Aussie Road trip with dad

My dad died earlier this year, which left a large hole in my life. I was fortunate to be able to spend some time with dad, travelling on various trips through Australia and Asia. In 1998 we flew over to Brisbane, on a trip to see dad’s ailing sister in Gladstone. This is the story of that trip. Dad’s brother Peter and my cousin Stephen came with us.

Background
Dad’s family had emigrated from the UK to Australia in January 1951 on the P&O Cameronia. They first settled in north-west Queensland on the railway at Wammutta near Cloncurry. They lived there a numer of years before moving out to the east coast on the railway at Kooltandra near Ogmore. On this trip we would revisit Kooltandra, and also find my grandfather’s banana plantation he walked away from during the great depression.

Day 1: Brisbane – Kingaroy – Bundaberg

Bunya Mountains National Park

Day 2: Bundaberg – Mackay
We pulled off the highway at Marlborough for a drink and decided to hunt out dad’s old place at Kooltandra. Further up the highway we stopped in Ogmore and found the site of the movie theatre where dad worked. We followed Kooltandra road through the scrub for a couple of kilometers south.

Peter (left) and dad at Ogmore

There was nothing left except for a wooden ‘Kooltandra’ sign and some railways infrastructure. Dad was able to point out the stump of a tree that he had a photo of surrounded by floodwaters.

The old photo
The tree in the old photo is the stump left of centre
Kooltandra, no station here anymore

Dad also spent some time poking around in a gully where a firearm had been dumped that had been given to him as a kid. No hope of finding it after all these years.

Day 3, 4, 5: Mackay, Broken River, Brampton Island

We spent a few days knocking around the area. My grandfather had a banana plantation somewhere near Eungella, so we set out to see if we could find it. A local museum gave us a few tips where some wild bananas grew within the Eungella reserve.

Possibly the site of Grandad’s banana plantation, now part of the Eungella National Park, near Broken River. Possible location on Crediton Loop Road.
Eungella National Park – possibly near Lex Creek Road off the Crediton loop Road

On a spare day we caught the boat out to Brampton Island for a look. It was still a busy resort with a nice beach. A couple of years later mum and dad spent a week on the island for a holiday. In more recent times the resort has closed and has been abandoned.

Brampton Island in the Whitsunday Islands, now an abandoned resort

Day 6, 7: Mackay – Gladstone
Capricorn Caves at Rockhampton

Day 8: Gladstone – Noosa
Epic thunderstorm in Gympie and Noosa
On the drive south, we got caught up in an epic thunderstorm as we headed through Gympie, the driving conditions were pretty difficult in the ultra heavy rain.
Later on we stopped in Noosa for the night, I walked down the street and spent an hour or two watching the anvil crawling lightening, with what felt like dozens of other people.

Day 9: Noosa – Brisbane

Review – Sunroad Altimeter / Barometer

I found this on Aliexpress, NZ$36 approx – multiple sellers with the product


My interest was a device with barograph function. Plenty of devices available with pressure trend, but I specifically wanted a barograph.

Sampling is every 30 minutes for the graph which is a reasonable interval, there is a specific barometer mode where the readings are ‘live’ but not graphed. The barometer seems consistent once it’s calibrated. One issue that has shown up is when there are significant changes in pressure, the graph scale doesn’t change – leaving historic data points ‘off chart’ until they age and exit stage left

Powered by a built in battery recharged via a USB port. Seems to last a while on one charge – mine is over two months and still going strong and showing a full charge. The USB port is charging only, while it would be cool if you could connect and harvest data… maybe another version or two into the future.

OK quality, the only concern is USB port used for charging seems to be floating rather than fixed in place. Reading the manual this could be by design. It clearly isn’t waterproof, maybe splashproof at best.

The device also does altitude / compass / temperature and humidity, plus a time and alarm function. It does have an annoying beep with every button press – nothing in the manual if it can be disabled (doubt it!)

Verdict – interesting device to keep on my desk.
I’ll update as I get to know it a little better!

Aliexpress link: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/32888977040.html?spm=a2g0s.9042311.0.0.3da24c4dpu1YUM

Nelson – Travel Memory

Years ago, I was travelling back to Auckland from Nelson after spend a day in one of the local stores sorting a stock issue. It must have been around 2001 or 2002.

In the golden light of the late afternoon I fell in love with Nelson. The day hadn’t been the nicest, but now the sun was out, it was warm and beautiful.

Nelson Airport c 2006

Back in the day Air NZ played New Zealand music pre-flight, and as we sat on the tarmac Anika Moa’s ‘Falling in love again’ came on. It stuck in my mind, synonymous with Nelson, and quite a few years later we used is as part of our wedding music selection.

We have been able to travel to Nelson a couple of times as a couple, and later on as a family. Special place, special memory.

Charlotte c 2014