Showing posts with label lolly shop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lolly shop. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 May 2016

Half-lap Day 9: Hahndorf -> Clare

It was nice and warm and dry all night in the cabin – we could hear the wind and rain and were pleased to be inside. When we woke up the sun was shining, everything was wet and there were branches and trees down everywhere, but the wind had died right down.

After breakfast I walked back over to our tent, which was still standing and had a few pools of water at the base of the poles inside. The mattress was also a bit wet. I opened up all the windows and started pulling everything out to dry a bit in the sun before we packed it all up. There were still grey clouds milling around and I was concerned that it would rain on all our drying things, but it held off. Once I had the tent empty I went back over and helped get everything out of the cabin, we returned the key and then started packing up our stuff.  Talking to the staff at reception they said that the Adelaide Hills was the area worst hit by the weather the day before.

The kids played in the games room and Caitlin wandered back and forth between helping, playing with the others, and balancing on the rocks around the campsite. Having the windows open had dried out most of the inside of the tent – we packed it up last (which is the opposite to what we normally do) and it was a relief that it was mainly dry inside at least.

We were ready to leave around midday. Tony dropped the kids and I off in Hahndorf so we could browse the shops like we’d wanted to do the day before. We checked out an op shop and then the fudge shop, all the kids bought some fudge or lollies with their holiday money. We also enjoyed looking at the old buildings and the autumn trees and vines. When Tony joined us Caitlin and I wandered a bit further and also explored an alpaca shop – I bought some alpaca wool insoles for my boots. Once everyone had finished choosing their lollies we headed back to the car for sandwiches. While we had been shopping Tony had taken the trailer back to the auto electrician to fix the plug that joins on to the car – now our blinkers and brake lights work without having to spend 10 minutes jiggling the connection.

We headed in towards Adelaide and then turned north. We listened to the end of Almost Super and were pleased when I looked it up and discovered that the author is writing an Almost Super 2. We used the Fuel app we’d downloaded to find the cheapest fuel on the way out of the city – the price wasn’t as good as the app said, but it was still better than what we’d been seeing on the main highway, and we were able to update it ourselves.

Heading towards Gawler the traffic was quite heavy then suddenly it cleared and our surroundings became less built up. I immediately felt excited and relaxed – it’s like the first week was just a tester holiday, and it was all places we’d been before (or near enough), and now the NEW part of the trip begins. Exploring unknown places and doing things we’ve never done. Also being out of the city always helps me relax.

We drove as far as Clare. The countryside on the way there was different again to anything we’d seen – not many trees, lots of rolling hills cleared for crops. Lots of sheep too. Even driving through areas of gum trees the ground below them was fairly clear, not a lot of undergrowth. Coming in to the Clare Valley was cool, being surrounded by vineyards and reading all the names of the wineries – Tony knew a lot of them, and has met some of the people who work there or run them.

We settled for the night at the Clare Valley Racecourse, just a bit out of town. It’s only $20 for the night, and we can use the jockeys’ toilets and showers in the race secretary’s building, or there’s (not so nice – full of tumbleweeds!) a public toilet block near where we camped. We arrived a bit before 5 so actually set up the tent while it was still daylight, a first for this trip! The kids ran around on the grass and went up the hill to see a horse in a paddock. Caitlin was excited to see the stalls where the racehorses would be stabled on race day. Tony used the large expanse of grass to practice hitting some golf balls.

Once it got dark we had dinner – left over chicken curry in rice paper rolls, very yummy. The kids played inside the tent for a while and we tidied up a bit, then went to bed around 8pm to read Brisingr. After we stopped reading we heard a noise outside, Tony said he thought he’d seen a cat. He and Caitlin went to check – a ginger cat had knocked the lid off our bread tub and was eating our butter! They put things away a bit more securely – then shortly afterwards I could hear purring outside. Caitlin and LiAM went to check, and said ‘yes, the cat is out here – oh wait, there’s 2..no, 3 – oh there’s kittens….’ So it was a mum and 4 kittens, who were purring because they’d found our garbage bag and were licking the sour cream lid we’d thrown out… So we tidied up even more securely (I don’t know how they got to the garbage, I thought we’d put it away) and things were quiet from that point.


Friday, 6 May 2016

Half-lap Day 4: Grampians -> Keith, SA

(Oh I forgot to mention yesterday – when we returned to our unlocked car after our walk, all our stuff was fine)

LiAM had a hard time sleeping, I think he was exhausted from the walk and couldn’t settle, so I lay on his bed with him for a while in the middle of the night and we chatted – we have great chats like this when he is trying to get to sleep and everything is quiet.

In the morning we had breakfast and eventually started to pack up. The kids wandered the campsite and played with sticks, followed the wallabies some more, helped with packing up a bit, Caitlin rode her bike, and they met a 10 year old girl, also an unschooler, and played horses and did some colouring and things with her for the rest of the morning. I had a good chat to her parents too, nice to talk to someone who has been on the road longer than us and get a few tips and some reassurance that this is doable!

We were packed up and on the road just before 1pm, so we’re getting quicker each time. We went back in to Hall’s Gap as the kids wanted to spend some of their holiday money (thanks Grandma and Grandad) at the lolly shop. There was a wonderful selection of lollies and chocolates, and everyone found things that they liked. LiAM also won 2 bouncy balls on a pinball type machine.

Kids with kangaroos in Halls Gap
We walked up to the top of that mountain yesterday!
It was very cool to look up at The Pinnacle and know that we had walked up there the day before. Everyone seemed recovered from the trek – I was a bit worried it would mean people weren’t enjoying themselves so much, but everyone seemed happy again. We drove through the Grampians to get to Horsham – a windy road with a drop off on one side – with the trailer on I know the car is so much heavier and I was terrified. Tony was calm and drove carefully – maybe I was still tired from the day before or just a bit overwhelmed at what we’ve taken on, but I was way more scared than I normally am in that situation (I’m normally a bit scared, this time I was seriously freaking out). I kept it mainly to myself though so the kids (esp LiAM) weren’t worried, and we all made it through ok.

We stopped in Horsham for one last stock up at Aldi – most of the things we buy from there are half the price than we can get from supermarkets so I filled up on our favourites. We ate lunch in the car, and had a bit more to eat when we stopped at a rest stop to tighten some of the ropes on the trailer that had come loose. We listened to the first of the audio books I’d downloaded – Almost Super, which is very funny.

We were keen to at least get in to South Australia today, to feel like we were really on our way. We were watching but didn’t see the Border sign – suddenly I realised the time on my phone had changed and we must have crossed the border. We made it as far as Keith before the sun set, and pulled in to Keith Caravan Park. The office was closed (it was around 5.30) but the sign at the front said to pick a site and pay when someone came around, or in the morning. So we set up on a grass area bordering what likes like a wildlife reserve – lots of grass anyway with lots of kangaroos.

We made a quick dinner of pasta and kabana and tomatoes, then some of us had a shower (we’d decided we needed flush toilets and a shower tonight). We were all in bed fairly early and read Brisingr for a while before crashing.