Category Archives: Family Life

November 12 of 12 …

Another month down and another 12 of 12. This month a bit of work and a bit of play.

I woke up this morning at the State Training Centre at Brukunga as I was taking part in the first Senior Officer Bushfire / Emergency Management Forum. This involved the Chiefs, Deputy Chiefs and Assistant Chiefs of the Emergency Services (MFS / CFS / SES) and the Police Commissioner and Assistant Commissioners of SAPOL. The high level forum discussed the Victorian Royal Commission for the 2009 Bushfires and came up with some resolution on how South Australia will tackle bushfires in the fire season to come.

The forum concluded at lunchtime and it was time to head back down to work for a few more hours before heading out with the family and 500 other scouts to the Distinctive Home Dome to watch the Adelaide 36er’s take on the NZ Breakers in basketball. The Scouts had a promotion on tonight including a half time show with abseiling, tent pitching and sand buggies. The tickets for the game were free as part of the promotion.

The game was an exciting one with the 36er’s being down by points early in the game before levelling in the 3rd quarter but ending up losing by 3 points. Not bad considering the NZ Breakers are leading the NBL competition at the moment.

Birds in the attic …

Was heading home from work last night when Jenny rang through saying there were no lights in the house with the RCD tripping and not going back on when reset.

We knew that we had some young birds in the roof space. We thought there was 1 or 2 birds in there. This is the second year they have been there but they were no trouble last year. The original plan was to let then grow and leave the roof as they had before.

This year was to be different. When I got home, I checked the attic and found where they had chewed through a Gyprock panel creating a hole 500mm x 100mm. Not only that I counted 3 young birds.

It was then time to start lifting off roofing iron to see what else they had been chewing. I removed 5m of roofing, to find about 20m of wires and 2 light fittings chewed to death.

The hardest part then was to find an electrician who would do the job. Many I rang told me Xmas time so it was a phone call to a family friend who hasn’t quite retired yet and three hours later at 9pm, the wires had been replaced.

Today was spent putting the roof back on after bird proofing it. Just after I got the roof back on, the parents tried to get back in but thankfully the bird proofing worked.

In the end, I found 6 young birds which have now been relocated to our local Fauna Rescue person who already is hand rearing 7 parrots. The birds were Crimson Rosella’s.

It is Winter again at Falls Creek …

With 4cm of snow falling overnight, we had a brief glimpse of sun at breakfast time but then winter hit again and stayed all day.

The slopes were perfect with a groomed base and 2-4 cm of “Aussie Powder” on top and it stayed like this all day as the temperature never went over zero degrees all day.

The only problem was that with 40 kph winds and alternating snow and ice, it confined you to the sheltered runs only to be turned into snowmen when you went up on the lifts.

We persisted until lunchtime then went back to the lodge for a break, heading back up the mountain after an hour to find the snow still coming down but the wind abating a little.

Due to the cold temperatures the runs remained good all day.

After skiing the Summit in the morning, we came across Samara Tanton doing her daily Falls Creek update, so we got our 15 seconds of fame in the background.

Falls Creek Daily YouTube Update

Rachael had Race Day in her Junior Workshop class and took out the fastest girl on the Mountain today. 🙂

After we finished for the day, I went down to the car to check that it would start and it was all OK.

Our last day of skiing is tomorrow then it is the trek home overnight.

Even with some time off at lunch time, still managed to do 52 km.

Another day of Paradise in Falls Creek …

We woke up to another day of sunshine after the rain at the end of the day yesterday. Once again the groomers had done their job giving us some good runs to tackle and we expanded our skiing to include the Summit today as well.

As is usual with Spring skiing, the snow had softened by around 11:00 am but provided you kept the skis pointed downhill, it was still good.

Bradley and Rachael are becoming some good skiers now with Jenny and myself maintaining our skills.

I took some video of Jenny and the kids so after some editing will get it up.

The clouds rolled in in the early afternoon with around 3:00 pm down came the snow. At least it wasn’t rain like yesterday. As I write this the snow is still falling – heavy at times.

Todays tally from the GPS was 56 km – similar to yesterday.

This is what Spring Skiing is all about at Falls Creek …

What a contrast of days to yesterday today was. We awoke to glorious sunshine so it was a quick dash up the mountain to some spectacular skiing on groomed runs. Even the non groomed runs were good once they softened.

On top of that there was nobody on the mountain (or it seemed that way). Managed to get about an hour and a half on Ruined Castle and Scotts before the ski schools descended.

The conditions continued until 3:00 pm but Bradley and Jenny were feeling tired from all the skiing so they went back to the Ski Lodge around 1:30.

They made it back up at 3:30 in time to grab Rachael from Junior Workshop. We managed to get a few more runs in before the black clouds and the rain came over. This is supposed to turn into snow overnight.

Before we called it a day, Bradley and I had a head to head race on Nastar Race Course. The winner was me but only just but I stil have it but not sure for how long.

Bradley redeemed himself with a race back to the Lodge. He got back 30 metres in front of me and he took the direct route.

Lets hope tomorrow is as good.

Three seasons on the slopes at Falls Creek ….

After hearing some heavy rain on the roof during the night, we were a little unsure of what we would find at the top of the mountain.

Across the road to get our skis and lift tickets from Viking Ski Hire then it was time to catch the chair lift to the top. The closer we got the windier and foggier it got but it wasn’t wet.

After dropping Rachael at the Junior Workshop, we went over the back of the mountain to Ruined Castle and found perfect snow, sheltered, some sunshine and only a few skiers. We enjoyed these conditions for about an hour then the ski schools descended and the conditions changed.

We then started moving across the mountain ending up for lunch at Cloud 9. We grabbed Rachael out of Ski School for 1/2 an hour of skiing and we continued with Bradley until down came the rain and sleet. No fun at all.

I headed back to Schuss Lodge to dry off and hot coffee while Bradley and Jenny endured the winter conditions. After an hour the rain and fog started to lift and the temperature dropped.

I went back up the mountain to find some good skiing conditions and continued until the lifts closed at 4:30, while Jenny, Bradley & Rachael called it a day at 3:30 having endured the rain.

We had the seasons of autumn, winter and spring today, maybe tomorrow we will have summer as well with a bit more sunshine.

From the GPS, managed around 50km on the snow today.

September 12 of 12 – off to the snow ….

Our day started off in Swan Hill after spending the night at Hill Top Resort on the annual pilgrimage to Falls Creek. First stop was Lake Boga to grab a cache at the Cannie Ridge Pump. This is the first time that we have seen Lake Boga with water in it for a long time. I would say with the floodings from last weekend and heavy rain would have something to do with it.

After grabbing a few of the Geocaching Australia Burke and Wills geocaches, it was time for stop at Echuca. We joined the masses down at Paddlesteamer Park or what is left of it to watch the River Murray flow past. Most of the park is now under water and the Paddlesteamers are firmly tethered to the bank. They are not in operation at the moment as the current is too strong. It would be a quick trip downstream and you probably wouldn’t get back again.

After lunch at Beechworth Bakery and a few caches in Echuca including the difficult Port of Call, we kept following the Murray Valley Highway to Shepparton. There is still a lot of water around after last weeks floods from the Goulburn River and a lot of debris against fences but no roads cut.

The trip continued through Benalla to the Hume Freeway then off onto the Snow Road through Millawa, Myrtleford, Happy Valley to Mt Beauty. We couldn’t see any snow on the way up but there was a lot of cloud covering the mountains.

We even had 2 sets of traffic lights on the drive up but that was due to the roadworks to fix up the road after last weeks landslides. We finally saw some snow about 3kms from the Resort Entry 🙂

It was then time to empty the car, fill up the Oversnow and settler in to our home for the next week – Schuss Ski Lodge.

12 of 12 July 2010 …

Having returned last night from the Birdsville Track, I thought today would be an average day just cleaning up. How things change.

The day started with a phone call from my brother. He was having IT issues at his office after the storm that came through Blackwood on Saturday morning. His modem had fried and the network wasn’t working like it should. A new modem and a few tweaks to the network and he was up and running.

Next was a trip to Adelaide for the regular Geocaching Pub Lunch at the Marble Bar. A lot of the regulars including some others that had returned from the Birdsville Track wetting the appetite of more 4WDers wanting to make the trek. There were also a few new faces today.

Around to the car wash to wash off the Birdsville Track mud and coffee, then back up to Blackwood to collect today’s pathtags from the post-box. Across the road from the post office was Hello Chinese Massage – why not!

Home with a clean 4WD, hang up the wet tents (we had some rain on the Birdsville Track which made the going fun) and then Molly the Dog went barking mad. It seems she found a couple of “friends” up in the spa rafters. See the last photo.

With the mud now off, it was time to check out the damage – final count – one new tyre, cracked windscreen and broken muffler. 🙁

Rain on the Birdsville Track ….

We were woken by the soothing sound of rain on the tents …… shit, everyone out of bed and let’s get packed up fast. Why, was the reply!! The answer was if there is too much rain then the Birdsville Track would be closed and we would be stuck there until it re-opened. (not all that bad :))

The tents and everything was packed up in record time and we were sitting at the petrol pumps of Mungerannie Hotel at 8:00 am when they opened up. Fuel was $1.65 a litre – how can it be 12c a litre cheaper than Marree??

It was onto the Birdsville Track and heading south to the Ferry. The rain was still falling albeit not too hard and the road was getting muddy and slippery.

We arrived at the Ferry to find one car lined up and the Ferry on the other side with no operators. I got on the CB to the Ferry Operators to find up about the hold-up. They claimed it was too rough but the creek was dead calm. OK, time for some breakfast while we waited. Half an hour later the Ferry arrived and they recognised us from yesterday and told us that they had been sorting out the belongings of the worker that died yesterday.

A quick trip over the Ferry and we went to the spot where the Birdsville Track was cut by the Cooper Creek. There was water everywhere with the camp-site sign and toilets 100 metres out in the water. Located here was the original “boat” (MV Tom Brennan) used when the Track was cut by flood waters.

We continued down the Track, and I started to feel a difference in the steering – yes a flat tyre. This was near Clayton Station.  A rock had fractured the tyre. No worries, grabbed the jack, spare tyre, wheel brace but where is the jack handle? Looked everywhere but couldn’t find it. (Of course I found it when I unpacked the car after we got home) Started using a screwdriver when another car stopped who also had an Isuzu so the right jack handle. It ended up that they lived near Mannum and knew Jenny’s Mum and Dad – how small is South Australia!

Back on the way and the road started to get muddy again. There had obviously been more rain here. A quick stop in Marree but not tyre repairs here so moved onto Lyndhurst where I had to get a new tyre as the fracture was to big to repair. A quick drive out on the very muddy Strzlecki Track to grab a cache at Clarrie’s Water Hole and we were back on the way south to Leigh Creek and Hawker.

With wet tents and sleeping backs, it was decided that we would not be camping tonight but the only thing available was a very budget caravan in the Flinders Ranges Caravan Park. It was some dry beds and the caravan park amenities were excellent.

After tea, Jenny and the kids played cards and I headed out to do some night caching (Found 14 caches around the Hawker area). All slept well, sleeping into 9:00 am the next morning. 🙂

Let’s go floating on the Cooper Creek …

Today was an easy drive with 200 km of the Birdsville Track to Mungerannie Hotel broken up 3/4 way by the Cooper Creek, but that’s OK there is a ferry over the water.

We had a look around Marree before heading off but there isn’t a lot to see apart from the old Train locomotives and the Lake Eyre Yacht Club. Fuelled up at $1.77 a litre and we were off on the Birdsville Track.

It was a pretty easy drive to the wet weather diversion of the Birdsville Track with a couple of rough spots. The diversion road was freshly graded but had not been completed. We arrived at the ferry with about 15 cars in the queue (well so we thought), which meant we were going to be in a long wait.

It ended up that most of the cars were there just to take photos and we were 4th in the queue. However, the ferry was on our side of the creek but there were no operators. It turns out that one of the grading road gang had suffered a heart attack and the ferry operator was the 1st Aid Officer.

After an hour they came to the queue and told us that the outcome was not that good and they were waiting for a helicopter with the Police and a Doctor. After another hour the chopper arrived, the 35 year old was pronounced dead and the ferry started up again.

It took around 15 minutes for the ferry to load a car, go to the other side, unload and load again and return. After another 40 minutes and we were on the Ferry and heading to the northern side of the Cooper Creek. The Ferry only took one car at a time, a total of 6 passengers and everyone had to wear a life jacket.

It wasn’t long and we were off the ferry and heading north to Mungerannie Hotel. The northern diversion road was very sandy but smooth, which was in contrast to the Normal Track which was rough in spots. We arrived to the oasis like Mungerannie Hotel and met up with Mungerannie Phil, set up the tents in the Wetlands Area. I went for a walk in the Wetlands to grab a couple of caches, while Jenny and the kids went for a swim in the Hot Pool.

After a spectacular sunset, we headed to the pub for tea, some beverages, 8 ball and then back to bed with some winds starting up.

Caches for the Day:

GC1EF5V – Hergott Springs

GC7339 – Hot Pools 1

GC1X91K – Desert Hats