Continuing to explore the Gold Coast

Tuesday afternoon we began expanding our domain with a bus excursion to a nearby shopping centre. The motivation was a search for drip style coffee. We anticipated Gail’s dislike for Australian coffee by bringing filters and holder to make drip coffee but first purchased ground coffee in Honolulu after we discovered a kettle to be standard equipment in the Queen Elizabeth’s stateroom. We replenished our supply of coffee and filters while in Sydney as we also had a kettle in the hotel room. Here we are now in Burleigh Heads and ground coffee is not a standard item on the shelves of local grocery stores. Today we expanded the search to a nearby shopping centre and made our first use of Queensland Public Transportation.

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In Sydney we had something called an OPAL card. It was quite useful and easy to top up as needed with not complicated registration process. In fact, there was a daily maximum charge which we hit several times. In Queensland we have a TRANSLink Go Card. While it is just as easy to use on public vehicles that is where any comparison with the OPAL card ends. Before any attempt to top up the card with funds online a registration process is required where almost everything except one’s bathroom habits must be recorded. Even after that the online update process kept insisting my trusty credit card was invalid. Every other store finds it valid. Fortunately, updates can be done at some 7-Eleven stores and there is one nearby and they happily accepted the credit card.

Tonight we had our first restaurant meal since arriving. The place was called The Carvery and for $12.00 per plate we had a delicious roast beef dinner with potato and vegetables. Typical evening meals in Sydney were in the $50.00 range. 

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On our way back  to the apartment we could see birds flying toward a small grove of Norfolk Pine trees. We were told these were Rainbow Lorikeets and there were thousands of them and they are not a quiet bird. Apparently this grove is their night time nesting place. Interestingly, the beach is lined with Norfolk Pine but only this small grove of 20 to 30 trees seems to attract the birds. They are impossible to photograph because they fly so quickly and seem to vanish once in a tree, it is only the loud screeching that gives them away. 

Stock Photo of a Rainbow Lorikeet

Rainbow lorikeet

Wednesday morning began as the coolest day so far with an overcast sky. When I walked to the beach dark clouds met the horizon and a light mist partially obscured the high-rise buildings to the north. We first noticed the rain about 9 AM. Before long the rain was torrential but dissipated quickly. After a few minutes of calm the wind picked up, rain redeveloped and continued with some intensity until noon. We still managed to find our way to the pool.

Thursday promised more rain but our timing was good. We walked north along a beach path to an elevated lookout called “The Nobbies” by the locals, “South Nobby Headlands” by the gazetteer. We were able to identify a few of the trees along the path courtesy of small signs along the way. We returned to the apartment just as the next rain storm began.

Short Screw Pines with taller Norfolk Pine behind

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Seen from South Nobby Headlands

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Friday, more rain promised. It was fine after breakfast so off to the southern trail. Our plan was to walk the lower trail along the water but it had been closed because of some rock falls so if we wanted to walk we had to walk up the hill. The trails are within Burleigh Head National Park. The lookout was about a one kilometre walk with a rise of about 85 metres. The trail began with a number of stairs then continued as a narrow trail. We chatted with several other walkers and saw a Bush Turkey and a couple of Kookaburras along the path. There was a rumour of a koala sitting but we saw nothing. Having arrived at the Tumgun Lookout there is a great view to the south with Tallebudgera Creek at the bottom of the headland then a stretch of sandy beach extending forever.

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After lunch and another rain storm we visited the ocean again. Playing in the waves is great fun. Here’s the drill. You can be standing knee deep in the water when suddenly a wave whacks you in the back, side or face. You fall down and the wave carries you onto the sandy beach. So you get up, walk out toward the surf and wait for the next wave to knock you down. It is truly amazing where sand can get to. The fresh water showers along the beach help getting rid of some sand. We seem to have developed a routine visiting the waves breaking on the beach once a day. Today, Saturday, they were the biggest so far.

This is what they look like just before they turn you upside down.

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Arrived on the Gold Coast

Saturday March 17 began in Sydney pretty much as it has for the past week, even though it was St Patricks Day. It ended at Burleigh Palms Holiday Apartments in Burleigh Heads, Queensland. The city traffic that slowed our trip to Sydney Airport is gone. Our apartment is on the Gold Coast Highway and we can hear some traffic but from our patio we can see only a few cars queuing for a traffic light. To the rear of our apartment is a walkway that leads in the direction of the beach which is only a block further.

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Our first order of business was to go grocery shopping. Burleigh Heads is a very small town and the shops a mere 10 minute walk.

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The day was hot, 28°C, and quite humid. After the stop at Woolworths, remember that store, well in Australia it is a grocery store. We visited the wine merchant and we returned to the apartment just before dinner time. For the first time in six weeks we got to eat a meal which we had to prepare and wash dishes. It was great!

Sunday was our first full day in Burleigh Heads. The parking lot by the beach was full very early and the beach and town eateries were busy all day, mostly with young adults, teens and children. Our morning was spent exploring the town streets and picking up more supplies. The pool seemed like a good idea on another hot day and it was exactly that. We had the pool to ourselves and spent as much time in the Australian sun as our pale skins could tolerate.

Our first venture to the beach with intent to get wet feet found the tide out, exposing a wide sandy beach. We waded ankle deep at the water’s edge. The surf was breaking about 50 metres from the edge of the wet sand. There were waves sufficient to please some surfers about 100 metres from shore. The surf is almost hypnotizing. After rinsing the sand from feet we continued walking the shoreline. There are clearly many paths to walk that we have yet to investigate in days to come.

Dinner preparation encountered a small speed bump as one of the two burners on the range top failed to work correctly. Once turned on it went immediately to blast furnace mode and no amount of adjustment would cool it. Manual on/off temperature control got the potatoes properly cooked. Our unit does not have an oven so the oversized electric frying pan became our oven. A second “home cooked” dinner was successful.

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OK, now I’m impressed by even the local amateur surfers. We were on the beach Monday around low tide and the waves knocked us around. Tuesday morning we returned to the beach at near high tide and got knocked down by the waves. I’m sure that after one wave sent me to my back I heard it say “make a wish” as it dragged me under. Never-the-less it is fun and I certainly understand the surf’s attraction. The locals called today’s waves “tiny” and I just don’t want to meet one they call “big.”

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Beach Video

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