Time to explore

It was still very windy and there were whitecaps blowing through the pass so we didn’t expect any visitors. We heard that 5 boats withdrew from the Sydney Hobart race due to weather related problems. We walked to Garden Cove on the north side of the island and tried to find a way to Pulpit Rock, off the eastern point. I’m not a big fan of bushwacking or walking on steep rocks but we gave it a try. We made it to a high point but didn’t make it to the rock today so we enjoyed a picnic lunch down by the water. There was a a large, ? 65 foot, sailboat rocking and rolling in the cove.

Sea Wolf at anchor, Garden Cove
Foot Fossil
I saw this fossil foot print on one of the rocks while I was trying to avoid breaking a hip. A reminder of those who walked here before us.

More carnage
Then we came upon these bones near the site of an old sealing settlement. There are cattle skulls and lots of wallaby bones around.
The remaining wallabies
Wallabies enjoying a better day.

So close to the Sydney Hobart race

This afternoon was the start of the Sydney Hobart race. 628 miles and some boats are expected to finish in a couple of days. Theoretically the 87 boats will pass by but they are too far east in the Bass Strait. We were able to watch the start on TV but for the next four days, the coverage is more spotty. Sounds like there will be high winds and seas for the first two days. We had the winds today but the seas aren’t an issue since we don’t have anyplace we have to be. The internet was more cooperative and I got to talk to a bunch of my family so that made me feel better.

It was a domestic day. I washed and waxed the floor in the house. i have always been a big fan of waxed floors. This was often to my kids’ dismay when they would go skittering across the paste waxed, wood floors in the various houses in which I have lived over the past several years. But there is something about cleaning a floor which makes the place you live, yours. So I guess I am a domestic goddess after all. it’s a good thing too because I couldn’t start the industrial lawn mower – I didn’t move the choke far enough over. So I quit and worked in the gardens instead. How spooky is this carrot?

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Christmas on Deal Island

Santa found us! We celebrated Christmas Eve last night with a lit Christmas tree. We had candlelit singing with a new candle holder Tim made for the occasion, accompanied by karaoke music from iTunes.

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This morning we awakened and had delicious and huge cinnamon buns, which grew in the refrigerator overnight. It’s frustrating because we can’t get online to wish Merry Christmas to the family today but we had several telephone calls from members of the Friends of Deal Island and the Park Service to wish us a happy holiday. Then we exchanged gifts. I received a miniature music box I had coveted in Launceston, Tas and Tim got a knit fairy penguin and a duct tape check book holder.
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There is something special about a simple Christmas. Now we are listening to beautiful music on the radio.

Sharing the garden

Our garden is full of vegetables and herbs. We’ve had fresh lettuce, carrots, radishes, potatoes, broccoli, kohlrabi, silverbeet, cabbage, peas and beet root since we arrived. Most were ready for harvest upon our arrival. Sweet corn is growing but I have to prop it up every day after the wind blows it down. I go out every afternoon with a large tub and figure out what’s ripe and what we can have for dinner. Then I pick and clean a lot of the food right out at the garden. There’s always a lot of dirt and a few earwigs. If something has been eaten too much by something else, I toss it. There are the occasional land slugs with pretty shells but bad intentions. Crunch they go. Now it’s our turn to plant the rest of the garden for ourselves and the next caretakers. So far I have planted pumpkin, watermelon, dwarf beans, silver beet, beet root, radishes, rocket, turnips, parsnips, carrots, corn, chinese cabbage, capsicum, tomatoes, leeks, cauliflower and broccoli.

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I’ll see how my garden grows

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We’re never alone

We are the visitors here and we’re not alone.

Every time we take a walk, we encounter at least a dozen wallabies.  There are a few rabbits, about a dozen Cape Barren geese.  Yesterday, I was working in the garden and when I came out, the garden was surrounded by a wallaby and a few geese.  We seem to see new birds every few days.  There’s a brown hawk, which flies over the cove near our house and yesterday we spotted a white face heron.

White faced heron in the visitor yard

We can hear the fairy penguins at night going home to their burrows.  They sound like old men snoring.   I made a video of the wallabies and penguin sounds, which you can see here. There are two new boats in the cove on the Erith Island, across the pass from us.  I saw one returning to its anchorage at about 6:30 am.  I think they may have headed out and decided against it due to rough seas for a change.  The wind should lie down over the next couple of days and maybe the human visitors will increase.

We have to remind visitors when they take the 2.5 km walk to the lighthouse to remember to tie open the door to the catwalk.  Otherwise it slams shut and they could be there for days!!

Rainbows and Christmas trees

Our day began with a double rainbow. A few squalls blew through and then it was sunny and windy for a change.

The rainbows end here
Tim mowing the lawn with the tow behind mower and the Ute
Tim used the truck to mow the trails and I went along for the ride.
We checked up on our visitors. No one was anchored in Garden Cove because it was too rough. Very beautiful, but rough. We found them in Winter Cove, tucked in nicely. By the footprints we found on the beach, we had just missed them.
Garden Cove
Our Christmas Tree Along the way, we spotted the perfect Christmas tree. It’s strange to be gearing up for Christmas in sunny, relatively warm weather. Will Santa find us here? Yesterday was our summer solstice and the longest day of the year. He doesn’t have a long enough night to do everything he needs to do.
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A nice day for a walk

East Cove and the road to the compound

Yesterday was a nice day for a walk. The sky was clear and there were 48 knot winds. Luckily I had my handy new headband and off we went. At the lower left of the picture is the pier. On the right is the road around the hill and to the compound. Below is a picture of the old way. Straight down the hill to the pier was a “whim” or tram: Iron rails on the ground like a railway on which a cart was hauled up. The power came from two bullocks (I don’t think they used horses) who walked in a circle, which turned a gear, which turned a gear.

The whim's engine, sans bullocks

 

 

Behind the “engine” to the left are the remains of some of the track leading down to the cove.

 

 

Dover and Erith Islands, Kent Group

A panoramic view of Dover Island to the left (south) and Erith Island to the right. Most of my photos from the compound are directed between the two islands where a swashway sometimes separates them.

The swashway and beyond

 

Barn Hill cliffs

 

 

Another perspective of the Erith Island, from Barn Hill

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This incredibly deep ravine on Barn Hill. I couldn’t go any closer to the edge to improve the perspective.

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What looms on the horizon for us?

I’m no meteorologist but these clouds look like some interesting weather might be on its way.

Front moving in

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I had unfinished business in the garden to attend to and left the house at dawn. I ran into the usual cast of characters along the way. I worked through rain showers and managed to plant twelve varieties of vegetables as stage one of my garden management plan. Garden Gate

Caretakers before us built the beautiful enclosure to protect it from the wind, sea spray, rats, wallabies and birds. (I think they are the same ones who built the bed we sleep in from lumber they found washed up on the shore. We are such light weights.) Check out the handle on the sliding lock.

Garden friend

They couldn’t keep this guy out though. I decided not to plant near him at the moment.

Low ceiling

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No new boats in the harbor. Just the birds. High winds and rain for the next couple of days. Tim has been clearing trails and I have been planning and getting the garden ready – and checking the beer and spinning up some beautiful yarn. Two sailors who have been anchored on the other side of the pass stopped by today. They needed a weather report and concluded they would be enjoying the anchorage here for a few more days. It’s hard for me to imagine sailing in a place where you can’t communicate with anyone else – even to get a weather report. We will get to act as a relay this summer.  

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I am using my Kindle a lot. I have over 100 books on it and also use it to store my recipes and knitting patterns. I didn’t bring any cookbooks or knitting books and have been doing just fine. When I find recipe or knitting project, I download it to my computer and transfer it to the Kindle. I wrote out the important recipes in my journal just in case, but today, I succeeded at a batch of bagels. I think I have got the hang of it now.

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And if the skies stay cloudy and the solar array doesn’t do its job, then at least I have a trusty night light – for a few days.PC170047.JPG

On the rocks

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We’re walking the walks. Yesterday, we hiked to Squally Cove on the east side of the island after lunch. Most of the hikes take a couple of hours and end in spectacular beaches. Yesterday was no different. We were there at mid tide and there were tide pool and the remains of ship, which sunk in the cove after it crashed on the rocks, Christmas Eve, 1920.
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There must be something in the water because I am seeing things… in all the rocks and even shipwrecks. Dragons, dogs, people.
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The pair
Now for some knitting news, I finished the socks knit from merino, possum and bamboo and they are lovely. First project on Deal.
Flinders Island Button
Then I moved onto a headband because I am tired of my hair whipping around in the wind and it’s often too windy for a hat. I’ve ordered my magnetic boots though so should remain grounded. I knit calorimetry twice. Too big, then just right. Now I am on to Christmas gifts. It’s not too late is it??