Thursday 30 March 2017

OUR FINAL DAYS ON THE MIGHTY MURRAY RIVER

Tuesday 28th March, we have found a new Coco Bend Caravan and Camping Ground over on the Moama (NSW) side of the river with lovely friendly owners that have heaps of information for you to spend your time locally.  We have chosen a site beside the lake not the river this time.  Love watching these red rumped parrots feeding around us as well as duck, plovers, galahs, magpies, peewees and swallows flitting into our canopy area.
Loved watching these red rumped parrots feeding beside our rig.


Woke early to capture this lounge window view.  How tranquil is this.
After setting up we took a drive back over the bridge to Victoria's Echuca to explore the history of the township and port.  We vaguely remember the area from years gone bye but so much progress has happened in this area, especially for the tourist industry.  Booked for a paddle-steamer luncheon on EmmyLou (the paddle-steamer used for the tv program "Rivers Run") for Thursday.



Wednesday, the usual laundry day and then headed on down to the back of the caravan park where we attempted to catch a Murray River Cod for dinner!  Not to be, but was a great back-drop to relax, watch a group of free campers across the other side and a heap of noisy school children on some horse riding and horse drawn carriage ride stop and play on the banks.



Thursday 30th March  Today we enjoyed our lunch on board the paddle-steamer EmmyLou. Temperatures have plummeted today so we have donned our winter woollies to sit out on the deck for lunch.  I am amazed at the number of paddle-steamers still in working order here at the Port of Echuca.







I am very disappointed, my SD card must be full, so all the photos I took this afternoon on the water and at the Holden Museum have not been recorded.  We found the museum very interesting.  I was trying to remember what model Mum and Dad's car was or did they have two??  Memory is not that great now after all it was fifty five years ago!!!

We have just loved roaming this Murray River and learning all the history and seeing all the businesses the water from this huge river provide.  We haven't seen all of the Murray but a large  portion of it.  Well worth this adventure.  Tomorrow we now head north to be back with the family for Easter.  Counting down now.

Monday 27 March 2017

MURRAY VALLEY HIGHWAY

We stopped at Lake Boga to enjoy this tranquil lake at it's best today.  Wish we had more time to park here beside its shores but have to press on down the highway to Cohuna RV Park.



Cohuna, thank you CMCA for putting in this park right opposite the shops on the other side of the Gunbower Creek.  Walked the town's sights and talked to locals and fellow traveller's who have also discovered this gem of a park.



The Park with our rig to the right through the fountain.  Yes plenty of traveller's stopped here for the night or the 3 nights as the park allows.
You would not believe it, this morning as I was catching up with this blog, the wind got stronger and stronger blowing dust through the camp.   Looked out as we headed over the creek for some lunch to see the whole area was ONE huge dust storm.  WOW!!!  After a couple of hours we have now just got the awning down in time before the rain has started to fall.  Nice to see - but we are sitting in dust and hope this doesn't turn into mud!!!!!!  So long as it clears the air down here, I do not mind.  Still 35 degrees.  Too hot for this munchkin.

We are now travelling through dairy farming country and the farmers flood the paddocks before ploughing and sewing the seeds for the crops to feed the cattle.  A  little different to where I came from.

Saturday 25 March 2017

SWAN HILL AND HARMONY DAY

How about this lounge chair view!

We travelled on down the Sturt Hwy to Euston, crossed the Murray River into Victoria and stopped at Robinvale for a coffee and pie for lunch before then wending our way along the Murray Valley Hwy to Swan Hill for a couple of nights.


Watched facinated as these two spoonbills fed off the muddy banks.

Thousands of galahs abound around the river banks here.
Harmony Day was celebrated right beside the caravan park so wandered over to taste the multicultural food markets for dinner and were fascinated to see all these outfits from all over the world.






HOME an installation of 1200 little houses made by the community on display in the rotund.



This photo captures the multicultural aspect of this district perfectly.

Wednesday 22 March 2017

RED CLIFFS

We ventured south to Red Cliffs were the town pays homage to its horticultural history through the proudly displayed "Big Lizzie", a 45 tonne machine that was once used to clear the Mallee scrub.

We have never seen wheels like this before!


We then took the Scenic drive and strolled the Redgum Gully boardwalk to view the Red Cliffs (why the town was named after), before continuing on to Snake gully and the viewing platform looking down Snake Gully.




Snake Gully on the Murray River.  Also one can see the power station situated near the cliffs generating power to local areas.
Yes, still plenty of vines growing in this region and so plenty of wineries.




Monday 20 March 2017

WENTWORTH













If you look hard, one can see the muddy waters of the Darling and the clearer waters of the faster flowing Murray River.

Wentworth, the junction of the Murray and Darling Rivers is where the town of Wentworth began.  This confluence was used by cattlemen as a crossing for cattle and sheep, to begin the "Sydney/Adelaide Highway".  Wentworth grew in strength and prosperity during the Riverboat era because of its position at the confluence of Australia's two greatest rivers and the commencement of the grazing industry.  The Murray and Darling River system is the fourth largest river catchment in the world. - Wentworth is the confluence of all rivers west of the Great Dividing Range.


How clever are these gardens.  Houses behind the gardens are used and also the power poles are also incorporated in the gardens.
So much to see and do out here at Wentworth - The TV program "Prisoners" Wentworth Goal.


Fotherby Park was originally developed to house the Paddlesteamer Ruby, built in 1907, was the 4th paddle-steamer to be called "Ruby" and transported passengers and cargo between Echuca, Mildura, Wentworth and Goolwa.
Also at Fotherby Park is The Man called "Possum".  He was a New Zealand shearer who became disgruntled by life during the Great Depression took to living off the land in and around Wentworth.  He slept in trees (thus the name), walked many miles, swam the rivers, living the life of a hermit and avoided human contact for some 50 years before his death at the age of 81 years.  Unfortunately the story via voca-phone by placing a coin in the metal box near the statue was broken by vandals so could not hear more about him!!!!

There is a tractor Monument in town and also this TEA20 Harry Ferguson tractor remembering their involvement in the building of the massive levee banks that protected Wentworth against the devastating 1956 floods.  The cairn of stones where the monument sits is set a t the hwight which water would have inundated the town if the clay levee banks had not been constructed.  "By God and by Fergie we beat the Flood!"

Could not get the photo of the town momument so put this one from Fotherby Park instead.!!

John Egge, a Chinese riverboat captain was Born in Shanghai, China, and came to Australia in 1852. Married, had eleven children, in 1859 the couple worked their passages up the Murray to Wentworth, where they set up a business hawking pies and pasties which they baked in camp ovens.  Trading in the businesses of bakery, butchery, general dealers and kept a boarding-house to cater for the many single men in the area. Chartered the Teviot to trade on the river as a floating shop then chartered more boats to carry cargo then bought the Endeavour to ply the upper Murray between Exhuca and Albury.  He became one of the biggest traders on the river, hence this statue down beside the wharf where he loaded his cargo etc. on board his boats.

Last but by no means least we visited the Perry Sandhills. According to geoligists, the Perry Sandhills originated after an Ice Age (40,000 years ago) and were formed by wind erosion over thousands of years.  Skeletal reamins of giant mega-fauna (kangaroos, lions, emus, wombats and giant goanna) have been found here.  A 500 year old river rud gum tree, known as the God Tree still stands with her trunk buried in the sand allowing one to stand in the canopy of the tree.

Perry Sandhills are 3 kilometres (as the crow flies) from the Murray River.


The large God Tree



Reminds us of The Simpson Desert.

Sunday 19 March 2017

MILDURA

We booked into the Buronga Family Caravan Park.  Wow, what a nice park.  Very spacious between vans, interesting gardens with lots of different plaster animals themed in different gardens as well as colourful flags waving in the breezes alongside the Murray River.  Look across to the Mildura CBD wharf and riverfront.  Here for the week ending 24th March where we will travel to Swan Hill for a couple of nights.


Plenty of ducks, two geese and black swans wandering around the grounds












This reminds me of Joe!

Cooling off in the second  pool in the Caravan Park.



Aren't these bronze statues depict the "family leisure time so well".




















After visiting the Information Centre to read the local history and take in all the displays we found the Port of Mildura Wharf and drove along the Hugh King Drive to the Old Mildura Homestead to stroll through the grounds, house, shearing shed (which holds functions) and stables and horse yards.  It really takes one back to those times of history.














We stayed here in Mildura for a week to catch-up on this blog, look at other places of interest and you can read and also met up at last with cousin Brenda who was travelling through in "Ice Queen".  So wonderful to see you if only for 10-15 minutes.  And yes, we will be getting a better lifestyle for ourselves thanks to you.

Some interesting Mildura fast facts I think worth knowing:-
The Mildura region grows the following percentages of Australia's fresh produce:
*  Almost 100% of australia's dried vine fruit (98%)
*  75% table grapes
*  69% almonds
*  48% pistachios
*  24% citrus
*  20% of wine grape crush
*  13% carrots
*  9% asparagus

Treated ourselves to lunch at the Riverfront Cafe - Docks.ide Cafe to this yummy trio of seafood platter.


These fish know when to hang around when one cannot finish ones chips on the plate!!  The fish bite the ducks who get to the chips first.  Ha ha.




Our last sunset looking over to Mildura CBD on Thursday evening

The magic of water to light up the town wharf at night.
Farewell Mildura - until next time.  23rd March 2017.