Australian Cruise

Australian Cruise
Our first full day in Australia, 2012, on a Freemantle beach.

Thursday, July 26, 2018

Part One. Trip to Western Australia, July 2018.

As per usual, I am extremely out of date on my blog.  But I thought this would be a great way to post my vacation notes and photos, so here goes! Note: I took a couple of thousand photos.  Here will only be a few dozen. :-)

We were gone to Western Australia for about 3 1/2 weeks.  I am going to divide the posts into four sections: 1) First part of the trip, Perth; 2) Second part of the trip, Eighty Mile Beach and Port Hedland; 3) Last part of the trip, Broome; 4) The birds.

PART ONE, PERTH


JULY 1, 2: We traveled to Sydney, and because of a 3 hour flight delay, we got to stay in the Rydge Hotel at the Sydney airport.  Very nice!  Instead of flying through “our” night, we got a good night’s sleep before heading to Perth.

JULY 3: Traveled to Perth, about a 5-6 hour flight.  We took the bus from the airport to as close to our hotel as we could, and walked to rest of the way.  We stayed at Bailey’s Hotel.  It’s a budget hotel, but it was perfect for us.  It had a fridge, microwave, was clean, had free (but limited) Internet, and was 5 minutes from the free bus, or a 20 minute walk to the train station.  Also a 5 minute walk to a grocery store and Dominoes pizza.
We discovered that we came during school holidays, so a transit “family pass” was only $12.50 AUD per day.  This saved us almost $100 in transportation costs for the week we were in Perth!
After we dropped off our luggage, we walked about half way around Herdsman Lake.  Found ducks and other birds.
On the bus!
  


Herdsman Lake
  







JULY 4: Our “big day” in Perth!  We hired a private tour guide, Nicolas (“Nic”), and he took us to the Pinnacles, some sand dunes and Yanchap Park.
The Pinnacles were spectacular!  Yellow sand, and fantastical shapes of stone pillars.  We tracked a kangaroo, but he was too fast for us to catch up with him.  Lots of evidence of many kangaroos and emus, but tracks and droppings. 


Notice the very yellow dirt!

John and Nic



One of the largest pinacles in the park.




Rained on and off all day.  Ate our picnic lunch in the car at the beach.  Great view, but no wind, sand or rain.
Sand dunes were the “small” ones, but they were amazing!  The rain had compacted the sand, so it was easy to climb up.  Once we got to the top—WOW!  The wind must have been 40 mph!

Yanchep: Koala bear family, all sleeping in the trees.  We found 6 of the 8 in the family.  Kangaroos, a few dozen grays.  Got about 3 feet from one.
At Yanchep Park


JULY 5: Freemantle & Cottlesloe
We went first to South Beach in Freemantle.  It’s a LONG walk from the train station to that beach.  We found a few good/new shells, but it was mostly things we already had.  It was a blustery day, cold and windy with occasional sprinkles.  It was warmer in the afternoon and much more pleasant.  Ate lunch at a park while watching the local cockatoos.

Perth Train Station
 


Freemantle beach

From Freemantle beach

One of the hundreds of cuttlebones here.

Fun mural on the park bathrooms.

Our lunch entertainment

When we tired of the Freemantle beaches, we walked back to the train and rode back to Cottesloe.  I had my doubts about this beach, because it was a surfer beach.  But just outside where the surfers were, there was a reef/rock cropping.  Amazing amount of shells.  We got some nice pin shells and several other cool shells.  We picked up as much volume wise in 1 hour as we had all morning in Freemantle.
We had planned to go to Cottesloe on a different day, but with the all day transit passes we decided to stop by and “check it out.”  Glad we did!


Cottesloe beach
Caspian Tern





Cormarant, drying off his wings
One of the many sponges that had washed up on shore.


Since our hotel has a little fridge and microwave, we bought most of our meals at the local IGA.  Their meat pies were scrumptious, as well as their deli sandwiches. 









JULY 6, Zoo:
Such a fun day at the Zoo!  They had an “Australian Walkabout: where we were 1 foot from wallabies, and saw both gray and red kangaroos.  They had lots of birds, too.  It’s a small zoo, but excellent!  These are just a few of the photos from today.  20,000 steps today.  








This black swan wasn't at the zoo, but in the Swan River, on the way to the zoo.


JULY 7, Rockingham and Cape Peron:
We found some fun beaches, especially at Cape Peron.  Some new and some improved shells. 19,000 steps.
Rockingham beach

Close up of part of beach.  Lots of shells!

Someone had made a heart, so I added J + R to make it ours.

Magpie Lark.  This is the female.  They are all over Australia.

This nice seagull was asking for a handout.

At Cape Peron

More Cape Peron.  This was the only place I found sea glass,
and I found a lot of it!  I brought it home and will put it in a jar.

More of Cape Peron.  One of the funnest beaches in Perth.

Our shell haul for the day at Rockingham and Cape Peron.


JULY 8, Church and temple:
The church website said church started at 10 a.m., so we took a bus and got there about 10:01.  Sacrament meeting was in full force… then we realized it was the end of the meeting, not the beginning!  Someone saw us in the hall, and came out and explained that it was a youth conference, and the regular ward for that day only was meeting at 1 p.m.  We were grateful for the all-day transit pass, as we took the bus back to the hotel, then came back at 1:00.
After church we took a few pictures of the Perth Temple, which is next door to the meetinghouse, then went back to the hotel.  Spent 2 hours on the bus that day. 😊  Nice relaxing day.



JULY 9, Rottness Island:
Prior to our trip, we had gone back and forth about whether or not to spend our money going to Rottness Island, and finally decided we’d regret it if we didn’t.  We are very glad we went!  Nice ferry ride (35 minutes) to the island from Freemantle.  (It was much cheaper to ride the train to Freemantle and pick up the Ferry there than to pick up the Ferry at Perth.)  Even though there were a few hundred tourists on the island, we saw few of them where we went. We decided to do out exploring walking, so we saw everything there was to see on about ¼ of the island.  We walked around to beaches and the lakes (small salt water lakes).  Only 2 beaches, lakes or ocean, had decent shells, and only in small areas, but we still found about 7 new species.
Saw quokas, the recident rodent that is like a small wallaby, an osprey, pelicans, and lots of other birds.  We even saw a skink!  The quokas are very friendly and used to people.  You’re not supposed to touch or feed them, but we sure could have.  One came up to John while he was filling up our water bottles and started sniffing him, like a dog would to a new person.  When I came up, he sniffed me, too, before he went away.  There are about 10,000 of them on the island.
Got fish and chips at Freemantle for dinner.

Map of Rottness Island





A very curious quoka.




Pelican


Stilts

Skink


I believe this was Herschel Lake. :-)

Our ferry


JULY 10, Laundry, catch-up and King’s Park
Our motel has laundry, and supposedly it was coin operated, but they had changed it to a tap-on credit card system.  None of our credit cards have the tap-on ability, so we had to lug our laundry a couple of blocks away.  We lugged it in one of the suitcases. John went back to the hotel while I stayed with the laundry and worked on my cross-stitch, then he came back to help me get it back home.  Very lovely laundrymat.
I folded laundry, John worked on getting shells ready to take on the plane, we went shopping for our food, had lunch, then went to Kings Park.
We spend a relaxing afternoon at Kings Park.  It’s HUGE!  We only went to part of it, mainly where the botanical gardens were, as well as the Reflection area, and the Pioneer Women Memorial.  Fun plants and flowers, although many were not in bloom because it was winter.  But plenty still were.
We expected to see different kinds of birds, but mainly saw red waddle birds and some lorikeets, until we were headed out of the park.  Then five black cockatoos flew into a tree right in front of us! Got some fun pics!
Home on the Red Cat bus. The Cat busses are free, and go mainly around the center of town.  One of the stops is less than 5 minutes from our hotel.  Besides food and laundry, today was free!



Boab tree



Grass tree




Black cockatoo

JULY 11, Pack, Monger Lake, and fly to Perth:
Packed up, then stored our luggage at the hotel, then took a train to Leedsville, and walked to Monger Lake.  We walked around the whole lake.  Saw pelicans, swans, cockatoos, etc. It was a beautiful, fun walk.  Then back on the train and bus to the hotel to pick up our luggage, then walked a few blocks to catch the bus to the airport.  Whew!
We got to the airport way early, and ate our lunch there.  After a few hours plane ride we arrived in Broome!  Saw the sunset from plane window.
We stayed at the Ochre Moon B&B, with hosts Frank and Mary Ann.  Frank picked us up from the airport, and we spent the rest of the evening resting, watching TV and eating dinner. 


Monger Lake, small but beautiful and lots of bird life.






Sun has set.



Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Walking down the stairs in the dark....

Way back in February 2015, I ran down the back steps, in the dark.  I thought about turning on the light, but peaked down the stairs, and I could see them from the porch, so thought I would be fine.  Once I was on the stairs, though, they were now in my own shadow.  As I hurried down them, I got to what I thought was the last step, took a big step to land on the carport, ......... and went down 8 more inches than expected.  I literally heard a crack, and felt immediate intense pain.  Not a good thing.

It was late, and I was pretty sure out doctor's office was closed, and I said I wanted to wait until morning to go.  I was hungry!  I wanted to eat!  John had an early commitment the next morning, and we went after that.  Finally we went, and sure enough, the x-ray showed that  I had indeed broken my foot.  My 5th metatarsal, to be exact.
The arrow points to the crack.  That's not a joint!

This shows the bruising and swelling of my right foot.

My new accessories.  Pretty uncomfortable. And ugly.



I did not want surgery.  I only went to my regular doctor at first, and he didn't think I would need surgery.  He even shared the x-rays with a podiatrist, who concurred with my doctor that I didn't need to see a specialist.

Between the 1st appointment and the 2nd, the x-rays showed a little healing. Between the end of Month 2 and the end of Month 3, x-rays showed no improvement.  That's when I finally went to a podiatrist.  The podiatrist looked at my x-rays and told me that if I had had surgery in the beginning, I would be healed already.  Bones only heal if the broken pieces are touching.  My broken pieces were not touching!  Close, but not touching!  The podiatrist said, "That's like saying you're just a little pregnant."  You're either pregnant or not.  Not almost pregnant.  Sigh.

If they did surgery at this point, it would be going backwards- they'd have to clean out the new bone growth, push the crack together, put a pin in, then start the healing process all over.  Instead of that, they gave me a bone-growth stimulator.  I had to wear this medical device 3 hours a day, every day.  I did it while sleeping, most of the time.  After a week, I thought, "You know, I sleep longer than 3 hours.  I may as well turn that thing on for another 3 hours."  I always wake up in the middle of the night anyway!  So for 3 weeks between Month 3 and Month 4, I was wearing it for almost an average of 6 hours a day.  I could feel that my foot was healing, the swelling was going down and it ached less.  That was a really great feeling!
This is my bone growth stimulator.  I would turn it on, and it would send electrical impulses at my broken bone for 3 hours.



Time came for the Month 4 x-ray.  My bone was almost completely healed!  Since I was moving, the doctor just gave me "the plan", which was to stay on crutches for a little longer, until mid June, starting to put more weight on my foot, with a boot.  Then wear my boot until August 1st.  I took the crutches on vacation, but didn't use them much.  I mostly just wore the boot.

Sometimes you just have to customize! Foam, polka dotted duct tape and a strap to hold a bag blinged up my crutches.
I flew into the Honolulu airport on July 24th.  I couldn't wait to take off my boot, so I actually wore it for the last time on Thursday, July 30, getting rid of it one day early!  I'm sure my doctor would have been okay with that!

Walking with a boot was quite easy.  WAY easier than the knee scooter or crutches!  No pain, just the weight of the boot.  Nice and supportive and very protective.  Walking without the boot was a different story.  My ligaments had barely moved in 6 months and were tight.  I had to move slow, and not go very far.  Each week I'd try to walk farther, and eventually my foot stopped aching so much.  I massaged my foot often, and took a lot of Ibuprofen.

It's been 6 months since I got rid of the boot. Now my foot is pretty much healed, probably 95%.  I can walk 5 miles a day!  Back in August I had a hard time walking 2 blocks to church!  My foot still swells, and I wonder if I will ever be able to wear my favorite shoes again!  Just to see if it was real or my imagination, I measured my feet a few days ago.  Around the middle, my right foot is one centimeter larger than my left.  I'm betting that sometimes it's more than that, depending on time of day and what I've been doing.  It was not my imagination!

In 2 weeks, on February 19th, it will be my one year anniversary of breaking my foot.  Even though it is not 100% back to normal, I am extremely grateful for the healing that has happened.  If this is as far as I go, well, I can certainly live with it!  I cannot complain, not when I can walk 5 miles!  I may have to buy more shoes, though.
My favorite sandals.  They are too tight across the front of the foot, and I still can't wear them.


What hasn't healed yet as much is the finger I broke while we were on vacation.  We were at a beach, and I wanted to go snorkeling.  John helped me in and out of the water.  After we got out, I let go of his hand, slipped and fell.  I hyper-extended the fingers on my right hand, and broke a piece of bone on my middle finger joint.  I still can't close it all the way or straighten it all the way and have to do stretching exercises every day.  I feel like the injury has spurred on some arthritis, as now all 10 fingers are stiff every morning.

So, the lessons are these:
1) Don't go down the stairs in the dark!!!
2) Don't let go of your support when you are in a vulnerable situation!
3) Celebrate the milestones, and do as much as you can to make your situation easier.  Figure out what you can do by yourself (without hurting yourself!), as it will lift your spirits do not have to rely so much on others.  The first day I could take a shower all by myself was a spectacular day!
4) Don't complain about your problems, because there are many who would trade you yours for theirs.


Our bodies are a blessing, and they are meant to be temporary.  As my brother, a computer programmer, put it once, "Body, version 1."   Be glad that you have one, and take care of it the best you can, and put it to good use!


Tuesday, January 26, 2016

BIG changes! Hawaii!

I was actually surprised to see that I had posted last February.  I didn't realize it had been so recent. :-) So many things to talk about. Most of those things will wait for a later post.

LOTS of things have happened since last February!  We have a new grandson; that was a BIG deal!! I love him so much!  It's amazing how much love you can have for grand children.  The HUGE think that happened this year was Hubby was assigned a new position and we moved... to Laie, Hawaii! Never in our wildest dreams did we ever think that we would live in Hawaii.

Main entrance to BYU-H.
Family Photo Wall
Many would think that this was a dream come true, but it isn't easy. It is true that I love living here, (I'll talk about the challenges later), but I miss Provo, too.  I miss my family- in-laws, kids, and especially grand kids-, friends and neighbors. After living in the same house for 25 years, the roots are deep.  One of the first things I did here was to hang family photos. Didn't feel right until the pictures were up.  I also started using Facebook a LOT!  I didn't feel so far away when I could see what my friends and family were doing.  Some people moving here have a hard time adjusting, mainly because they are so far from family.

There are many challenges here that I've had to learn how to deal with:

1) Humidity. When you drop a piece of ice, it melts, then stays a small puddle of water.  Unless it is in the sun, it seems to stay forever.  90 degree weather feels about the same as 100+ degrees in Utah.  Thankfully, we usually only get to 90 during "summer": July, August, September, and maybe into October if it's a hot year.

Humidity is also a good thing.  My skin and hair are so soft, even though curls don't stay more than 5 minutes after you step outside!

2) Mildew.  Related to humidity, obviously, but you have to always be on the look-out.  I've had to clean mildew off of 2 pairs of shoes, a skirt and a jacket that I hadn't worn for a while.  Plus a wallet I wasn't using.  Threw out my almost all green "boot" (worn after I broke my foot last February.) Gross.

3) Rust.  Also related to humidity, but also to the fact that we are close to the ocean, and the ocean breeze blows in salt air.  Plastic is way nice to have here, especially for patio furniture and fan covers.  Motors don't last long on small appliances or lawn mowers.  Someone said the average life of a lawn mower was 2-3 years!  I put my sewing machine under its cover with a silica gel bag inside the cover.  Hopefully, it will survive.  Also, metal door handles and door stops corrode like crazy. Everyone's bike that's not brand new this year looks like it is 20 years old. We wash our car every time we come back from the beach, and it still has rust spots on it. Rust just happens. You have to constantly attack it.


4) Bugs. Never, ever leave any food scraps out.  Ever.  You need to make sure you clean up after meals and not procrastinate or leave until morning.  You will be sorry.  Sometimes the ants come without even food to invite them.  Terminex is my friend.  They come every 3 months and in-between if there is a problem.

The things that I've really enjoyed:

1) The sea breeze.  Our house is 2 blocks from the ocean, and we get the East Tradewinds blowing right through our windows.  I absolutely love it when the wind is blowing!

2) The green mountains.  I love mountains.  I love white, snow-capped mountains, short mountains, tall mountains.  Oahu's mountains are green, some are very steep and some are more shallow and round.  I love seeing the different mountains around the island, and love showing them off to visitors.





3) The ocean.  Okay, that may be obvious, but there are a lot of people here that just aren't ocean goers!  Hubby and I love to snorkel and scuba dive, and have done so many times since our move here.  Many of the beaches are fun to go to to look for shells, too, which we have done for some of our Saturday outings.

4) The community.  Laie is a very close-knit community.  Almost everyone is associated with either BYU-Hawaii or the Polynesian Cultural Center, and everyone knows everyone.  I don't know everyone yet, though!  The faculty and staff at the school are definitely an "ohana," or family.  Although I'm quite new here, everyone has really tried to make me feel welcome.

5) The fruits, palm trees and flowers.  I really love pineapple, mango, bananas, passion fruit!  Palm trees are just so cool and make me feel relaxed.  And the flowers are gorgeous!

6) My house. We are renting, but I really like our new house, which is technically a duplex.  I have a master bathroom, a walk-in closet, a garage, a huge laundry room and a huge dining room-living room combined area.  Small yard.  LOVE it.

7) Being with hubby more.  John's responsibilities at work and church here do not take up as much time as they did back in Provo.  Even the fact that he can walk to work in 3 minutes makes a big difference in how much time he spends at home.  Back in Provo, he would walk to work and back- almost 1 1/2 hours.  Now we take a long walk together each weekday morning.  Even though we still have yard work, it takes much less time, so I get him for more hours on Saturdays.  We probably spend 10-15 hours more together each week than we used to. That's a huge difference.

So even though I miss Provo, my home is here now.  The truth is, my home is where John is.  When he goes away on a business trip, I miss him, and start feeling a bit homesick for Provo.  But when I'm gone visiting, and he is here, I miss him and love it when I'm back!

Pretty bad picture of John and I after a Saturday outing.


Saturday, February 21, 2015

My first attempt at designing my own snowflake!

I was at a basketball game and brought along my thread and hook, but only one simple snowflake pattern, because I wanted to actually be able to watch the game!  I finished that snowflake before the 1st half was over..... Hmmmm.  Maybe I'll just start crocheting and see what I come up with....  Here are the results!


The one on the top is the first attempt, and I finished it by the end of the game.  I decided to make another version the next day, and that is on the bottom.  The secondary loops are on the 4th row instead of the 3rd, so they doesn't have the single crocheting around them.  Also, on the first attempt, I made the loops 8 chains on the 3rd row, so it was a lot more loose.  I kind of like that look. 

If I was to do it again, I'd make the picots on the secondary loops much smaller, like all 3ch picots, instead of 5ch, 7ch, 5 ch triple picots.  I like large picots, but it is a bit too much here for ALL the loops to have such large picots.

Here is my pattern (my 2nd snowflake):
Rhonda's Snowflake
Special stitches:
5 ch picot: ch 5, sl st in 5th ch from hook.
Triple picot:  ch 5, sl st in 5th ch from hook; ch 7, sl st in 7th ch from hook; ch 5, st st in 5th ch from hook; sl st in first sl st.


Ch 6 and sl st in 6th ch from hook to make a loop, or (preferred) make a magic ring.
Rd. 1:  Ch 2 (counts as dc), 11 dc in ring.   (12 dc)
Rd. 2:  (Ch 6, skip a stitch, sl st in next st) 5 times.  Ch 3, dc in beg st.   (6 loops)
Rd. 3:  Ch 1, sc in same loop, (Ch 6, sc in next loop) around, joining at at beg sc.  (6 loops)
Rd. 4:  Ch 1, sc in same loop, *in next loop (4 sc, 5 ch picot, 4sc); sc in sc.*  Repeat around, sl st in beg. sc.
Rd. 5: [Ch 5, triple picot, ch 5, sl st in same st. Ch 12, triple picot, ch 6, sl st in 6th ch from hook, ch 6, sl st in next sc.]  Repeat around, sl st in beg. st.
Finish, weaving in ends, and stiffen.


Monday, February 16, 2015

More snowflakes!

The materials for making snowflakes are quite portable, and they are so fun to make, that I've made some more!  Four of them are the same (some of the ones I will be giving away), one is another repeat, but the others are new patterns.  So fun!

First, the four of a kind, with the chart found at http://stylowi.pl/15848121:


Next, I have 4 snowflakes from a Martha Stewart site :


The Martha Stewart site is sort of confusing, as it shows a picture of all the snowflakes, then has steps 1-5.  Step 1 is the overall directions of making, stiffening and pinning the snowflakes.  Steps 2-5 are instructions for the individual snowflakes, all mooched together in one paragraph.  I copied pasted onto a Word document and put spaces between the rows.  The "feather" flake was easy, but a pain to pin.  All of them were fairly easy patterns.

Then one I have to find the pattern for... Book, "Our Best Christmas Thread Crochet", #31...


Then the last one is from a site with seven snowflake patterns.   Mine is #7.  Super easy pattern, with a lot of loops, and you just pin it to get the angles.  I think it's pretty cute.  My changes to the pattern:  Instead of starting with a chain of 8 and then 18 dc (2sc counting as a dc), I did a 6 chain ring and did 12 dc in the chain. Then just do the next row "in the next stitch." Couldn't figure out what she meant by skip the next space...