Wednesday, February 13, 2013

UK trip - Helen and Marks wedding

Karen's nephew Mark invited to his wedding over in the UK and as we hadn't been away from Darwin for months we decided to go.

The flight over was easy enough as we left Darwin and flew to Singapore and stayed there for 24 hours for a bit of a rest and a look around the city.

I have to say that we simply love Singapore. Everything there is done so efficiently and with such politeness it makes the rest of the world look rude in comparison.

Aside from checking out the shops (and how many specialist designer shops does one city need?) we went for a ride on the Singapore Flyer - currently the largest ferris wheel in the world.

It was an amazing thing to do and the views (we were blessed with a beautiful, clear day) were astounding.

 The picture above shows the pods as they come into the base and this is where you hop in.


One the way up! Singapore is an apartment city and these apartments look to be some of the nicest.


Difficult to see easily, but this building has a boat perched on top of it!

A view from the top - Cool eh?

We left Singapore on a Qatar Airways flight, stopping over in Doha for an hour. Great service, great planes, but the Doha stop is one that would make us think twice about flying with them again.

Perhaps once they have built the new terminal and you don't have to suffer with the bus transfers.

England - well predictably, this was not as warm and pleasant as Singapore (nor home in Darwin) so we ended up rugging up and trying to avoid the wind.

We drove to Crewe to see Karen's sister in law, Glynis, and then a couple of days later we drove over the Peak District to my old home town of Chesterfield.


Yes - it was snowing! As you can see, it can be really pretty when it is snowing, but it is definitely survival unfriendly.


Speed limits officer? What speed limits?


The little Vauxhall we rented. At ten pounds a day ($16 Aussie) it was a great little runaround.


The view from my brother's place.



Us with my brother outside a local pub. Yes, it IS snowing.


Snow is not a bad surface to drive on as it has some grip and is predictable. It gets worse when the road surface underneath is covered in ice though.


Chesterfield is an old town - it has its origins as an early Saxon settlement before the Romans took over and made it a Roman town. The earliest architecture left in the town is medieval though.

Anyway, the pump above is the old medieval town pump and is situated in the middle of the market. It has been dressed up a little, but it (apparently) still works and forms the centre of the town.




There is an old area just off the market place called "The Shambles" which also dates back over a thousand years. The pub in this photo is in the middle of The Shambles and, according to the plaque on the wall, was used as a recruiting post for the Knights Templar when they were looking for volunteers to go and fight in the crusades.

I grew up with this stuff and thought nothing of it, but now I am appreciating it a little more.




We returned to Crewe for the wedding and to buy me a new suit.

We did the shopping around the town and then went to Nantwich (where we found a suit that we liked) and enjoyed a couple of beers there.

Nantwich is an old town too and the pics above show some of the buildings that date back 500 odd years. Nice town,



The new suit - I don't really like the modern style of having things look too small, but what the heck.


Karen's outfit - she loved it in the shop and hated it when she got it out for the wedding. I liked it though!


One of a million wedding photos!

After the wedding we drove south to see friends on the south coast. I really dislike the UK motorways these days. The lanes are narrow and crowded and the people seem to drive so very fast and so close together. I can cope with the speed, but the fact that someone is only a couple of metres away from my rear bumper at 140kph is quite disturbing.

So I decided to take the more scenic route through the Cotswolds and around Oxford and these photos were taken on that trip.

Yes, it was snowing.







We stopped for a bowl of soup at a cafe and some cheeky devil parked his Aston Martin DB9 next to our powerhouse Vauxhall!

We reached Milford on Sea and settled into our B&B before catching up with Carolyn and Bruce.
Carolyn had donated a kidney to Bruce (what a generous and heroic thing to do!) a couple of weeks before we got there so they were both less than lively but it was great to catch up with them.

While we were there we took a walk along the cliff edge to Barton on Sea to get a bit of exercise.





These little huts are bathing huts and each is owned by a person and they use them to store their beach things. Given that the beach is made of pebbles measured in inches across this probably includes some substantial boots.


We left Milford on Sea and headed off to Sway in the New Forest. This is close by so we detoured to Bournemouth to check it out. We walked the pier and nearly froze solid - Cold just doesn't do it justice.


We ran away from freezing Bournemouth and headed to Sway, but we called into a local pub there before we got to Sway. Magic - pubs are one thing that the UK does really well.

While we were staying with Judith and Paul in Sway we had some other mutual friends, Jayne and Bob, come along as well. I have to say that this couple of days was the best fun we have had in ages. We had forgotten just how much we loved these people.

Everyone took the day off work for our visit and we pent that day chatting. At lunchtime we went for a walk through the New Forest to a pub for lunch and it was just a magic time.


New Forest ponies - more of a road hazard than roos over here!


Look! It isn't snowing!


The obligatory silly photo. The track we walked was often under water so we all got muddy and wet, but somehow that didn't matter!

I will leave the story there for now, but to summarise things, we had a great time catching up with people and even if the weather was typical British winter stuff, it didn't dampen the joys of the trip.


Saturday, August 25, 2012

Back to Darwin


We left Brissie and headed north up the coast to Rockhampton.

From there we went west through Emerald to Barcaldine.

On the drive through one of the ranges we stopped off to check out the view.




We hit Barcadine and went to see the Tree of Knowledge. It was poisoned some years ago but the tree itself has been preserved and remains as part of a monument.




Barcaldine itself is also noteworthy for having six pubs in a 200 metre length of street!



Longreach - we decided to stay there for a couple of nights and to visit the QANTAS museum and the Stockman's Hall of Fame.





I will have to edit this picture a little, but I think it has the makings of a decent image. What do you think?


After a few hours driving we arrived at McKinley where they have the pub from the first Crocodile Dundee movie installed on site. Yeah - we stayed the night and had a few beers!


We drove on again, this time going through Cloncurry (holder of the title of the hottest temperature ever recorded in Australia) and headed north through the Burke & Wills Roadhouse and Gregory Downs and on to Lawn Hill National Park.

Wow! Lawn Hill was a special place indeed and we stayed there for four days, walking through the park and canoeing up the gorge.

In the outer reaches of the park the spinifex was everywhere.



But the gorge was, well, gorgeous!
















We headed up to "Harry's Hill" for sunset while sipping a wine and nibbling cheese and biccies. Magic views!

Termite mounds . .


An old meteorite crater. . .











From Lawn Hill we headed south to Camooweal and then across the Barkly Highway to the Barkly Homestead Roadhouse as people advised we would not get the van through the Savannah Way - it is in disrepair.

Travelled up the Tablelands Highway to Cape Crawford and stayed at the Heartbreak Hotel.

Drove across the Carpentaria Highway to Daly Waters and spent the night at the pub,

North from there to Katherine.,

Then Darwin via Mayse's at Pine Creek and the Adelaide River pub.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Heading back to Darwin

Well, after visiting my brothers (one from the UK and one from Brisbane) down in Brissie for the past few weeks we are heading north west to Darwin. Karen has picked up a role with the Red Cross and I will be looking for work in the area.

We stayed some of the time in Brissie at the home of friends (thanks Joan and Rob) and although we found SE QLD to be damned cold we enjoyed our stay there.

Here is a pic of all three of the brothers with my son James - the royal family would never allow this to occur though - all four McDermott tadgers in one place!  What a loss to the world if a terrorist had gained word of this!

The reprobates are, from left to right as you view the pic, me (Joe), Fint, James (the brother) and James (the son).


I had to post this picture too - yes, in Brissie they sell firewood at $3 a piece!


While we were there we took Fint away for a few days down to Evans Head in NSW. It was cool enough, but the sun shone and the days were glorious and we had a ball.

This is Fint relaxing at our camp near the river.


We spotted a Falcon XR8 with his initials too - I think he'd have driven it away quite happily.  :)



Karen and Fint next to the Richmond river at Evans Head.


And some beach photos!


Fint and I decided to walk to the next headland.