Monday, April 8, 2019

Australia - Part 3 - Tasmania

Platypus Hunting

As soon as our ferry landed in Tasmania at dawn, we headed to Latrobe, where we were told we might be able to see a platypus.  We were in luck, and managed to see three platypi (?) swimming across the river.  We didn't get any pictures of them, but we can verify they aren't imaginary creatures (even though they still look like somebody made them up!).

Can you see the platypus in this picture?
Ok...this might not be a real platypus


Launceston

We spent the first few days in Launceston, primarily catching up on school.  We also were able to take advantage of nice weather (not something Tasmania is known for) to check out the Cataract Gorge, which is walking distance from downtown.


Alex the hamster

Alex finishing a tough climb while cruise boat passengers watched him from below on the South Esk River


Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary

We visited the Bonorong Wildlife Sanctuary in particular to get a chance to see Tasmanian Devils, and were also able to see wombats and feed a mob of kangaroos.


A friendly Tasmanian Devil...whose bite can crush bones
This cute wombat with stubby legs can sprint at 40 km/hour
Cute and fuzzy...and can weigh up to 35 kg (75 lbs)!

I prefer our pictures of wild koalas (see Kangaroo Island post), but this one is still pretty adorable

Alex verifying koalas are actually as soft and fuzzy as they look

Randall the three-legged echidna

A tawny frogmouth (it's "owl-like", but not an owl)

Alex found Roo!

Oooh - that's the spot!

The reason a group of kangaroos is called a mob

Hi Joey!


Climbing the Moai sea stack


We didn't make it to Easter Island, but did climb a Moai!  It's a free standing sea stack on the wild southwest coast of Tasmania.

Starting the 90 minute hike to the cliffs above the Moai

Looking down on the Moai from the cliff top
Katie enjoying the exposure

Alex on the summit of the Moai...hoping it doesn't collapse today

Victory smiles all around





Don't look down!

It's not over yet!  Katie on the two pitches of climbing to get back up the cliff, then the hike back to the car


Not climbing the Candlestick sea stack

The day after climbing the Moai, we headed back out to the other side of the bay to try climbing the Candlestick.  This is a two-hour hike each way with four pitches of climbing and a long rappel.  It also adds a swim across the channel and two Tyrolean traverses (think of a zip line that we would rig to move between the mainland and the Candlestick).

Unfortunately, it didn't work out.  I stared at the churning water, surging waves, and partially exposed rocks for quite some time, and decided to save it for another trip.  Next time!

The Candlestick is the rock pillar between the mainland (right of picture) and the middle island

The plan was to rappel down to the cliff base, then swim across the churn and rocks past the Totem, and establish an anchor on the far side

The Totem is the small freestanding pillar, and the Candlestick is the stack of pillars behind it


Next...


Back to Melbourne to catch up on school, and get ready to head to Borneo!

2 comments:

Aunt Sheri said...

Good decision on the candlestick! I love all the “I had fun” faces.

Unknown said...

these are stellar pics! A group-selfie is missing :)

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