The family was off to Tasmania a couple of weeks ago, and as is traditional around here, it’s time to put up some photos:
Penguins at Low Head, at the mouth of the Tamar River north of Launceston. The family was pretty impressed how you just had to stand still, and the fairy penguins would wander past your feet on the way to the shrubbery. I expected penguin tours to keep you at a further distance.
We stayed just the one night at Low Head at the Pilot Station. This house was ridiculously good value, and only vaguely gave the impression of being haunted.
It sits right on the water, so you get this view from inside:
Very pretty.
Next: the drive along the north coast is prettier than I expected. And the small town of Stanley, famous for the large protuberance into the ocean called the Nut, didn’t fail to charm:
The photo above was somewhere on the north coast, and I believe they were onions in the field.
Onto Hobart, and one of my favourite places near there is the Salmon Ponds, where trout and salmon were first introduced to Tasmania from England in the 1850’s. This is of itself a pretty fascinating story, but today the ponds are notably for the large, large fish they still breed there, and the lovely gardens:
And of course, Hobart itself is a charming small city, and here’s your stereotypical harbour view:
We stayed at an odd sort of motel at Sandy Bay, but it was in a great location, close to the university, and heaps of cheerful places to eat (with a lot of Asian food in particular.) The streets are full of quite charming cottages and houses:
That’s enough for now, I’ll do a separate post for a few more pics.
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