Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Movement at Goughs Bay

 With all the approvals now in place, Mark the Builder was able to arrange for the excavations to start on the block.  The massive stump in the middle of the block was first to go.

Now the ground has been prepared for the building and water tanks at the rear.

Yarrawonga

 We took a day to travel to Yarrawonga to meet the solicitor who was dealing with Greg's Will.  On the way up we had to check out the vanilla slices.

We found our accommodation to be right in the middle of the 1960s but  the rest of the town was buzzing. It is a centre for water sport and retirement on the banks of Lake Mulwala on the Murray River.  The place has a long history.  The original Customs House between the colonies of Victoria and New South Wales still stands along with some early buildings.
The Ovens River is near flood levels and is soaking the local wetlands.
But the rain seems to be suiting the surrounding crops and canola.

Saturday, August 13, 2022

Cooper - Basketball

 Cooper was just back from Music Camp and had to climb out of bed to play Basketball.  They got a bit of a hiding so a little more practice may be needed.  Cooper had some good passages of play.

And he got a bit of air time.
He came off after the game ready to go back to bed!

Brett's Birthday

 Celebrating a birthday late seems to be almost the norm these days.  However we did get to Brett's celebration at the Cinque Restaurant last night.  A great restaurant and definitely not short of customers!

A New Driver

 Jack has his "L" plates. A new era starts in the household!

Thursday, August 11, 2022

Heading Home

 We had an early start in Winton in order to get to Longreach to meet the train.

It was an uneventful journey that saw us at lunch in a Longreach Pub then on to a plane to Brisbane, then a flight to Melbourne.
The following morning, the cars on the street were covered in ice! We have to face up to harsh realities.

An Ancient Drama

 We headed south west of Winton to the Lark Quarry where an amazing dinosaur trackway had been discovered.  There were over 1000 footprints of a number of dinosaur species.  The footprints tell the story of a large (horse size) predator chasing smaller prey.

The track of the larger animal is clear and the smaller animals scatter around it.
A huge covering has been constructed to preserve this extraordinary find.  The desolate spinifex country where the discovery was made is a far cry from the conditions faced by the dinosaurs.  It would have been warm and wet 100 million years ago.
We continued on back to Winton through some spectacular country that was "green" for the first time after 10 years of drought.

Dinosaur Country

 As a result of amateur paleontologists, coincidences and chance meetings over 20 years ago, the Winton, Richmond area of Queensland has become the epicentre of dinosaur research and discovery in Australia. We visited one of the large facilities near Winton where the extracted fossils are being cleaned, reconstructed and investigated.

Fossils embedded in rock are encased in plaster to preserve them before extraction.  This rack could take 20 years to fully investigate.
Dental equipment is used to remove rock from the fossils.  It is painstaking detailed work largely completed by volunteers.  Some huge bones have been found.
This sample is made up of the actual fossils extracted from the rock.
An ancient mud flat is also preserved that shows the progress of a variety of dinosaurs across the (then) soft mud.
The animals discovered range from tiny to enormous.
A sunset dinner was the perfect way to end the day.

The Waltzing Matilda Museum

"Waltzing Matilda" is essentially on the bottom of my playlist so it was with some trepidation that we were taken to visit the "Waltzing Matilda" Museum.  Thankfully the museum was more about the area and its history than the song.  Unfortunately the background audio was predictable.

Winton

 We travelled the few hours up the road to Winton, smaller and more remote than Longreach.  The town may be small but it hosts a number of Pubs and the pubs host the local philosophers

One of the old pubs is being refurbished in the full Art Deco style.
The region features low rainfall so the local cinema was able to forgo the need for a roof.