Sicily Walks #5

It’s 9.15 am and I’m drinking a Sicilian Pale Ale in a bar in Palermo Airport. Our bags are checked through to Brisbane. I don’t particularly care where they go as long as they eventually find us at home because we have all of our important stuff with us including all the requisite boarding passes.

That’s the celebratory reason for the beer. The real reason is that we dropped off our hire car an hour ago and I bid a poison-spitting farewell to Italian roads and drivers. The 50 or so kilometres from our hotel to the airport this morning was supposed to be a breeze. It was a nightmare. When I checked Google Maps at 6.00am it was predicting a 43 minute trip. The bad news is that it took an hour and a half. The good news is that we didn’t hit anything and noone hit us. God knows how that happened. In the areas where the traffic was heaviest – the outskirts of Palermo city – the lines on the road became as rare as functioning car indicators and it became a free-for-all with lanes becoming multiple choice and when a huge truck decides it wants half of what appears to be your lane and half of the next one over, drivers scatter and aim for the nearest available space. The words of our Syracuse cab driver (see #4) were Nostradamus-like in their prophesy.

I was sweating bullets all the way to the airport, the child bride was finally able to relax in her seat when we got here instead of jumping about like she was constantly being cattle prodded and our travel companion, in the back seat, when not getting hit in the back of the head by a flying suitcase (hard breaking unavoidable) was grinding her teeth to the gums.

Notwithstanding the driving hysterics, we had a marvellous time in Sicily. It was the second series of White Lotus that originally got us thinking about coming here. We even went to where it was filmed – Taormina – which looked nothing like what we imagined from the series. Not to worry because we found plenty to gawk at everywhere we went, the food (with one notable exception) was great, the beer was cold and the wine went down far too easily.

Our trip into Palermo yesterday was by train. The previous night it cost 70 euros for a taxi, one-way for the 25 or so kilometres into town. On the train it was 3.3 euros each. To compensate for the much cheaper price, the ticket machine wouldn’t accept any of our credit or debit cards; only cash. As luck would have it, this was the only time on the whole trip when none of us had any. A very kind American couple gave us the 10 euros needed for three tickets. Lucky I was wearing my Tennessee Titans t-shirt which got the conversation with them started.

These old European cities are always just a corner away from something interesting, historic or both. Anywhere with lots of glass will be soulless and boring comparatively. So walking along the main street of Palermo (Via Roma, I believe) from the railway station, it was easy to find something to photograph which is the determining factor differentiating interesting from boring.

The trains, or at least the one we travelled on between Santa Flavia and Palermo, are clean, comfortable, fast and on time. My recommendation to anyone planning a vacation in Italy is to shelve the car hire plans and catch trains. Apart from the absence of stress, you get to enjoy the incredibly rugged and spectacular scenery (talking Sicily here), none of which I saw when for about 900 kilometres, all I focussed on was the lane marker (when there was one) staying in the bottom left-hand corner of the windscreen. Getting used to driving on the wrong side of the road and not knowing where the front right corner of the car is (get your designers onto that, Mercedes) made centring the car in its lane rather challenging initially as that guard rail in Taormina discovered. Fortunately we got there and here in the end. I just need to know now, how many fines I wracked up by blowing through toll gates.

Sicily Walks #4

We drove on the Syracuse to Catania road for the fourth time a few days ago. I wasn’t driving – we were on a tour to Mt Etna and Taorima. I’ve driven it three times. Only one more time when we head to Palermo. And we went through toll gates legally this time. I covered my face.

Mount Etna is about as Mars-like as I would imagine Mars to be. The only environment i have seen similar to this was in the backblocks of Namibia – rough, twisted, razor sharp  volcanic rocks and black sand. If you fell over in this place you’d be picked up in strips. Strangely, very strangely in fact, lady bugs are everywhere on Mount Etna because they can float up and away from predators on the thermals and hide in the many cracks and crevices. I’m surprised every other low on the food chain insect didn’t think of this. Who knew?

We were up pretty high after taking the cable car at Mt Etna. Not as high as we were when we went to the Annapurna Base Camp in Nepal, but high enough to get the wobbly boots after sudden movements. After walking up a moderately steep slope for about 30 metres and having to stop halfway for a breather, I concluded that if I am ever dumb enough to attempt to climb Mt Everest,  it would take me about a year.

On Sunday we did another museum. When you consider that it doesn’t matter where you are in this country (I imagine Greece is the same), there will be a few thousand years of history right under your feet so there’s a lot of stuff to put in museums. So while sculptures and pottery and tools and weapons and jewellery and frescos abound, there are very few taxis on Sunday afternoon. We eventually found one driven by a bloke who had spent a career travelling the world in the hotel industry and had come back to his home town of Syracuse during covid. He told us you’d have to be mad to drive in Italy. Thanks pal. Pity you weren’t looking over my shoulder when I booked the car. Day 1 and I’m wondering why the speed limits don’t seem to demand much attention. Day 6 and I’m ignoring speed limits with the best of them. And lane indicators are as optional as clothes at an orgy.

We’re in Palermo now, staying at a very nice resort hotel which so far seems like a home away from home for Germans….and mosquitoes. Pity really because everything else is fine. We last encountered mosquitoes in the rooftop bar in Syracuse which was a bit of a surprise. Them flying that high in cool weather would be the equivalent of me walking up Mt Etna. And besides, why hasn’t the Mafia had them all shot.

Speaking of the Mafia, we had dinner in a Michelin starred restaurant last night. There are a few here and we’re told that the boys with the black shirts and white ties like to hang out in them. Not for the food, obviously. I’ve never been particularly impressed with these ultra-fine dining places. It’s more about presentation than a good satisfying feed and the presentation didn’t disappoint but the food did. Just as expected. The price didn’t disappoint either. Again, just as expected. The mark-up on a lamb chop was about 1000%. But the chef did remove the bone.

Sicily Walks #3

We travelled first class on the train down from Naples to Messina in Sicily. You’d expect that for the extra money you’d get a window to look out of. Apparently not as passengers in every second row found out. What we did get was a train that boarded a ferry and crossed over to Sicily from the Italian mainland. Now that’s pretty cool. Just think of the possibilities. You could access the Trans Siberian from Alaska. Sri Lanka from India, the Marrakesh Express from Gibraltar, the UK from France – oh that’s already available underground in both directions or by inflatable dinghy in one direction if you have no legal right to be in the UK. I believe I can be locked up for saying that now. What a retarded world we live in.

So the surly waiters in Naples have been left far behind to be replaced in Syracuse, by a delightful young lady (she’s Argentinian) and a robot called Lola which delivers food to tables, I believe. It’s brother Leonard, is required to deliver stuff to rooms. The CB asked for tissues and a shower gell top-up. Apparently Leonard deliverd these things but we didn’t know because he couldn’t knock. Apparently he just waited outside the door. Something is missing here.

Getting to Syracuse from Messina was interesting, says he with characteristic English (I was born there) understatement. The hire car guy never mentioned the toll gates. Solution – pick one that doesn’t have a boom and just drive through. Red light? What red light? And driving on the right-hand side of the road is one thing but doing it in Italy with Italian drivers all around makes it a potential demolition derby. I’ve also discovered that on the highways where the purely academic speed limit can be up to 130km/hr, actual drivers either dawdle or pretend they’re Top Guns in a land hugging missile.

Road maintenance appears to be conducted the same way wherever you are in the world. Barriers are erected for miles for no good reason apart from maybe slowing the traffic down -ha!. If Italy had speed cameras especially in tunnels where the speed limit routinely drops from 130 to 80, the national debt would be paid off in a month. Speaking of tunnel’s, Sicily doesn’t appear to do hills. If it goes up, put a tunnel through it and if it goes down put a bridge over it.  Sicilians prefer their roads flat it seems. This means that in a mountainous place like this the 400km+ journey we have just done from Syracuse to the Valley of Temples and back was about 75% bridges or tunnel’s.

And don’t ask me why it’s called the Valley of Temples because while the “temples” part is correct, it’s actually on a high ridge. Go figure. The Valley of Temples is Greek, dating back to 500 BC and if you’ve seen the Parthenon at the Acropolis in Athens, the one here is better preserved. Looks like it could have been thrown up last year provided there were a few thousand slaves available. As with the archeological park in Syracuse, Greek architecture, or its remains, is pervasive. The Romans kicked them out after a few hundred years and when they tried to utilise the Greek theatre for gladiatorial combat and especially fighting wild animals, found the ground level seats for dignitaries were a bit too close to the action so they built another one – completely enclosed and with the front row beyond the reach of a fully extended lion.

Sicily Walks #2

Getting from Naples airport to our hotel was easier said than done. There were 6 of us with 6 suitcases and more than 6 assorted back-packs and other bags, most of which contained about 2 weeks of dirty washing. At least 2 cabs would be needed but then Enzo showed up with his tardis. How we all got in there with our bags reminded me of when I was 10 and our football coach got a whole 4 stone 7 pound (child footballers were weight limited back then) rugby league team, that’s 13 kids, into a VW Bug for the admittedly short trip to the ground where we were playing. Herbie would have been proud.

I got Enzo’s number and a few days later he excelled on our behalf again. We got him to take three of us round the Amalfi coast. Nothing funny happened but we were gobsmacked by the spectacular beauty everywhere and the English accents everywhere. The town of Amalfi was packed and the tourist season was winding down. I can’t imagine how many people are hit by cars in the high season, looking right instead of left.

Speaking of driving, you haven’t been tail-gated until you’ve been tail-gated by an Italian. You’ll be cruising along at 120km/hr in a 100km/hr zone when out of nowhere someone doing 150km/hr+ has pulled up a metre or so from your back bumper. And they’ll stay there until you get the f… out of the way.

Back to Naples and looking out of our first floor hotel room window you would have to conclude that Naples is a grubby, massively graffitied, crime ridden shithole. That’s a little unfair as parts of it aren’t entirely like that if the street sweeper has just gone through. There are parts that look unfinished, like a big part of Rome, but I think in this case it’s because they just couldn’t be bothered. When you have Pompei (167 acres and counting) and it’s little brother Herculaneum (20 acres) plus wine tasting on the slopes of Mt Versuvious, the Isle of Capri and the Amalfi Coast nearby, Naples itself doesn’t have to try too hard.

When the CB and I were in Rome some years back we heard that all attempts to dig a subway system failed because they kept digging up antiques. Similarly, Herculaneum’s 20 acres is only a fraction of its pre 79AD area but most of it is under the modern town 60 feet above. If you want to put a subway anywhere in Italy, you’d have to do it where noone lives or has lived which kind of defeats the purpose.

Sicily Walks #1

The Sicily Walk is beginning in Naples which I guess is rather silly and therefore appropriate in itself.

Rather less silly, let’s start at the beginning. We lobbed into Naples and immediately encountered a problem – one of us left a bag in the customs area and we were all outside. That is, we had entered Italy but one of the bags was not quite in Italy. So I and the owner of the bag had to figure out how to get back into customs to retrieve the bag. First problem – the doors only open from the inside so we had to wait until someone came out then we ducked in. Not very legal and we were immediately nabbed by the constabulary. After explaining the situation I was told to stay put and my companion was taken off to retrieve the bag in question. All done and noone was arrested. Goodish start.

That’s actually the third time I’ve done something similar. Once in India, at the boarding gate I was told that my carry-on had to have a baggage tag for the security guy at the gate to stamp otherwise why do you need a security guy at the gate. The tags were available at the check-in counter so I confidently (this is important) strode back out through customs and immigration then strode confidently back inside having secured a tag from check-in, and noone batted an eyelid. Another time I was sitting on a plane at Rio de Janeiro airport one night, having officially left Brazil albeit still sitting on the Rio airport tarmac but after many hours the plane didn’t take off due to a technical snag or more pertinently due to the guy who was supposed to fix the snag not being available. So we were all marched back through a darkened terminal with nary a customs or immigration person in sight. We were accommodated in hotels then returned to the airport the next day. On explaining the situation to the check-in chick, we were directed to an unmarked door which magically allowed us to skip immigration and customs again, as we had skipped it coming back in and viola, we were out of Brazil again.

So I haven’t had a chance to put a coherent flowing Naples narrative down up to now because we’ve been having too much fun. So here are some random thoughts to begin with.

The CB and I were in Nepal (that’s not a typo) a few years ago, just after the covid gates were slightly cracked open, and on the bus trip from the Katmandu airport terminal to the plane I was offered a seat by a young Asian lady. I didn’t know whether to be grateful or offended. Something similar happened again a few days back. We were in Pompei. The old Roman roads there are about 40-50cm below the narrow footpath so I was waiting to step up from the road onto the footpath as a stream of tourists went past. One of them, again a rather attractive young woman stopped and asked me if I needed a hand getting up onto the footpath. It was a warm day and we had done quite a bit of walking so I probably looked a bit frazzled…..but really. I think I’m doing okay for my age – won’t be climbing Everest anytime soon but still more than capable of doing…..this and that. But apparently I look pathetically hopeless and helpless to attractive young women. If I could produce that look on demand it’s a skill that could prove useful in another life in a parallel universe, but not now.

Never take short-cuts you haven’t first tested yourself. The CB and I and one of our mates decided to visit the Naples Archeological Museum which is 1.9km from our hotel and a 27 minute walk according to Google maps. After an hour of our unintended Naples walking tour we were 13 minutes away – half way – yea! And isn’t that railway line supposed to be on our right and not on our left?

We got there eventually and it was well worth it – it seemed like every statue and every fresco from Pompei and Herculaneum had been looted and deposited in the museum. One could assume the towns themselves are empty shells having been stripped bare. No, that is not the case and is a mightily unfair assumption because notwithstanding a lot of their stuff being removed, Pompei is now up there with my world highlights along with the Acropolis in Athens, the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, Niagara Falls, the Himalayas and that lap-dancing place in the Valley in Brisbane (speaking of stripped bare).

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Nostalgia Trip

The CB and I lived in Tasmania, Zeehan to be precise, for three years. She taught primary school in Queenstown, Roseberry and Zeehan and I worked at the Renison tin mine and played rugby on the weekends. Tassie is a great place to visit but for us, our recent visit was a trip down memory lane also. So as we drove past Rugby Park in Hobart and I said “I played a sevens tournament there and we made the semi finals”, by the time I got to the word “tournament” I was greeted by hoots of derision emanating from my three female travel companions. The CB said she didn’t even remember. That episode was at the end of the holiday but was pretty indicative of the attitude to the rugby part of the nostalgia trip. But this is my blog so some of the memories of my glorious three year career with the West Coast Green Machine will adorn this post.

From the day we all agreed to do this trip my overwhelming desire was to have a beer at the Central Hotel in Zeehan. I have fallen off more stools in that pub than any other in the world. Okay, it was only twice (that I can remember) but the events that caused these alcohol induced plummets were indeed momentous. One was a going away piss-up for someone and I can’t remember what the other one was. I do however, remember walking into the bedroom wardrobe at home after one of these occasions. I blame the publican for locking us in after closing time.

Anyway, much to my chagrin when we got there, it was permanently closed. After a bit of research I discovered that I could have bought it for $390,000 a couple of years ago but on mentioning this to the CB, the look said it all. We would not be moving into the back room at the Central any time soon.

Zeehan The Central

The Central was our rugby clubhouse before we built our own.  Actually we sited it rather than built it. Our club president was the underground manager at the nearby Mount Lyell copper mine and he happened to find a disused building which was thrown on the back of a truck and deposited on a concrete slab next to our playing arena 30km away in Zeehan. Alas, all that remains of the clubhouse is the slab. So that nostalgia trip was stymied as well.

I was two and zero as we headed out to the golf club which, great relief, was still there, still had old mine shafts in the middle of it and still looked like you could lose your ball in the middle of the fairway after the grass was mown. Notwithstanding it is still the only course where I have played in an official competition (once) and won. I then retired undefeated. The clubhouse was still there but like many of the buildings I once frequented (including our home) it was the worst for wear.

Our old house on the corner of Gellibrand and Fowell Streets had a shed where I built my barbecue from old zinc smelter bricks and the bit of fence I erected was gone. And it was blue whereas it had started out green and was pink when we left which sounds a bit like a sad version of Edward Scissorhands’ street. It was a company house so choices were limited to what you were told you would get. At $2/week rent I didn’t care what the outside looked like.

Zeehan Our House

The CB got to stand outside the school room she taught in, right across the road from our house. The school seems to have done alright out of Julia Gillard’s Building the Education Revolution with a relatively new hall or gymnasium or whatever that no doubt cost five times what it would have cost if organised by non-politicians.

Zeehan School

We drove past the shop where I was laughed at for wearing shorts on a Sunday morning in winter, having just ducked out to get the newspaper. Then there was the shop where the CB bought me the very first Australian Penthouse with the recently defected red bikini girl, Liliana Gasinskaya on the cover (and inside minus the bikini). Across the road is the Gaiety Theatre where we played basketball when it was raining too hard for rugby training. As the old-timers used to say “if you have to play in it, you should train in it”. We were wimps.

Just outside Zeehan is a particularly treacherous piece of s-bendy road which our car took, at speed, upside down one wet Saturday night. There were no wives present just three players and one of them (me) was sitting in the back of the car nursing a broken nose from that afternoon’s activities. More accurately, as we slid down the road I was sitting on the ceiling – seatbelts weren’t compulsory back then. On this recent occasion I wanted to stop and see if we could find the carton of beer which was flung into the bushes after the car was put back on it wheels. But I was out-voted. Miraculously the car, a little Mazda 808 still went. Back then what we now call hatch-backs were called fast-back cars. We had the only fast-front car in Zeehan. More miraculously, the car stayed on the road despite its unconventional trajectory and no one was hurt.

Away from Zeehan we regularly stayed at the Penny Royal Hotel in Launceston. This was our hotel of choice when we visited for rugby games. On one particular Saturday morning there, I picked up the newspaper to find out Keith Moon had died or more correctly inflicted death upon himself, inadvertently I assume. Later that morning we (there were three players and three wives there) watched the Australian Wallabies inflict a rare but incredible defeat on the All Blacks. Incredible because Wallabies loose forward Greg Cornelsen scored four tries, a feat (against the men in black) which is yet to be equalled I believe. That afternoon our team, the northern competition premiers, played the southern competition premiers and we got towelled. It was quite a memorable day.

As we drove around the state many fond memories and some not so fond (see above re Mazda 808) came flooding back. Considering the amount of rain the west coast of Tasmania gets, “flooding” is rather appropriate. Great place to visit but wouldn’t like to live there (again). No, that’s unfair. There are many nice homely spots in Tassie. Go check it out.

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Part 5

Last year the CB and I visited the Highlands of Scotland. The weather alternated between bleak, sunny, atrocious and average, every day. It was summer. The only difference between the Highlands and Tasmania’s south west is that while we’ve been here in the south west the weather in mid-autumn has been consistently atrocious. Now this isn’t necessarily a bad thing if you can marshal a bottle of port, a few red wines, a roaring fire and double glazing to your defence against the elements. And thus it was so. Oh, and there are no men in skirts that I could locate despite the name of the town.

Still, Strathgordon is a long way to go to sit in front of a fire. Fortunately the view through the double glazing was spectacular. The white sandy beaches of Lake Pedder and the bare mountains dusted with snow like icing sugar on grey, craggy cakes provided a perfect backdrop to the lounge chairs round the open fire. Occasionally, when the rain relented we rushed outside to snap a few photos then beat a hasty retreat back to the sanctuary of the Lake Pedder Wilderness Lodge, an excellent, welcoming and hospitable sanctuary I have to say.

It “only” rains for 270 days a year down here and for the other 95 there are bush fires. We saw the evidence. Black charred trees and pristine white snow provide quite a contrast. And now, a couple of months after the last major fire there’s a smattering of green as the tree ferns spit new fans skywards and leaves start to sprout rather incongruously from tree trunks. Fortunately the wilderness areas here are massive and the fires only impacted a small percentage before the tireless firies got things under control. Thanks guys for another job very well done.

Tassie Tango – The Brown Sign Boogie Part 4

Strahan is the only port on the west coast of Tasmania. In fact it’s the only town of any significance on the west coast because if you go west from Tasmania, the first land fall is Argentina. So the weather has quite a long run-up before assaulting poor little Tassie. So why would anyone want to live here? I guess that’s one of the reasons the harshest penal colony in Australia’s colonial history was put on Sarah Island, a few miles away from Strahan in Macquarie Harbour. Now, with its infamous history well and truly behind it, it’s a picturesque little maritime town with terrible weather.

Strahan is also something of a holiday destination. When the CB and I lived in Zeehan (about 40km from Strahan) we were surprised (initially) to learn that some of the locals went to Strahan for their holidays. Some of them hadn’t been to the eastern side of Tassie and considered the north island of Australia to be “overseas”. Salt of the earth people but somewhat insular.

One of the country’s most famous rivers – the Gordon – empties into Macquarie Harbour which incidentally is 6 times as big as Sydney Harbour but has only a 60m wide access to the ocean hence the two lighthouses which attempted, not always successfully, to guide ships into and out of the harbour. Why you would attempt that at night is mystifying, but some did and suffered the consequences.

The Gordon is famous environmentally and by extension politically. You can look it up. Suffice to say it was almost dammed (not damned) but due to political intervention, wasn’t. So a boat trip to Hell’s Gates, the entrance to the harbour, and then down the Gordon was very much on the agenda. And they were serving booze from the get-go which was 9.00am once we were underway so the incentive to do an all day (or most day) tour was irresistible.

Hell’s Gates is very much as the name suggests. Having spent all of my working life in the mining industry I am here to tell you the people on the front of our 34m catamaran, when we passed through the Gates would have been required to wear life jackets, safety harnesses and hard-hats at least and no kids would have been allowed if a mine manager rather than a tour operator was running that boat. But the boat proprietors were obviously oblivious to the risks of having their clients flung to the deck or worse still, overboard as the boat bucked and tossed like a tasered kangaroo. Notwithstanding we all had a jolly good laugh afterwards then settled back for the trip to the Gordon River.

On our Gordon River cruise we had occasion to stop in the heritage area and do a 400m boardwalk through the impenetrable rain forest. While GF2 rushed off to find a spot to have a smoke in the strictly non-smoking dripping wet rain forest, GF1 was taking pictures of everything moss and fungus to add to her extensive photographic collection of such things, the size of which would fill a full set of Encyclopaedias Brittanica. I thought she would be the only person on the planet to engage in such activity. I was wrong. There are 50 or so others with similar interests and they were all on our boat.

Macquarie Harbour is also home to countless fish farms. All I remember about the operation of these things is the fish are the size of your little finger when introduced, are left for 12-18 months then when they are five or six kilos they’re sucked up by a pipe into a boat and despatched to your plate. Sucked up by a pipe – where are the vegans swimming out to these fish farms in the freezing water and chaining themselves to the easily accessible pipe infrastructures to protest this fish sucking. Surely this would be much more effective than invading an abattoir or a nicely temperate farm. Apparently not in the fairyland they occupy.

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Part 3

The CB and I had ever so briefly been to Stanley many (many) years ago and it obviously never registered what a charming, picturesque place it is even if, like all other Tasmanian coastal towns it is exposed to elements which would have daunted the most intrepid of explorers.

I did most of the planning for this trip (after a suggestion from GF1) and up to now it’s been a resounding success which is just as well. Can you imagine (if you are a man) being in a car for hours on end with three disgruntled females. But I hadn’t expected the response to cute little Stanley. It was positively orgasmic. The place is full of neat, immaculately presented period houses and they all seem to have views to die for. As we were leaving yesterday, GF2 demanded the car be stopped so she could get out and buy a house. And then there’s The Nut, a large rock that sticks up out of the land (50%) and the sea (the other 50%) like a miniature Ayre’s Rock.

And there’s penguins. Back along the coast a few kilometres there’s a place called Penguin but their attempt to corner the region’s penguin driven tourist economy failed when word got out that there are penguins all along the coast. Common as bums they are, but they still generate the sort of reaction generally reserved for tiny babies and puppies. So we duly went down to the sea wall / boat ramp / wharf a couple of nights ago to watch and listen as the juvenile penguins whinged and whined for their food like so many tiny babies.

The old pub in Stanley was a welcome respite after a few hours in the car and for an hour or so, we were the only ones there. “How’s the serenity” one might say if one was in an iconic Australian movie or in a quiet (when the bloody jukebox was on recess) country pub. But eventually we were joined by other tourists and perhaps the odd local.

Now we’re all of the friendly persuasion and are quite happy to converse with those of a similar bent. Unfortunately GF1 inadvertently opened a conversation with a gentleman who had ignored the two women he was with but was happy to talk at us with a relent that would have done the ever persevering Wylie Coyote proud. I tried to do a Road Runner on him to shut him up by saying I was holidaying with my three wives and this was the one time of the year they are allowed out in public, but he was unphased. Admittedly my “wives” were wearing jeans and skirts rather than freedom sacks and we were in a pub and we were drinking so my attempt at cultural intervention failed miserably. I should have said I was a Mormon.

But back to The Nut which so dominates this place. There’s a chairlift that takes you to the top which never gets more than a few feet off the ground. GF1 who doesn’t like heights, figured this was her kind of chairlift after the somewhat more challenging experience of the largest single span for a chairlift in the world over the Cataract Gorge in Launceston. During the 2km circumnavigation of the top of The Nut the clouds and rain moved in. This was more like the Tasmania we knew and loved in our three year Tasmanian sojourn many years ago.

Tassie Tango – Doing the Brown Sign Boogie – Part 2

Up to last week, in my long(ish) and mostly satisfying life I estimate I had seen around four sea horses. This rather obvious deficiency was spectacularly righted when GF1 insisted we visit the sea horse farm at Beauty Point north of Launceston. Incidentally, and I digress, there was a general complaint among my female travelling companions regarding the fact that most if not all things in this part of the world are named after men. Then I pointed out that Beauty Point is in fact named after a female….cow. Hurt feelings were not assuaged I’m afraid.

Anyway I am now an expert on the reproductive ins and outs (if you’ll excuse the expression) of the seahorse. I know there are 54 species of seahorse of which 23 are in Australia. I’ve seen them in their thousands and they are exported to aquariums all over the world. I’ve even held one and let it twirl its long tail round my finger. But I still don’t know what you call a tank full of sea horses – a herd, a school, a posse, maybe a saddle of sea horses.

And who knew there were things such as hand fish which look like a miniature version of Thing from The Adams Family. They are almost extinct and of one species there are estimated to be only 70 adults left in the world, all of them in the Derwent River. When they sit on the river bed and don’t move much you’d think that would be an open invitation to predators to partake of the hand fish buffet. So it’s not surprising there aren’t many left.

Up to now the trip’s been mostly about animals (Tasmanian Devils, platypuses (platipi?), echidnas (hello Randall you cute little three legged critter), kangaroos, the aforementioned sea horses, wombats and assorted bird and snakes. Oh, and bridges – Richmond Bridge, Batman Bridge and the Hobart bridge that was hit by a barge many years ago, collapsing one of the spans. I had the t-shirt to prove it which in hindsight was a bit morbid and insensitive because there were fatalities. But we joke about everything provided there has been a respectable interval between tragedy and comedy. Why were the Japanese crying poor after the Fukushima tsunami. I saw one house with eight cars and four boats in the driveway. See what I mean.

Time to switch from animal to mineral and The Nut at Stanley.