Friday, 22 February 2013

Tasmania- Day 1&2

This year we decided to celebrate Australia day in Tasmania (which is still a part of Australia for those of you who don't know your Australian geography). We have been meaning to go for some time. In addition, now that we are living in Melbourne there is no good excuse to NOT see Tassie...It is literally a ferry boat ride away (you can drive your car up on the ferry- rent a little cabin bed and 8 hours later show up to a Tasmanian morning).  Sadly for us, there was no room on the ferry boat and we had to take a 45 minute plane ride instead.

Lucky for us, my dad was in town and he had never seen Tasmania either (last year he visited us and saw New Zealand on the way) so we invited him to come along. Since we had one extra person, we no longer fitted into a 5 seater car so we upgraded to the only thing they had...the IMAX- it was huge!
Day 1: we landed in Hobart, found our cabin at the holiday park, turned on some Aussie Open Tennis and let the kids play around.
Day 2: We headed up to Mount Wellington, which is the highest point in Hobart- Darwin tried to summit this mountain twice. The first time the weather forced his party to turn around and the second time he wrote that the guide was an idiot and took them the wrong way (more difficult way up the mountain) and it took them all day to get back :-)  I love Charles!
Sadly, by the time we made it up to the top of the mountain the weather had turned bad and it began to rain. In addition, the wind started to pick up. :-(

After Mount Wellington, we visited a very famous museum called 'The Mona'  
It is about 4 levels of modern art (which my kids got a kick out of--and while covering their eyes at times would have been appropriate, the museum had a way of placing the most shocking things in places where you could not help but run into).
As you can see, changing directions was not always easy...we had some interesting discussions afterwards :-)
 This picture below, was an olfactory (smell room)- modern art really taps on all of the senses in this museum.
Here is clip of Thomas and the word waterfall
and last of all, a couple of my favourites: (1) the bubbles coming out of the rubbish bins. I liked the stark contrast of clean and dirty and when we were there the bubbles had reached up to the ceiling and were about to topple over. My kids could blow on them...which was fun and maybe something we shouldn't have been doing...
 Here is a white library...this kind of reminded me of a sterile psychiatric unit for some reason- it creeped me out big time; but my dad thought it was hopeful- books to be written.
 Last of all the worm mural.  
Visiting the museum was perfect as we were able to miss the rest of the rain storm and when we came out the sun had come out as well!  Here are some shot of our drive up to Coles Bay, from Hobart! It was stunning, along the coast and good for anyone who is not sitting in the back. We kept having to rotate who would get to sit up in the front, and luckily there were no accidents!


Once we got to Coles Bay, we unpacked and then ran out to see some stuff! We did a short hike up to Wineglass Bay! 













Before the sun set we ran over to the beach and then went to dinner! 


It was a beautiful day- 

2 comments:

Daniel said...

Alisha, you wrote "We did a short hike up to ------------?"

Are you not sure if the hike was short, or if the hike is named "------------"? I am pretty sure that no one would name the hike a big string of dashes, unless it was Morse code. The letters represented by only dashes in Morse code are M, O, T, and the number zero. You put 12 dashes, so some valid combinations are the following: (1) 00M--kind of like James Bond, right? (2) MMMMMM, like you really, really are happy that you are on the hike. (3) TOMTOM, likely the name of the originial explorer who created the hike. (4) MOTTO 0, which is some Australian mantra that your kids can recite. (5) Last, O-TOOM which is phonetic for "a tomb"; perhaps kids named it that since they didn't like the hike.

Glad to help! Love you.

Sue Swinton said...

More beautiful scenery and a beautiful family! I love that you e-mail when you have done the blog. Keep it up! Love you all