Completely overslept
today. The plan was for Iain and me to head in to town at seven in
the morning. Iain for Camerons graduation from university and me to
look at Sydney during that time. After that we could have met
somewhere.
That plan didn't go
according to plan, as I woke up at 11.30 AM. After finding out my
clocks where going right and Iain hadn't been able to get me up I had
some breakfast and then continued on to the train station to get to
Sydney. The next train left Springwood 45 minutes later, so I had a
look around the town. After that walk it was a train ride of about
one and a half hours to Sydney (don't know exactly, slept some more).
The trains here all seem to be double deckers and I was at the top
looking out over a valley whilst going to Sydney. Met up with Iain
and Brendan in Sydney Central, Cameron had to leave early to get to a
job he got. We had a look at the Sydney Opera house close up and the
harbour bridge from afar. The Opera house is plated in ceramic tiles,
similar to a bathroom floor.
After viewing that it
was back on to the train for a journey back to Springwood, where we
said goodbye to Brendan, who had another hour to take home. Went
shopping and Iain cooked up something nice in the evening.
Aaaand I woke up early
today again. Plan wasn't fully fleshed out that early in the morning.
I ended up chilling until midday, as Iain went of to vote, Leanne got
prepared for her netball game later in the day and Angus was still in
bed (much like Daniel actually). Iain and me got dropped of at the
station bye Leanne on her way to the netball match and took the train
to Blackheath where Brendan, Maddy and Nicholas where waiting for us.
After the rest of the entourage had voted (NSW has their votes right
when I came) we set of towards a bush walk. We looked for snakes and
the likes of animals on the way to some cliffs that overlook the Blue
Mountains National Park, similar to where we had been the two day
prior. Shortly before the cliffs we had a small break and Maddy went
of home for some rest, whilst the boys carried on along Braeside
Track to get to Govetts Leap at the end. Govetts Leap turned out to
be a waterfall and the wind was blowing the water spray back over the
waterfall itself on to the track we where walking along. It was
basically very damp air on a hot day. We reached Govetts Leap at the
end and met an Australian with his German companion and a few of the
German relatives over for visiting. Had a small chat overlooking the
fantastic view of the Blue Mountains National Park from Govetts Leap.
Carried along through the bush, with Nicholas being swapped from Dad
to Granddad. Always had a view to the left over the canyons as we
carried on along Clifftop Track to Evans Lookout (same place we had
been two days ago). We spotted two termite hills on the way, a few
black parrots out over the canyon, some crimson rosellas (red
parrots) in the trees and wild sundews (meat eating plants) in the
damper regions. Arriving at Evans Lookout which was more touristy and
stayed a while before Nicholas decided he had had enough and we
returned back to where they live. They showed me the Grand Canyon
exit and entry along the way, a track we might do sometime.
Arrived back where
Brendan's family lives and where greeted by Maddys mother who showed
us around their place, a pretty large spot of land surrounded in
bush, before we carried on to a lively evening meal. After that a
short stop by the three sisters after we had dropped of Brendan,
Maddy, Maddys mum and Nicholas at their place. Watched the bats zoom
around catching insects and viewed the three pinnacles known as the
three sisters before we headed back to home for some rest.
Lovely and massive
canyon system here in the Blue Mountains.
Not that much today, I
woke up to go see a soccer game of Angus, which his team won.
The afternoon was spent
with lazzing around a bit, doing some weeding and watching a film
about the Blue Mountains National Park (The Edge). Didn't know they
where the only place in the world that has Wollemi pines (100 million
old plant species), one of the oldest and rarest trees in the world
(less than 100 mature trees). Their location is kept a secret and
people flown in are blindfolded to not give away their position.
After that the evening
was spent with organising a surf lesson and checking the job market
with what is available.
A great way of helping to preserve the Wollemi pines :) - by blindfolding visitors so they are unaware of the location!
ReplyDeleteSuper
ReplyDelete