Thursday, May 29, 2014

Casino to Kiama

On the Sunday after Easter we were still in Casino but this was the day that Greg and Chris were leaving to return to Narrabri, in NSW.  We were leaving the van in their front yard and coming back to Brisbane for the day to celebrate Bonnie’s (Vic’s Mum) 80th birthday, so after another emotional goodbye, we left Greg and Chris to their packing and headed up the


Our birthday girl - Bonnie
not a bad ol' stick for 80!!
highway back to beautiful, sunny Queensland.  
We had a fantastic time partying with the whole extended family and Bonnie thoroughly enjoyed her day but it was also a great chance for Vic and I to say goodbye to everyone.  

Happiness written all over her face - happy birthday mum!

Our extended family celebrating Bonnie's birthday
Many of the family members hadn’t seen Vic since she left hospital and they all seemed impressed with her recovery.  This was undoubtedly the hardest goodbye yet and leaving Bonnie, Tom, Cara, Glen, Allie and their little family was the most emotional yet.  

  
 Cheeky boy, Lakyn, up the ladder 


 
Aunty Cara with 2 week old Frankie Grace
The Madens - Rod, Frankie, Vicki, Cara Jay, Allie, Lakyn and Glen
The trip back to Neil and Jan’s (on the Gold Coast) was a very quiet journey.  As usual, Neil and Jan made us very welcome at their home and we had an enjoyable evening, before saying yet another goodbye the following morning, and making our way back to Casino to collect the van.  

Farewell Casino free camp
This was it… Monday 27.4.14, three months to the day later than we had planned to leave, and now we were on the road and heading south.  All the farewells were done and we were content that, before we left, we’d had the opportunity to spend time with some of our great friends.  By the time we’d hooked up the van and left Casino, it was mid-afternoon.  We had a good run down to Grafton, where we took a short break, and then to Dinjerra Road Rest Area, which is not far south. 
Dinjerra Rd rest area

As we arrived at this spot the traffic was backing up due to a truck crash, further on, which had blocked the highway, and as we set up for the night, we had an audience of stationary truck drivers.  They sat there for over 3 hours before the road was reopened.  I’m sure many would have logged it as their rest stop.  Due to the fact that this is the main route from Sydney to Brisbane, it was fairly noisy overnight, but still a good spot to park up with plenty of room, toilets and undercover picnic tables.  

Nambucca Heads

After getting away the next morning, we passed through Coffs Harbour and onto Nambucca Heads for morning tea at the Anzac Park.  This was a lovely spot right on the river and after kicking back here for a while we rejoined the highway and made it into Port Macquarie at about lunchtime.  

Sundowner Caravan Park at Port Macquarie

We booked into the Sundowner Caravan Park, a beautiful park by the river and the ocean, where I’d stayed with my Mum and Dad back in 1964 when we travelled in an EH Holden Premier towing (ironically!) an Olympic Caravan.
 
Cheers Paul, wish you were here too!
Later that day, a long-time friend of ours, Jenny, a fellow Jeeper we hadn’t seen since 2005, joined us.  She was travelling from her home in Sydney to visit her parents in Brisbane where Paul, her husband, will join her in a couple of weeks.

Jenny pitched her tent on our site along side the van before we went and sat on the break wall to watch a pod of dolphins playing in the river then settling into a night of reminiscing and catchup.  The next morning was grey and overcast, so after Jenny got away, Vic and I took a leisurely stroll along the boardwalk into town and enjoyed coffee overlooking the river.  I also found my dream car!
Airstream Australia's
vehicle

Vic and I have always had a soft spot for ‘The Port’, and have always enjoyed our visits.  Apart from being here with my parents 50 years ago, Vic and I visited with Cara and Glen back in 1993 and then we were back here when we travelled after renewing our vows on our 25th wedding anniversary in 2005.

Port has some beautiful sunsets
The next morning was glorious and after a slow start we drove out of Port Macquarie and rejoined Highway 1 and headed south.  Taree is Miran and Ann’s old stomping grounds, so we were compelled to take the off ramp and have a quick look around before returning to the highway again, then taking the Forster/Tuncurry turnoff.  In Forster, we pulled into a beachside park and took a stroll along the beach to a fabulous little café called ‘Beach Bums’.  
Two beach bums at Beach Bums
$3 buy
We sat here and enjoyed coffee with a really nice fish and chips meal.  As we walked lunch off, we found an Op Shop so had to check it out… as you do! We got a pair of very cool vintage towels (for the car) and Vic found an anodized teapot that she couldn’t live without.
After leaving here we travelled back to the highway via the Myall Lakes, which wasn’t the quickest route, but certainly a very pretty drive.  As we travelled, Vic was checking on Wikicamps, looking for an overnight stop and came across the little town of Karuah.  Anyone who has travelled the Brisbane to Sydney road before bypasses, will remember Karuah.  I always loved driving into this place with the approach taking you across the Karuah River via (you guessed it!) the Karuah Bridge.  This is a steel truss bridge opened in 1957 (trivially… the first one of it’s kind built in Australia using high tensile bolts rather than rivets!!) as part of the State Government’s program to replace ferry crossings. 
View of the Karuah Bridge from our afternoon drinks spot just outside our van
Karuah
There is a roadside stop on the highway, which has been closed, however, the local council has opened up two parks (one on each side of the road) to free camping, in an effort to bring some tourist dollars to town.  Local businesses have suffered since the town was bypassed in 2004.  The areas are well appointed with clean toilets, bbq’s, bins, plenty of undercover picnic tables, good phone and TV reception and a short stroll to shops and services.  Vic and I enjoyed
Oyster farmers returning from their's day work
a quiet happy hour overlooking the river watching the oyster farmers return from their day’s work.

Since Vic and I are travelling a bit later than originally planned, we have made the decision to get ourselves to Kiama before slowing up. We’ve travelled the coast road between Brisbane and Sydney many times and will certainly return here at some stage in the future.

As we left Karuah the next morning, I wasn’t looking forward to the days driving. This was the day we would travel through Sydney’s outskirts and make our way to Kiama.  I feel I’m still getting used to towing the new van and…well… I just don’t like Sydney!  Vic did a fabulous job of keeping me in the correct lane and navigating us onto the right freeways to get us around Sydney with a minimum of fuss, but I certainly did enjoy the coffee we had just before taking the turnoff, which would lead us into Kiama.
Beautiful Kiama waterfront
Starting to get a little chilly here 
We checked into the Surf Beach Caravan Park and after setting up, Vic and I took a stroll over to the beach.  Kiama is a really nice town on a beautiful part of the east coast and we were really looking forward to checking it out. 

Until next time… Happy travels!  

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Introducing Frankie Grace

It’s been ages since I posted the first entry of ‘Ourtime 2014’ and as I prepare this one we are well and truly into our trip, but I’ll fill you in on where we’re at and what we’ve been up to.
Maudsland housesit
At the end of March, Vic got the news from the doctors that she’d been hoping for regarding her recovery from the surgery, and the ok to resume our travels, so we prepared to leave the housesit at Maudsland on the Gold Coast.  
We’d decided to stick around for awhile to be handy for the arrival of our little grand-daughter so moved to the footpath outside our son and daughter-in-law’s house on the Sunshine Coast. All indications were that the baby would come early, but this was not to be and we spent 3 weeks here enjoying valuable time with Lakyn (our grandson), Glen and Allie.

Sunrise Beach
We had fun walking through Noosa's National Park, visiting the Yandina Ginger Factory, taking walks along the beach and doing normal chores like washing cars and bikes, and of course Lakyn would always be close by helping Poppy .....  especially up the ladder.

Giggle time with Poppy (or is it Pa....?)
Gingerbread man at Yandina
Lakyn loves the train at Yandina Ginger Factory
Picnic lunch at the Noosa Botanical Gardens
Feeding the ducks and turtles
Watching tele at Nanny's place in the morning
Helping Poppy is always fun
Washing the bikes
Catching crabs on the beach
On the 14.4.14 (at 1.40am) our gorgeous little grand daughter, Frankie Grace, was born.  It is easy to say babies are beautiful but this little girl won everyone's heart when she eventually arrived.
Frankie Grace Maden
 
Proud Nanny
One happy little family

We stayed a week after Allie came home to help where we could, but they needed to settle into their new life with 2 children, and we needed to get moving so this trip can be completed. 

It’s rather ironic though, to think that Vic and I came back from Darwin to be here for the birth of Lakyn, and now we were hitting the road again so soon after the birth of Frankie!  

On Easter Sunday we hooked up the van and made our way to Neil and Jan’s on the Gold Coast where we spent the night, before saying goodbye, again, and moving on to Ballina.  
Vic and I checked into the Ballina Lakeside Resort and got a nice spot along the fenceline backing onto the reserve. It’d probably been 25 years since our last visit here when the kids were little and we had the trailer-tent.
Jeep heaven
The following day, we were joined by Ann, Miran, Paul and Jenny, all great friends and fellow Jeepers. They’d been attending Camp Coffs, an annual Jeep event staged in the Coffs Harbour area. 

It had been 5 years since all of us were together so the next couple of days and nights were made up of a lot of laughs, ribbing, heckling, social drinking and good food, including some sensational local seafood. We are extremely lucky to say we have had these wonderful true friends for well over 30 years now and love having them in our life.
 
Friends for life - Paul, Jenny, Vicki, Rod, Ann & Miran

Vic and I were getting pretty good at farewells as we left the group and made our way over to Casino where we would spend the next 3 nights visiting more good friends, Chris and Greg, fellow caravanners we had spent a lot of fun times with while working in Emerald. 

Greg & Vic and one of
the local clydesdales
 
They're working in Narrabri at present as they travel around and Casino is their home base, where they were spending a 2 week break. It was a really enjoyable few days here with Greg, Chris and their family and we got to check out the area including, a couple of op shops, a Flag Lowering Ceremony on Anzac Day, Greg’s manshed, which houses his HQ Monaro project (insert Tim the Toolman grunt here!), his outside fire pit and how well his beer fridge works!

Flag Lowering Ceremony
The week blasted by and we hadn’t travelled too far, but it was important to us to see all these wonderful friends and take some time to thank them for their help and support over the past few months. We had one more day of farewells to go and it was also a very important day.


Until next week… Happy travels!