Carolle's Walking Group
Wednesday, 25 February 2015
90 Clifton Gardens to Curlew Artists' Camp
The walk from Clifton Gardens to Curlew Artists’ Camp and back again was our first walk for 2015. ‘Quite short ‘ said Wendy who so kindly and helpfully joined all the dots, where to start, where to go, where to end. We found ourselves walking and walking while our heads were telling us this was a ’short ’walk. It was lovely, every inch of the way, gorgeous board walks, views, Bradleys Head, the Zoo, the bridge, the boats, a lazy lizard, the Artists’ camp which made us wonder about conditions over a hundred years ago, also thoughts of a piano being hauled to that rugged little spot, Sirius Cove, such clear harbour water, little stone walls from once upon a time. Finally our footsteps led back to Clifton Gardens, crossing the beach to our now familiar Bacino Kiosk. En route once again we looked up at The Manor which we have seen before from different angles on different walks.
“The Manor one member wrote in 1931, was destined to be ‘a divine station from which will emanate the moral and spiritual forces that cleanse and heal our world’. Well, interesting as well as notable people passed through those portals. Wish they’d been more influential in cleansing and healing our world though. All the same, that manor has some vibrant history in Australia’s cultural life.
None of us, I think, except for Wendy, had actually visited the site of the famous artists’ camp before.
One important and worthwhile result of this walk was that it was Good exercise with valuable huff puff and very good for the condition of our hearts!
Walkers: Marie-Claire, Moira, Kate,Wendy, Donna, Jane, Carolle
89 Sea Cliff Bridge
SEA CLIFF BRIDGE:
The Sea Cliff Bridge is one of only seven off-shore parallel to coast bridges in the world.
What a lovely Day. Linzi was here, the rain kept away as did the storms - in fact the prediction was that Tuesday would be the only day without a storm and so it proved to be. Two cars with drivers Pippa and Donna. Heading South we arrived unhindered at our destination at Coalcliff.
Our walk started in pretty Leader Park a nice surprise due to a small wooded and beautiful little gully with its bridge over a stream with a waterfall . The stream with good sized shiny boulders led down to a little beach which we could see from the vantage point on the bridge. Water Monitors lazed on the rocks below.
It was not difficult to find our way towards the Sea Cliff Bridge where almost right away our expectations were exceeded as stunning views and great rocky platforms with fringing waves presented themselves while the heights of the coals cliffs loomed on one side. Ahead we could see the great swathes of engineered bridge construction all grey and white and cleanly commanding space above rocks but close to cliff faces.
From Coalcliff to Clifton we went. On reaching Clifton we found parks on either side of the road. A nondescript tiny building turned out to be a toilet facility, which, surprise, surprise, contained electronic wonders of piped music, buttons galore to open and to close doors, buttons to shoot out lengths of toilet paper, hand washing sensors to notify toilet flushing which obediently flushed. Seemed somewhat out of place in that quiet rural area.
We retraced our steps back again along the Bridge to to Coalcliff where we settled into our cars to drive this time, across the Bridge. This of course equalled the third crossing of the morning. The destination was lunch at Austinmer so starting at Coalclioff we passed through all the suburbs/villages along the way - Clifton, Scarborough, Wombarra, Coalbrook before arriving at Austinmer to stop at AustinmerBeach Cafe for, let’s see, two iced coffees with Everything - one iced coffee, no ice, no cream - three Detoxes with ginger and unusually for Moira No coffee nor a little warm milk on the side.
After lunch at Austinmer we needed to cross that Bridge once more to get home. Oi, Oi, our FOURTH Bridge crossing. Been there, done that we can satisfactorily say! Four times in one day.
En route home though we stopped at Stanwell Tops for the sky-diving, para gliding spectacle. Here we met up with Judy Gill which was such an added bonus. Judy informed us that the wind was excellent which accounted for many people gathered on the high point of Bald Head. The Sky diving kites were magnificent as they soared against the backdrop of the Sea Cliff Bridge in the distance.
At Bald Head we indulged in extra ice creams and Affogato as we watched the kites in the sky.
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How lovely it was to have Linzi with us again. Time flew but we managed to hear bits of Linzi’s exciting trips abroad during her ’Gap Year’. I think we all were able to catch up between the adventures of the day.
Kate’s trip to Canada though remains a mystery to me at least - next time there may be more time to hear about some of that.
88 Tunks Park
Tunks Park - a pretty park, bound on both sides by bush with Long Bay at one end and the wonderful Northbridge suspension bridge at the other. The Park is perfect for people and their dogs, for children, for sport, for old men taking a quiet stroll down to the rocks next to the creek (as we saw), for a lone young fella doing Tai Chi, for elderly couples with thermos flasks, for Lycra jogger gals, for people with boats. Something there for everyone really. A nice peaceful place to visit though probably not quite the same on sports days. Still, there is enough space all around while down next to the creek it is quietly beautiful as well as peaceful.
An important point for us with regard to this walk is that it is the middle link walk between the Artarmon to Middle Harbour Walk track and the Wreck Bay/Long Bay Walking track. This time we actually walked back to the creek crossing steps which we crossed on a memorable rainy day way back in 2012! We also climbed the narrowest gap of steps which led to the Northbridge Golf course at the opposite side of the park hence ensuring that we had covered all of the distance from Artarmon to Dorset Road, Northbridge.
Coffee at Sprout Wholefood Cafe, Narremburn.
Walkers: Marie-Claire, Pippa, Moira, Donna, Jane, Carolle
Saturday, 8 November 2014
87 Northbridge - Clive Park, Minimbah Road
At the end of Sailors Bay Road in Northbridge we set off to explore Clive Park and surrounding area. Unexpected surprises presented themselves the first being Clive Park itself. Although small, it has excellent picnic tables, benches, BBQ area well set apart in a couple of little glades under trees looking through to Sailor Bay and across the water to Castlecrag. It felt quietly secluded even though a few children with attendant adults were enjoying the beach below. Our path led around large boulders skirting the beach. Right there in front of us was, allegedly,one of the the smallest sea pools in Sydney. See photo.From Clive Park we turned into Minimbah Road to walk along its entire length passing the Marina before ending up at the Swimming Centre. Again families were enjoying the new found summer weather.En route down Minimbah we looked for and found Bob’s and Blanche’s house.
A friend of ours (the three walkers today) lived on the cliff above B and B’s house. She deliberately and crossly grew bamboo to avoid having to watch the PM putting around the roof-top Putting Green. From where we were below on the road we could see that bamboo higher up on the cliff.
Further on we found the beautiful Italian style house where we three once attended a memorable party. Peering over the high wall was pointless as all we could see were the terracotta roof tiles Too steep, too far below.Minimbah Road proved to be an interesting road with houses strung hung down the steep cliff with two, three or more floor levels needing mechanical movers clinging wherever possible. Stairs and stilts and railing and steps of every description. A glass mosque like dome on one home, another with a stunning glass roof the shutters of which created floor patterns two stories below. Architecturally interesting, sometimes very pleasing. Gardens likewise.Pippa noticed iron supports on the cliff face - woe if ever a tremor sends rocks skidding down. One can only admire architects and builders who have won the odds agains the slope, the cliff and the rocks.
Tuesday, 23 September 2014
86 - Rookwood Necropolis/Hidden Sculpture walk
Rookwood Necropolis
Thanks to Pippa’s precise instructions and her belief that car driving was the way to go, we found our way to Rookwood easily, following those instructions right into the selected parking spot. We also followed up later by having coffee in the cafe, Reflections. Thank you Pip for all that research. It seemed unbelievably difficult, too far, too hard but you eased the way by showing us how to go.
Well, at last we found ourselves in Rookwood Necropolis along with the added bonus of the “Hidden” sculpture exhibition both of which kept us transfixed, interested and thoroughly fascinated for the few hours we were able to wander through just a fraction of the 283 hectares.
Jane guided us from sculpture to sculpture with the aid of her guide-book. While the sculptures sometimes fascinated, the surrounded area dominated, coloured as it was with emerging spring colour; graves were either highly polished shiny or grey crumbling with age, a sense of decay mixed with modern carved glitzed marble, structures massive or tiny, some buried sunken obliquely into the ground, topsy turvy. There were monuments, mausoleums, symbols of every religion, rows of precise granite memories edged by another section of unruly disorder. Somehow it all hung together in the most charming way with scattered monuments, chapels, urns, obelisks, shelters, beautiful trees, birds, dale up, dale down, vistas, views, Few of us had ever been to this monumental place, few of us could guess the enormity, the size, nearly a million internments.
Established in 1868, it is protected by an act of Parliament.
We didn’t see the the original 81 hectares which is subject to a Permanent Conservation Order “represents the largest and one of the finest surviving examples of a Victorian public cemetery anywhere in the world” It was designed as a “grand gardenesque style” once fashionable. Surely we need return, there are still another 200 plus hectares for us to explore!
Walkers: Pippa, Marie-Claire, Jane, Kate, Carolle
Monday, 15 September 2014
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