Tuesday 30th October 2012
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sunrise and ALANA ROSE |
Seven
Spirit Bay Resort – Coral Bay
11’11.772S – 132’02.964E
0930hs: MrJ and I were back on board pulling
up the anchor to motor back up the port to Coral Bay to drop anchor out from
the Seven Spirit Bay Resort. I called the resort up on the radio asking
permission to be anchored in their part of the bay and we greeted by a very
friendly female voice on the other end, whom I was to find out later was the
lovely Vicki, saying that we were most welcome to stay in the bay and was
encouraged to come ashore at our leisure to make full use of the resorts
facilities.
Vicki did mention that the resort was at the
beginning of their close-down period, there were no guests at the resort, the
manager was away but would be back on the flight in the next day and that it
was the Chef’s day off but they would be most accommodating to our wishes. We
were most welcome to join the staff for their meal that Vicki would be cooking,
not the Chef, if that was alright. Obviously this was not the norm, MrJ and I
didn’t mind, we were pleased to fit in with whatever was going as we were the
ones who had dropped in unannounced without prior notice. As it turned out the
evening meal with the resort staff turned out to be one of the best night that
MrJ and I have had in a long time.
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Graham and Kim with MrJ |
After a little afternoon rest MrJ and I
dinghy ashore to be greeted by Kim, the hostess with the mostest, with here reliable
buggy to take us up the red dirt road to the resort. Kim escorts us into the
opens air large main building, reception, office, bar and dining areas all
under the one roof, to be introduced to the friendly Graham, Kim’s hubby and
co-worker. The building was off a wood construction lending in with the natural
tropical bush surrounds with different varieties of wood and cane being used
for the main bar, the walls, the floor the furniture and the rafter in the high
ceiling which had a number of ceiling fans circular cool refreshing air. I did
notice bits and pieces here and there; shells, natural ornaments and aboriginal
painting scattered tastefully throughout the building. One of the main features
in the middle of the foyer was a display of a huge croc skull. Picking up from
the conversation later on, this skull would have been about the same size as
the croc that inhabited the beach just off from the resort. Wow, scary stuff!
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out the back |
MrJ and I were privileged in being a part of
this special selection of people, sweet Kim the hostess with the mostest,
friendly Graham front of house as well as general duties man with a wicked
sense of humour, Chad the Head Chef who could whip up anything from nothing, a
real comic who though we (MrJ and I) would be wanting a full three course meal
prepare on our arrival (hahaha, he soon found out different), Vicki the
cook(was and loads of fun) who cooked the staff meals and a mean chocolate
fudge cake, Ian the boat, fishing man and anything else that was thrown his way
was so down to earth with his dry bush humour, Petite the sweet little French
girl who hated the spiders and the snakes with a passion but made up for this
with her chirpy outlook did a bit of everything and the young German couple
Lukas, who had won his working tour through a competition back in Germany did
ground work and maintenance and Franci who helped in the kitchen to pay her
way. All staff at the Seven Spirit Bay
Resort was multi tasked and very capable of doing most if not all of the
varying jobs around the resort. I do know that they took turns at the nightly
washing up even the boss.
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wildlife in the garden |
After a couple of cold beers at the bar and a
great old chit chat with Kim and Graham, Vicki, Chad and Petite keep popping in
and out and having a bit of a chat, MrJ and I went for a relaxing swim in the
pool. The water temperature was certainly at Territory levels as by now the in ground
temperature levels combined with the heat from the sun had really taken any
chill off the pool water and I enjoyed my swim tremendously. The lush tropical
garden pool surrounds were refreshing cool shading the deck area where we could
laze around for as long as we had wanted to.
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mealtime for the staff |
The staff meal was also a farewell dinner to
Petite, Lukas and Franci as they would be leaving the next day on the same
flight that was bringing the boss Leith back along with a paying guest. Vicki
prepared several yummy salads, potato salad, red cabbage coleslaw, a chopped
tomato based salad through the steak and sausages on the BBQ where Graham
helped with the cooking of and made this fabulous creamy Pepper Sauce that was
so pleasing to the taste buds and didn’t burn your throat out. Yummo! Franci
made a tradition German Apple Strudel having this with whipped cream. We all
ate heartily while the conversation and humour flowed.
Wednesday 31st October 2012
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another day, another sunrise |
|
Kennedy Beach walk |
MrJ and I had arranged for Kim to take us on
one of the resorts’ tours out to Kennedy Bay, Kennedy Beach walk, the headland
red cliffs and the miniature bats in one of the red cliffs, several other bush
track and to the lookout over Gunner Quoin. All this would takes us two to
three hours so it was decided that we would head off at 0800hs before the real
heat of the day set in. The tide was on the turn so that by the time we got to
some of the place it would leave long shoaling sandy beachfronts to walk along
and expose the great sandbars at Gunners Quoin. All of the tour was absolutely
magnificent; from tropical dry season bushland to majestic exposed red/red
through yellow to white raw cliff face with small secret hollowed out caves and
crevices and the tough little bushes and bigger trees clinging to the rock face
or the cliff’s edge by a maze of roots.
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another resort 4X4 |
|
Kennedy Beach |
On the our ride along the bush tracks I did
recognize the Pandanus trees, the Banyan trees, the Kapok trees, the Paperbark
tree, Native Hibiscus and the Casuarina trees but am not up on the different
native fruit trees. The natural wild bushland supports wallabies, banteng,
water buffalo, numerous lizards, goannas, snakes, jungle fowl, bandicoots,
possums, other rodents, bats, flying foxes, native honey bees, various birds
and the termites which build the multitude of ant mounds that the Territory is
famous for. The coastal area, beach and sand dunes attract goannas, turtles,
and crocodiles, water birds (egrets, cormorants, white-headed shelducks and
herons).
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snack time |
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red cliffs |
MrJ and I spent much of our time with Kim
walking along the long sandy beaches as well as driving through the bush.
At
the tide exposed sandy beach, which we needed to climb down a steep embankment
to get to, where the magnificent red/red cliff walled the land was hiding in a
small secret cave the tiny bats, Microbats, all huddled together against any
intruding bright light in the further most corner of the cave ceiling. So tiny
but so cute!
Australian Microbats
As in some other groups of Australian animals (e. g. marsupials), in bats the
larger species are herbivores and the smaller ones are carnivores. Microbats
are nocturnal predators and live either alone or in groups but they don’t hang
off trees. During the day they roost in caves, tree hollows, tunnels, or
abandoned mines. Microbats’ eyes are very small.
They don’t rely on eyesight
for finding their prey, instead they send out sound pulses between 5 and 200
kHz and pick them up with their large ears as they bounce back, telling the bat
the location, size and moving speed and direction of its prey. Microbats need a
lot of energy to fly and to replace the body heat that goes out through the
large wing and ear surfaces. A microbat can eat 50% of its body weight every
night. But during the winter the food is scarce and some species of microbats migrate,
others hibernate.
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bat cave |
Kim had provided cool water to quench our
thirst in the tropical heat, fresh fruit and nuts to snack on when hungry and
towels for us to sit on to prevent our sweaty bodies from sticking to the
truck/land cruiser long-wheel-based tour wagon’s seats.
The last stop was the cliff lookout over
Gunner’s Quoin which lies on the western side of Coral Bay. The shore is low
and wooded as far as the cliff which was named for its shape after the wedges
used by Nelson’s gunners to elevate cannons. Gunner’s Quoin provides a great
boaties’ landmark for Coral Bay with its variety of anchorages. Out from the
cliff there is a large fringing reef and a small sand island.
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Graham, Ian, Vicky, Kim |
Back at the resort MrJ and I thank Kim for
her our fabulous morning, her time and effort than head back to AR for our
afternoon rest to return to the resort swimming pool in the late afternoon.
This time we did not have the resort and pool all to us alone, the guest,
Fiona, had arrived and was lazing by the pool. After a polite casual introduction
MrJ and I took our swim then retired to the bar where the conversation was not
as boisterous as the previous day’s. At this time we were to meet the resort’s
manager Leith, a good looking young man in a rugged sort of way. He was in his mid to late 20’s, very proficient in
management and well equipped for handling the bush ways. All the staff had
praised Leith highly.
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Ian and MrJ in the staff room |
MrJ and I stayed for another delicious meal
with the staff. This time we were once again privileged and with Leith’s
permission, to be able to join the staff at their table out the back of the
kitchen while Fiona had the entire restaurant by herself. You helped yourself
from a spread of Vicki’s delicious mousaka, couscous, steamed cauliflower and
peas with waffles, ice-cream and chocolate sauce for desert washed down with a
couple of beers. Vicki brought us out from the kitchen a mud crab wonton each
to taste. Just melt in your mouth yummo! I was now feeling like a stuffed pig but a
very happy one!
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Terrifying, ancient, and resilient – crocodiles are among the most fascinating animals in the Northern Territory. |
|
The
Australian continent has steamy tropical rainforests in the far north, snow
capped mountains in the south, and hot dry deserts in the centre. Native bees
can be found in most of Australia’s diverse habitats. Multitudes teem through
the carpets of flowers in our heathlands and swarm around the blossoms at the
tops of gum trees. Some species burrow into the desert sands whilst others nest
inside straggly trees near isolated waterholes. |
|
The female Golden Orb Weaver is a large spider with grey body and black and
yellow banded legs. The male is much smaller and brown or reddish-brown in
colour. The female builds a large vertical web with golden threads. The spider
remains in the web all day. |
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Chad the best Chef.....! |
After diner MrJ and I said our farewells,
with trusty torch shining, waddled back down the red dirt track to the resort’s
pontoon leaving our hosts to retire to their own cabins for the night. Down at
the pontoon we came across the three young fellas off the fishing boat that was
alongside for the second night. Two were sitting casually on the dock while the
third young fella was cooking their meal on a BBQ or portable stove on the back
deck of their boat. These were not fishermen, they were collectors; the three
had a licence to collect live corals, shells and sea creates for a saleable
market. Their collecting took them far and wide to keep from over taking from
the one spot. The collectors were in this area for four days and would spend
each night in one of staff huts after sorting their day’s haul and cooking
their meal. The three young fellas prefer the comfort of the staff hut to sleeping
on the boat, so would I!
That evening MrJ and I sat in the cockpit for
a while before turning in, catching the slight breeze that funnelled through
the opening in the covers. The next day we would be moving a little closer
toward Darwin.
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