Hi there Sean here:
Before leving today, we thought (well at least Leo and I did) that it would be good to have a last game of pool. We decided that it would be Leo & Mum against Sean and Dad-they seemed fair enough teams and was a very close game (Leave us a comment and say who you think won!
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First we went on a ferry to get to Kangaroo Island and I got to see the cars come on and there were about 36 cars on the boat. It was about a 45 min ride to the island. The sea wasn’t rough and the ferry didn’t sway. Unfortunately we didn’t see any dolphins or whales. When we got to Kangaroo Island we saw that a truck filled with sheep was about to go on… followed by about five others!
On the way to the place we were staying at (which was on the other side of the island) we went to a honey farm to taste some honey and get a honey ice-cream. We got to see a beehive and we had to try and find the Queen Bee. Later on we got to our resort and there was a free mini pool table in the games room and me and Leo played it.
That night the wallabies and possums came out where we were staying.
3/10/07-Walking and Riding
Leo here again:
I kind of really like this place we are staying at. It’s good because of all the free stuff there is included in our accommodation: free internet/wireless as well, mountain bikes, breakfast, games room with mini pool table, soccer table and board games, DVD loans. So as I said we get free breakfast, we just walked into the restaurant whenever and got whatever we want from the buffet.
It wasn’t a long drive to the Information Centre at Flinders Chase National Park, where we saw these birds flying/walking around that (to me) looked like geese with a duck’s face, but they were called Cape Baron Geese. We were on the lookout for some echidnas, kangaroos/wallabies, and reptiles (goannas or snakes) on the walk. But we didn’t see anything; Mum spotted a Superb Fairy Wren and a Scarlet Robin (both small birds). Basically what we were doing on the walk was looking for some platypi in the rivers, unfortunately we didn’t see any.
Something I absolutely love doing we got to do today, that was mountain bike riding. We rode the mountain bikes around the place, finding a bush track that we knew went 10.5kms down to the beach. We rode down until we got to a point were we got tired of riding and started heading back. The track was more for 4WD’s than mountain bikes but it was pretty good. We saw our first echidna for today when we stopped to turn back; it was just waddling across the track looking for ants. We didn’t do much after that; it was good because I was getting tired.
Sean and I went off playing another few games of pool. It’s pretty interesting playing a really mini game of pool, it’s really easy to hit the ball, and they are really bouncy as well.
While Mum and Dad went out to the restaurant where we are staying, Sean and I watched a movie back in our room and had some toasted sandwiches. We also finished off the evening feeding the wallabies (and the scavenging possums), that appear at dusk where we are staying.
4/10/07-Sea Lions and Caves
Straight away after we finished our breakfast, guess what Sean and I did?………. We had a game of pool!! But not for long because we had to get ready to go to out. I thought what we were going to do was pretty boring-‘Sea Lines’-is what Mum had told me (I didn’t even know what they were). But then later when we arrived at Seal Bay, Mum explained (with a laugh) that we weren’t looking at ‘Sea Lines’, we were looking at ‘Sea Lions‘!!
Sea Lions turned out to be more interesting than Sea Lines anyway; Sea Lions are just like seals. We saw them all down on the beach, some were swimming, some were fighting and some were just resting in the sun. To me they looked very lazy, but the guy who was leading the tour said that they sometimes go out fishing-up to 3 days at a time and swim 30 km out to sea. So they come back to the beach to rest.
Kelly Hill Caves were next, we found a lot of stalactites and stalagmites, and we even saw a couple of helictites. I didn’t quite understand how one could start off as a stalactite and spiral back up on itself and then appear to be growing upwards.
That night we went out-again-but to somewhere else that wasn’t too far away. The ‘Nocturnal Tour’ is what they called it. For 1.5 hrs we were outside in the bush from dusk until it was really dark-we basically saw possums, koalas, wallabies and kangaroos. Something really weird happened with some of the koalas, first we heard a female koala (but couldn’t see it) screeching as loud as it could (I first thought it was just a cockatoo), we didn’t have a clue what it was until the guy told us that she was marking her territory, her tree for the night. We also saw another koala (but male) climbing up his tree for the night, so he obviously made his grunting noises to mark his territory. At the end of the tour we had a good view of the stars- we could see Scorpio, the Southern Cross, Jupiter and the Milky Way. We were unable to find a satellite but every now and then we saw a meteor (shooting star)!
5/10/07-Rocks and Fur-Seals
I am always the last one to get to breakfast each morning (I like my sleep!). The thing is, breakfast goes from 8.00am-9.30am so the latest I can get up is 9.00. Most of the time we have been getting up at 8.00am because Sean is always waking us up so he could get there early (probably because he is hungry all the time).
Driving through a recently burnt section of Flinders Chase National Park on the way to the “Remarkable Rocks”, from a distance they looked like some of the Devils Marbles that had rolled down south. As we got closer we saw that the rocks were eroded and funny shaped, some were curved over to look like waves, there were big ones, small ones and one had this funny shaped hole in it that we could fit through.
The New Zealand Fur-seals we saw next at Admirals Arch seemed different to the Australian Sea-lions we saw at Seal Bay. Sea-lions are a paler orangey colour (like lions)and have whiskers, whereas fur-seals are just like…well…normal seals, dark grey, slimy fur (it’s not really slimy, that’s just what it looks like when it’s wet)and whiskers. We drove to a lookout to where we could see some fur-seals on the rocks, most of them were swimming in the water and some catching the waves, but there were a few just lying around in the sun. There was a bit of a bush walk up to a lookout to get a good view of the beach where the seals all were.
I don’t have a clue how “Snake Lagoon” got its name, seeing there weren’t any snakes anywhere along Rocky River. It wasn’t all that exciting walking along it anyway-I just wanted to go back to the Retreat (where we were staying) and rest. The walk was too the mouth of the river, there was a sandy part at there end of the walk- Sean and I amused ourselves chucking huge rocks into the river.
6/10/07-Two Roll Overs
Straight after a good meal of Coco-pops, juice and a croissant we had a little time to go on the internet before we were off to the north western tip of Kangaroo Island to Cape Borda. Driving on a dirt road to get there, we saw a car that had rolled over. We think it happened because a kangaroo ran in front of the car causing them to lose control.
There was a lighthouse and a canon on the top the hill, and we went on a tour inside that small square lighthouse. The guy just was telling us about all the ships that come by and what the best direction is for them to go if they were to pass KI (Kangaroo Island). I wasn’t really that interested and half the stuff he was talking about I didn’t understand! It was a bit more interesting watching them set a canon off at the end of the tour.
We drove east now to a more northern part of the island. At Parndana-a small town- we got petrol and some ice-creams. About an hours drive down the road we got to Stokes Bay – but before that, we saw another car that had rolled over, This time it was more serious as the car had crashed into a tree as it rolled and the people were more injured. There was ambulance, police, and fire brigade there. To get to the beach we had to walk though the cracks between a whole lot of huge rocks it was more of a climb than a walk. On the beach Sean, Dad and I were kicking the mini soccer ball around. We kept moving along the beach until we got to some rocks and headed back to the car.
Driving back along the dirt road that took us to the main highway, we saw all the police and ambulances had gone, and the car that crashed had been towed up the road a bit. We could see how both front side panels were smashed in, one of the side mirrors had broken off, the front windscreen was all shattered, the windscreen wipers were wrecked and one of the wheels had been taken off. Basically the whole front of the car was in a mess!
That night after some more mountain bike riding on the bush trails aound our place, Sean and I played a couple games of pool, we also used the internet while we had it for free – well at least I used it.
7/10/07-Exploring KI
This was our last full day in Kangaroo Island we were just visiting some places we hadn’t yet been to: Emu Bay; where we had a picnic lunch watching pelicans on the beach- Emu Bay is a holiday spot for locals. We just looked around Kingscote-the main town on KI, and we found a park on the foreshore that Sean and I kicked the soccer ball around on. Some local girls came along and showed us a penguin burrow on a steep cliff, there was one penguin in it sitting on his/her 2 eggs.
We had a bit of an early tea that night (or afternoon) because on the way back to the Retreat we came to a store that we got local whiting burgers/fish’n'chips from. As we were staying in a remote area in the western end of the island it made sense to get our tea as we were passing through Vivonne Bay which is the nearest general store about 40km away.
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