
On the way out of Hervey Bay, Glen noticed that the bike rack was leaning about 1/2 degree more than it should so upon inspecting the nuts and bolts he found that one of the uprights (out of two) was cracked almost all the way through. Luckily we were in a major city and after a quick detour to autobarn and 30 minutes later we were back on the road, hopefully this one will last all the way home.
We got to Rainbow Beach at lunchtime and checked out the beach (not very inviting) and the park (for toddlers) the shops and the pool (19 degrees) but the kids still had a swim until they went blue.
The weather wasn't great while we were in Rainbow Beach, and they say your impressions of a place can be totally dependent on the weather so I guess Rainbow Beach "wasn't that great for us". However we did manage to catch up on a bit of homework and washing when the weather was ordinary. During our three days there we did manage to go for a walk to the Carlo Sand Blow, which was quite impressive. Sand Blow's are common in this part of Australia and are the result of sand being constantly blown up through the vegetation, literally swallowing it. We also splashed out at a nice cafe for fathers day lunch, then again for dinner because happy hour went for a bit too long watching the footy finals. Rainbow Beach is probably the cheapest town to access Fraser Island. If you are looking for a day trip to Fraser Island then come to Rainbow Beach on a weekend. It costs $80 for the ferry crossing and $47 for a permit to drive over there. Wish we had done this but you can't do everything.
We went for a couple of little drives along the beach (just to say that we have done it) and to see the many different colours of sands that make Rainbow Beach live up to its name. The sand dunes are very steep and very high with colours ranging from yellows, oranges, reds, grey and black. All the way along this stretch are fantastic formations and patterns which have been eroded in the sand over time. Mel through it would be lovely to wind the window down and film us driving down the beach navigating around the rocks at low tide. Glen thought it would be hilarious to drive through a washout. You can guess the rest. We all got wet! Hilarious guy that Glenno! Rainbow beach can be tricky if people don't take particular notice of the tide. Throughout the year many people take a drive along the colourful sand dunes only to realise on their way back they can no longer drive past the rocks again as the tide has quickly changed. To their horror they can only bail out of their car, climb up the rocks and sand dunes to safety and watch as their car is bashed against the rocks and taken by the ocean. The drive took us 30 minutes, the queue up for the under body car wash to get rid of all of the sand took 2 hours, so we are a bit hesitant to take Bruce back onto the beach.
We got to Rainbow Beach at lunchtime and checked out the beach (not very inviting) and the park (for toddlers) the shops and the pool (19 degrees) but the kids still had a swim until they went blue.
The weather wasn't great while we were in Rainbow Beach, and they say your impressions of a place can be totally dependent on the weather so I guess Rainbow Beach "wasn't that great for us". However we did manage to catch up on a bit of homework and washing when the weather was ordinary. During our three days there we did manage to go for a walk to the Carlo Sand Blow, which was quite impressive. Sand Blow's are common in this part of Australia and are the result of sand being constantly blown up through the vegetation, literally swallowing it. We also splashed out at a nice cafe for fathers day lunch, then again for dinner because happy hour went for a bit too long watching the footy finals. Rainbow Beach is probably the cheapest town to access Fraser Island. If you are looking for a day trip to Fraser Island then come to Rainbow Beach on a weekend. It costs $80 for the ferry crossing and $47 for a permit to drive over there. Wish we had done this but you can't do everything.
Friends for five minutes while bushwalking to the Carlo Sandblow |
View of Rainbow Beach from a sand dune |
Fantastic patterns in the sand dunes eroded of time |
The highlight of Rainbow beach had to be the massive sandhill 50 metres from the caravan park. Where all of us got a buzz out of sliding down the hill on the boogie boards. There was a small 20 metre slide and a rather long 80 metre slide towards the beach. The climb up to the top of both was pretty steep so most of us slept well that night.
We stayed at the only caravan park there, which was again pretty ordinary, squeezed in like sardines, even tighter than Hervey Bay. Most vans needed a tractor to get them in and out of their sites, however I'm sure that if the weather was great we wouldn't be spending a lot of time at the van park. Next stop, Noosa.
TIP: Take notice of the tide charts when driving along the beach. Apparently you can feed dolphins at Tin Can Bay which is reasonably close to Rainbow beach, the only drama is that you have to be there by 7:15am and it is about 40 minutes away, so that counted the Stevos out who have come accustomed to sleeping in until 8.00am these days! Always move your car away from your van and poles before you start pulling them down as sometimes (well once) poles can just fall onto it. If you don't want to get your car sandy, take a trip to Fraser Island on one of the big day tour buses. It costs a fair bit but if you shop around you will be able to find a price that suits.
Friday 5 September 2014
Hervey Bay
Another
2 and a half hours down the road is Hervey Bay, the main connection between the
mainland and Fraser Island, also well known for its whale watching tours. It was once eight small fishing villages but grew into one larger city. We
spent a couple of quiet days here riding along the esplanade, sightseeing, going
to the Cinemas to watch Rio 2, shopping and playing at the parks. During our
time at Hervey Bay our funny little guy Camo turned 5. We celebrated by doing
all the things he loves starting with pancakes for breakfast, opening presents
that were Spiderman and Batman orientated, ten-pin bowling, playing at the park
and making his favourite dinner Pasta and Green (pesto) followed by chocolate cake!
The birthday boy with his girlfriends Lily and Amy and Taylah and Oliver on the ends |
Happy Birthday to you Camo |
Our friendly humpback whale |
While
Camo’s biggest highlight was falling in love again, Glen, Mel and Taylah’s
highlight was of course going on a whale watching cruise. It had been cold and
windy when we first arrived so we put the whale watching tour off for three
days and we were glad we did. Mel took her sea sick tablet ready to brace the
swell but she needn’t have as it was calm and sunny all day. We cruised
alongside Fraser Island which is magnificent with its silica sand. Just a bit
of useless information Fraser Island is 127kms long!
Within forty minutes we
had seen two humpback whales cruising quite fast so we followed them for a
while taking photos and oohing and aahhing. Although we were within metres of
them, they were not really in the mood to play so we cruised on looking for
others. We soon found another two who were willing to play around our boat or
as we were told, they were mugging our boat, and did so for nearly two hours. Mugging
is where whales swim closely around your boat. You are unable to start your boat
up or manoeuvre it until they are ready to let You go! They are unbelievably
massive and elegant. Sorry, we had to add a video as well |
A very happy Taylah up close and personal |
TIP:
Apparently it’s best to go on the Whale Watching Tour when the conditions are calm
as the whales are more playful. We cruised with Tasman Ventures, a three tiered
vessel that costs a family $300. At that price you get morning and afternoon
tea and all the tea/coffee/hot choc you can drink and a free DVD on whales. As you can imagine, Mel
basically drank their supply tea dry!
Agnes Water and 1770
Only three
and a half hours further south is Agnes Water and 1770. Like many coastal
places in Australia, both are hidden little bays and off the main highway but
are definitely worth the trip. We stayed at Agnes Water, a township which is
currently expanding with new holiday and housing developments. Our van park was
situated right on the beach so we only had to stroll down each morning and sit
on the golden sand and watch the waves rolls on in. Mel was excited to see
waves and have a crack at surfing so off to the local surf shop we went.
Chillin at the beach |
We
hired a long board and spent that time closely watching others surf and trying
to use the same techniques. We were able to casually eavesdrop on a few surfing
lessons to get more tips and Glenno the country boy was quite the surfer and
stood up more times than Mel the North Wollongong Beach city chick! The surf at
Agnes Waters is perfect for learning. The sets roll in slowly and are small and
slow enough for a learner to ride a perfect wave. We spent two whole days relaxing under our
beach tent, swimming, making more sand castles and surfing and it was bliss.
And without being biased we’ve gotta say, Bruce looked quite good with the surfboard
on the roof!
Action shots! Obviously before we got any good at it! |
Cam's first wave!
We ventured to the town of 1770 a couple of times (only
five minutes away). 1770 in particular has a significant history for Australia
as it was named in honour of Captain Cook's landing at the location in 1770
when he arrived on the HM Bark Endeavour in May 1770. It was his second landing on the Australian continent, after his
first landing in Botany Bay, Sydney. Every May the
town of 1770 re-enact Captain Cook’s landing which would be fantastic to watch.
1770 is also the gateway to Lady
Musgrove Island. Unfortunately we did not go but heard it was great for
snorkelling. The area is apparently great for fishing (although we tried and
failed) and fabulous for families with little kids as there are no waves. Apparently it is also the only western facing location on the east coast that you can watch
a sun set. And trust us when we say it’s a magical sunset each night. It
slowly melts down over the water and behind the mountains and was worth
visiting just for that!
Snagging lures
|
TIPS: Definitely stay at Agnes Water if you are looking for some surf. Book early at the Caravan Park as it is small and very popular. It has clean facilities and a coffee shop. Otherwise if you are staying at 177 there is no surf but has a few good spots for fishing.
The treasure hunt |
The lookout at 1770 |
Saturday 30 August 2014
Mackay and Kinka Beach
Mackay was much bigger than we thought with plenty to do (as long as you don't
want to go for a swim)! We soon got a look at the town centre which is quite old
and starting to become overtaken by the massive shopping centre in another part
of the town. We had to drop Mel off at the airport who unfortunately lost her
Pop "Ronald Thomas" early in the week and was flying back to Sydney, then on to
Wollongong to deliver the eulogy at his funeral. So the next 3 days Dad was
chief entertainer, chef, taxi, teacher, timekeeper, swing pusher, dish washer,
bike fixer, hook baiter and sook squasher! But to their credit the kids were
awesome for the whole time!
Not happy about the Lagoon being closed for maintenance |
The rest of that day we had the task of picking
out a new bike for Cammo to replace "speed", doing the groceries and finding our
way out of the shopping centre! That is normally Mel's job! Separating the kids
into different beds worked a treat as Dad, watched the footy, had a few mid
strengths and built the new bike swallowing plenty of bugs courtesy of the swamp
out the back of the van park.
The next morning Glenno, Taylah and Cammo went
on a big ride. Mackay has an excellent loop of the city, probably about 25km all
up but we rode from the awesome 3 tiered blue water lagoon (closed for
maintenance) to the botanical gardens and back, along the river, probably
covering over 10km. The kids were tired but not tired enough for an hour at the
park before lunch at the shopping centre where dad made them eat something
different than nuggets and chips. Taylah was really good at catching up on a lot
of homework in Mackay, spending most of what was left of that afternoon writing
in her journal, and doing online 'mathletics' and 'reading eggs' while Cammo, you
guessed it, rode his bike around the van park. Speaking of the van park, we
stayed at the big 4 (only because we were members) and were told that the new
pool and splash park would hopefully be opening on Monday (2 days time), but it
was nowhere near finished and probably won't be open for weeks. However, it was
being renovated and will probably look great in a few years, but still has a
long way to go. The new 9 hole putt putt course was good fun however (for 10
minutes!), enough time for Cammo to learn how to NOT use his feet to kick the
ball into the hole.
Cam's new bike "Dragon" on our big ride |
Watching turtles in the Botanical gardens |
The next day, Great Poppy's funeral day, we did what Ron
would want us to do and went fishing off the old bridge that once was the Bruce
highway over the Pioneer river. He would not be happy to know that we didn't
catch anything but he would be happy to know that Taylah showed great patience
and persistence, and even had a go at casting the line out. Cammo lasted 5
minutes and was throwing rocks and jumping over imaginary spider webs. We did
get plenty of bites though which kept Taylah interested. Then we went to another
skate park which was a little too big for our novice kids, and too dirty, grotty
and badly graffitied.
I took this shot within the 5 minutes Cam was sitting down |
In the afternoon we got out the boogie boards and
checked out Mackay beach, which was deserted apart from a couple of topless sun
bakers and one other family obviously also from Victoria (because they were swimming). The kids caught a
couple of nice waves and then had a go at standing on the boogie boards until
they got knocked over! Unfortunately due to low tide the water was too far away
from the topless sun bakers for Dad to get a good look!
Shallow Water surfing at Mackay Beach |
The next morning we
went to a great park at the Mackay Marina, obviously there to keep all of the
hotel guests and their kids happy if they weren't out on the water in one of the
1000 boats in the harbour. We picked up Mum from the airport after lunch, the
kids couldn't control themselves running through the "no entry" sign to giver
her big hugs! We spent most of the afternoon showing mum all the things we had
done over the last 3 days and giving her a quick tour of Mackay, now that we
were locals!
At the Marina Park |
Hooray!!! Mummy is back! |
Our next stop was "Coolwaters Holiday Park" Kinka beach, about 4
hours from Mackay. Nestled between two very rich and thriving towns of Yeppoon
and Emu Park. The van park was another of what we are calling "super parks"
which means to a child they have an in built water park and awesome facilities
and totally worth the extra $15-20. A small price to pay for entertaining kids
while adults relax, or join them on the slides, to tire them out enough so they
fall asleep straight away. We got there too late for the splash park and slides
to be open but the kids still had a swim (too cold for the adults). In the
morning we investigated the beaches close by which were a little disappointing,
not to look at but no waves and a long walk doesn't look that inviting. We
strolled along the Main Street of Yeppoon and were amazed by how big, modern and
thriving it was. After much nagging from the kids we spent most of the afternoon
at the slides and splash park, a few beers and wines with Jim and Cheryl, a
couple we sat with on our Big Fury boat trip, then a late dinner and settled in
to the slow regular tunes of the fat bloke next door snoring all
night.
Kinka Beach, Bruce and Great Keppel Island in the background |
The superpark pool |
The superpark slides and splashpark |
TIP: Ear plugs!
When asking for a caravan powered site with
children, do so at your peril. In our experience this has worked both ways,
sometimes they give you the ones with the most room, away from everyone, but
sometimes they give you the one near all the permanent bogans and Mel has been
fantastic in getting drawn into a conversation with all of them!!!
Having lunch at Gladstone Marina |
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