Departing Brisbane

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Bound for Sydney.

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Running from the Night

A flight across the Tasman, losing a race with the terminator.

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Auckland airport. Normal weather.

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Spider web in rain

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Views from my hotel

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Storm Season

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Botanic gardens

A happy afternoon pottering around the botanic gardens, admiring other people’s hard work.

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Up the Mountain Together

A cool day, so we trudged up the mountain looking for wildlife, interesting things and ice cream.

Forest Trail

The start of the trail

Tree stump  on termite mound

Did the tree grow on the termite mound, or did the termites move in later?

Bolbe sp. ground mantis

Ground mantis

Rain channel in forest

Rain gully

Spiky leaf parasites

Spikes.

Eucalypt forest

View across the valley

Fern and tree trunk

Fern, Tree

Brown Grasshopper

Highly friendly grasshopper

The ice cream at the top was delicious.

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From the Mountains to the Mangroves

Yesterday was mountains and rain forests. Today we went as far from the watersheds as you can get and visited Boondall Wetlands. It’s an area of about 1000ha of coastal forest and mangrove swamps.

Since it’s located on the other side of the city we asked Siri to navigate. We already knew that she has a fondness for the new toll-charging AirportLink tunnel, but today we learned that it’s more like a toddler’s single-minded obsession. The idea was to follow her instructions to the start of the toll section, then continue in a sensible direction until she re-planned the route. This didn’t work.

Siri: “Turn left onto AirportLink”.
Us: <ignore, drive right past>
Siri: “Turn left, then left again onto AirportLink”
Us: “No thanks. Heading happily on.”
Siri: “In 100 metres, make a U-turn”
Us: “Nope-de-dope. Full steam ahead!”
Siri: “At the next roundabout take the fourth exit signed AirportLink”
Us: “How’s about a nice hot cup of ‘Not Listening?'”
Siri: “Turn around right now.”
Us: “Do-be-do-be-dooo”
Siri (as we pass the far end of AirportLink toll): “I am never speaking to either of you again.”
Us: <fire up Android navigation>

The wetlands have a variety of walking, cycle and canoe(!) trails. We decided on a 2km walking circuit. It’s been a wet summer and now we’re well into a lovely autumn. Much of the forests are covered in lush greenery which will dry out a treat for fire season.

As often happens on our expeditions, a little forethought would have saved some misery. Wetlands. Hmm. Open stretches of fresh-to-brackish water in autumn. What breeds in that? By the end of the day we’d each donated about a litre of blood to the mosquito population. Dengue can’t be far behind. Anyway, pictures!

Boondall Wetlands

Still green. Paperbarks and Casuarina, mostly.

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Blue flowers in a forest

Blue flowers.

Mangrove creek

Mangrove creek

Pool in Wetlands

Mosquito recruitment area

Swamp in wetlands

Seething with the little bastards.

TRee and sun reflection

More playgrounds for mozzies

Duckweed in swamp

It’s pretty, but it’s home to bloodsuckers.

On the way home, we navigated with a paper map.

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Mount Tamborine

I’m still on holiday. We try to make the most of time off so today we boarded the enormous truck and pointed it southwards towards Mount Tamborine. This is a 600m high remnant of the Tweed shield volcano which blew up around 20 million years ago.

One of the attractions there is a suspended walkway through he rainforest canopy. It would have been good if “Rainforest” and “Canopy” parts had triggered some thoughts about “Vertigo”, “Plummet” and “Fear of certain death” before we arrived. Once we’d forked over the twenty bucks a head I wasn’t going to let my residual plains-ape instincts prevent a good day out. The suspended walkway is solidly built but is designed to permit a clear view in all directions – including straight down to the rainforest floor 20 metres below.

The views across the rain forest were stunning. Serious photography was done by other people. I spent my time worrying about the engineering and chivvying the party onwards to solid ground.

Anyway, pictures:

Rainforest

Helical tree

Rainforest lianas

Skywalk at Mount Tamborine

Rainforest canopy

Panorama from Mount Tamborine

Moth on leaf

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