Archive for the ‘NSW’ Category

Mount Kosciuszko Summit


25 Dec

Yesterday we decided to try for the top of Mount Kosciuszko from the top of the Thredbo chairlift. We hadn’t been further than the lookout, just 2 km from the chairlift, for several years. We knew that Nathan would manage the 13 km return walk but we weren’t sure that Toby would. He often stands infront of me with his arms up saying “carry me” and this walk wasn’t any different. Even though it has been at least two years since Toby has been in the mei tai (with the exception of a few weeks ago when he was sick and he tolerated 10 minutes on my back) we took it along with us.

We arrived at the Thredbo top station at 9:45 am and started walking the track. It took us about 45 minutes to walk the 2 km to the first lookout where we had a ‘rest’. The boys didn’t really rest though, they just climbed the rocks. After a drink and a snack we kept walking. It got harder and harder with Nathan complaining and Toby telling me he had sore feet and wanting to be carried. Toby wanted to stop and look at all the little streams of water that we went past, and because he was looking he was the first to see tiny native fish in some of the creeks.

Rawson Pass has changed a lot since I was there last. It used to be a flat area that had gravel off over it and a row of portaloos. Now there is a toilet block, paved footpaths and some signs to read. It is quite a beautiful spot now. Toby was tired and went onto my back at Rawson Pass and then we set off for the final 1.4 km uphill trek to the top of Mount Kosciuszko. Andrew took off ahead of the kids and me so that he could get to the top and set up his radio and antenna for SOTA (summits of the air).

Toby was upset that I wouldn’t let him down when we got to a patch of snow on the side of the track, and I told him that he could walk down on the way back and play in the snow then. We finally got to the top, had the obligatory photo at the stone marker, and sat down for some lunch. We watched Andrew make his first contacts, the boys climbed the rocks (again, instead of resting) and at 1:15 we set off down the mountain, leaving Andrew to finish working on his radio contacts and pack up.

It took us over an hour to get back to Rawson Pass. The boys wanted to walk on the rocks beside the walking track instead of on the walking track, and then they played on both of the patches of snow. At Rawson Pass Toby went back on my back for a while, and it was not far from the Kosciuszko lookout that Andrew caught up with us after leaving the top of the mountain at 2:15 pm. We made it back to the chairlift at 3:45 pm, so we had plenty of time to spare before the chairlift stopped at 4:30 pm ( we had been a bit worried about making it back in time).

It was a great day, perfect weather for a long walk, and as always I adored the views from the top of Australia.

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No running

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Walking with Daddy

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At the lookout….resting….

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Another lookout, near Rawson Pass

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We made it!

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We ALL made it!

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Highest boy in Australia

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Andrew playing on the radio

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Heading down the mountain

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Walking on the rocks beside the track

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Little native fish

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Chairlift back to Thredbo

Lazy Day and Back to Melbourne


24 Dec

Yesterday was another lazy day with a very cranky Toby. It was a very warm day too, but all Toby wanted to do was sleep on the bed which was quite a hot place to be. Andrew set up the fan to help move some air around which helped. Nathan also had a sleep in the afternoon which is very unlike him.

Both Andrew and I had had enough of Toby being clingy and cranky, and just wanting Mummy to sleep with him all day, and only having very short happy periods throughout the day. It was very windy this morning and the forecast was for showers and cold days for the next couple of days, so we made the decision to go home a couple of days early. We are onto day 6 of sick Toby and it hasn’t really been a lot of fun. Now that he has a rash all over his body I’ve finally diagnosed him as having roseola which is caused by a herpes virus (of course I could be wrong, but it looks the same as when Nathan had it when he was little).

We packed up the trailer, said goodbye to the two couples we have got to know, had a last visit to the river and started driving back to Melbourne via the Barry Way and Cann River. We have never been back this way and it is really very pretty.

We made a couple of stops on the way back for the kids to stretch their legs at playgrounds at Bombala and Cann River, we had a short walk on the beach at Marlo along the mouth of the Snowy River before it started to rain, and we had fish and chips for dinner (Toby’s choice) at Bairnsdale. The rest of the trip home was uneventful and we got home around 9 pm.

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In the playground at Bombala

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In the playground at Bombala

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The playground at Cann River

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Roseola rash on Toby’s foot

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Marlo

Charlotte Pass


22 Dec

We went to Charlotte Pass today after popping into Jindabyne to get a bit more drinking water and get rid of our rubbish. Toby was really tired and still not well, so we also thought it would give him a chance to sleep in the car.

We only did the very short walk to the lookout at Charlotte Pass. Nathan remembered walking down to the Snowy River last year and we promised to do some more walks with him in this area in a couple of years.

Every time we have been to the mountains since Nathan was born, there has been a photograph taken of Andrew with the kid/s, so (of course) we had to do it again this time. Unfortunately Toby was particularly upset and didn’t want to pose for a photo, but it will forever more remind us of the holiday in the mountains when Toby was sick.

Toby slept on the way back to the campsite, and after he woke we had a play in the Thredbo River at the campsite. It really is a lovely place.

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Toby Turns 3


21 Dec

Toby’s birthday wasn’t a great one for the little boy. Both he and Nathan slept a really long time. In fact Nathan slept over 12 hours which is, for me, a reason to be concerned that he is getting sick. Nathan doesn’t generally sleep more than 10 hours, and if he sleeps more than 11 hours it is typically a sign that he is coming down with something.

When the boys were awake, Nathan stuck up all the decorations he had made and he put out the sign on the camper to tell everyone that it was Toby’s birthday. He was very excited to be putting them up, and Toby was pretty pleased with them as well. We had two lots of people visit to wish Toby a happy birthday, so Nathan was pleased that his sign worked, though in reality they were all people we’ve had a bit to do with and their visit was nothing to do with the sign.

We made pancakes for breakfast but Toby didn’t feel like eating them, and he had jelly for breakfast instead. We made the cake and put it in the Weber and then we opened a few presents. Pretty much as soon as that was done Toby wanted to go back to bed and that’s where he spent the rest of the day. He was so very miserable that we rang the medical centre at Jindabyne and were told that if we wanted Toby to see a doctor we had to be there before 4 pm.

So we packed up the campsite and headed into town. We had to wait a while to see the doctor, and when we got into his office Toby didn’t want to have anything to do with him. He tried to bribe Toby with stickers, but there were no train ones. Then he tried lollies, but the first one Toby got was a caramel one and he thought it was chocolate and didn’t want it, so the doctor went looking and found a green snake for him. Toby didn’t want to eat it, he just held onto it while the doctor listened to his chest and looked in his ears and mouth. He still had an elevated temperature, and after getting a quick glimpse of his mouth he decided Toby had an infected throat and prescribed some antibiotics. Before we left I asked the doctor just to take Nathan’s temperature as he seemed a bit hot to me and hadn’t been himself all day. The doctor said he was fine but humoured me, just to discover that indeed Nathan also had an elevated temperature and further discovered that Nathan also had red ears and a red throat. So Nathan was also prescribed antibiotics.

We went to the chemist to get the prescriptions filled, then down to the supermarket to get more jelly, back to the chemist to pick up the medicine and finally made it back to the campsite. Toby was looking a little better, so we quickly iced the cake, sang happy birthday and Toby opened his last present. He played for a bit with his new toys and then I tried to give Toby his medicine before dinner and Toby refused. The idea of having medicine, or my attempt at giving him some medicine, upset him so much that he went back to bed and went to sleep.

As far as I could tell from Toby’s cries all night his sleep was full of nightmares about Nathan doing things Toby didn’t want him to do, not getting his watermelon the way he wanted it, and me trying to give him medicine.

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Yarrangobilly Caves and Thermal Springs


19 Dec

Today we went for a drive to Yarrangobilly Caves. We had planned to leave our campsite early, but Toby slept in, and in, and in. He had had a bit of a fever overnight so I wasn’t suprised that he slept late, particularly given his exhausting day yesterday. He was still hot when he woke up, but he didn’t seem unwell so we went ahead with our plans.

We made it to the caves at around 11:30 after a couple of stops for a motion sick Toby and another stop for a play at the playground in Adaminaby. We bought tickets for the 1:45 tour of Jillabenan cave. Tickets were $20 per adult and kids less than school age free. We ate our lunch in a picnic area that had a big shelter complete with free electric BBQs, kitchen for washing and even power points.

The cave was small, but the formations were beautiful. There were lots of delicate little stalactites hanging from the ceiling, some water pools with formations happening at their edges, stalagmites and columns and even a shawl or two. The tour went for about 45 minutes, and we were shown stones with fossils of sea creatures, a sign of the coral reef that the area used to be. There was also a column that had been cut in half, and it was so interesting because you could see the original stalagmite that was engulfed when the stalactite met it to form the column. The cave was said to be 2 million years old.

When the cave tour was over we drove to the carpark for the thermal springs and walked the 700 metres down a steep track to the swimming pools which are a constant 27 degrees celcius. I only had to carry Toby the last bit, but was already dreading the walk back up to the car! Nathan and Andrew had a great swim in the deep pool (2.5 metres maximum depth) while I dangled my legs in the water and held a very tired Toby who dozed. We saw a little water dragon and Nathan told me he’d seen it swim across a corner of the pool! I had a little swim with Nathan after Andrew got out, and it was really nice. There was a lot of algae growing on the edges of the pool and weeds growing in the bottom.

It was an exhausting trip back to the car carrying Toby the entire way. But we made it, of course. We drove back to our tent site, stopping at Adaminaby for dinner at the pub and a photo with the giant trout.

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Waterfall Walk


18 Dec

The weather was perfect today. Perfect for going on a walk. We chose one that we haven’t done before. It was approx. 6 km in length (Andrew recorded 6.9 km), a loop with a waterfall at around the halfway point. We packed our lunches and drinks into our backpacks. The kids each carried one and we had one other. The big problem with going on walks while we are here is that I didn’t bring a carrier of any description because Toby just hasn’t wanted to be in one for a long time. So I sort of forgot to bring one for carrying a tired child on walks.

Toby slept until 8 am this morning, so I figured we had plenty of time before he got tired, even though we arrived at the walk at 11 am. Well, I figured wrong. He was asking to be carried well before we reached the waterfall. So it ended up being a really slow walk, because I did a lot of carrying of Toby. Andrew also did some while Toby was asleep.

It was a beautiful walk, going through some lovely bush. At one point there was a lot of orange flowers out (egg and bacon flowers?) on bushes. The ground was a little undulating. Andrew had a little program on his phone which indicated we had just under a 200 m elevation throughout the walk. The waterfall was nice but there wasn’t anywhere to stop there to eat your lunch, so we crossed the fence and perched ourselves in the shade on a large rock near the water. On the way back we went through an area of large granite boulders which was pretty interesting. Andrew and Nathan climbed one of the boulders to see the view while I rested with the sleeping child. It seemed to take forever to get back, but we finally made it to the car.

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Carols and Bike Riding


17 Dec

Yesterday it didn’t rain a lot, but it was really, really windy. Unpleasantly windy. We went into Jindabyne to do a bit of grocery shopping. Otherwise it was a day of sorting out our campsite and I wanted to update my Wispy Threads website with a heap of new hats, so I spent a while taking photos of hats which wasn’t easy with the wind and the rain. We went back into Jindabyne at around 7:30 pm to go to Carols by Candlelight. The kids had fun running around and rolling down the grassy hill, and both loved the fireworks. It was the first time Toby had ever seen fireworks too!

Today the weather was significantly better and we spent some time down at the river this morning. The water was freezing, but it didn’t stop the kids paddling in it and throwing stones for about an hour. This afternoon Nathan, Toby and I went to Bullocks Hut. The kids rode while I walked. It was fine getting there, the kids had a ball, but getting back was too difficult for Toby. He still often has day sleeps but I had hoped he’d be ok today without…but he wasn’t. He rode some of the way back, then he walked some and rode some, then he wanted me to carry the bike, and then he wanted to be carried as well. I did for a few minutes and by that time he was asleep, and it was impossible to carry a floppy nearly-3-year-old as well as his bike, so I texted Andrew (thankfully there was coverage, i had my phone and it wasn’t flat) to ask him to come and help us. I just sat on a log in the shade and waited for my hero to arrive. 🙂

Andrew and I shared the carrying of Toby back to the campsite. He didn’t stay asleep when we put him in the tent, but that didn’t matter as he’d already had a decent nap. A bit of food and a drink and he was ready to go at full speed again. Andrew took the kids back to the river while I cooked dinner and updated my blog. After dinner we tried to give them a bit of a wash in warm water, but the black bag we were trying for the first time to heat water using the sunlight had already cooled a bit and the air temperature had dropped as well. The boys shivered through their wash and then ran around a bit more, talked to people and rode their bikes for a bit more before falling asleep more quickly than normal when they went to bed. Once again I wasn’t too far behind them.

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At the start of the walk to Bullocks Hut

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Come on Mummy! We are waiting for you!

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Nearly at the hut.

Off to the Mountains


16 Dec

We left on our regular pre-Christmas camping trip yesterday. We had been undecided about where to go now that we have the camper trailer, and finally decided on the northern part of Kosciuszko National Park. We left home a bit later than we’d hoped, and we decided to just go to our normal campsite and we’d make a day trip to the northern part of the park, or maybe even come home that way and spend a night in a campground up there.

We also decided that now that Toby is better at traveling in the car that we’d try to get to the mountains in one day instead of staying overnight in (or near) Albury. That was fine with me as it was raining all day and the idea of setting up the camper in the rain and then probably packing it up wet again the next day to keep traveling just didn’t appeal.

We had a break for lunch at Euroa, another in Albury for the kids to play on the fabulous Adventure Playground there and then it was straight to the campsite. Poor Toby had his usual bout of motion sickness while traveling on the Alpine Way. We made it to our campsite quite late but there was still some daylight to get the camper set up.

It continued raining while we were setting up the camper, and when it wasn’t so hard or stopped briefly the kids went splashing in the puddles in their gumboots or riding through them on their bikes. At least it has cleaned off all most of the mud that was still caked on their brakes and wheels from our last trip. We had a very late dinner with two overtired kids going crazy, but finally they were in bed and asleep. I wasn’t far behind! It’s been a very busy few weeks.

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Additional holiday photos


18 Nov

Here are some photos from the big cameras taken during our holiday. Andrew edited them when we got home, and I have had a go at identifying all the birds we managed to snap. I’m pretty confident with most of the identifications.

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Major Mitchell’s cockatoo

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Nankeen Kestral

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Walls of China, Mungo National Park

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Toby taking photos

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Fun on the board walk

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Sunset

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Wedge-tailed eagle

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Monitor lizard, probably a Lace Monitor

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Look at those pretty markings!

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Emu and chick

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Another favourite of mine, rainbow bee-eaters.

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White-plumed honeyeater

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White-breasted woodswallow

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White-breasted woodswallow

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Australian Ringneck – race barnardi, or Mallee ringneck.

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Little Friarbird

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Singing Spiney-cheeked Honeyeater

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Emu with four chicks

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Red Kangaroos

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Galah

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Little Corella

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Sturt Desert Pea

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Yellow-rumped Thornbill

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Peaceful Dove

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Male Brown Treecreeper

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Emu drinking

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Apostlebird

Mungo National Park to home


11 Nov

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Today we drove all the way home. It was a long day, stopping in Swan Hill for lunch, Kerang for an icecream, Bendigo for the kids to run around at a playground and we got home about 7 pm. Toby fell asleep twice, Nathan once.

We had a great holiday, the new fridge worked well…it was brilliant having a fridge with us. And, of course, it was so convenient having it hooked up to the second car battery. Getting the battery installed and wiring up the car was really worth Andrew’s efforts. The camper towed well, though we did lose the wheel jockey handle somewhere! I’m looking forward to the next trip. 🙂

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