Saturday, April 27, 2013

A swamp wallaby PS to my post below

Shane and I were enjoying the view from the back verandah this morning around 8.30 and I was chatting to him about my early morning walk when a swamp wallaby hopped into our direct view, into the boys' paddock.  Here I was reflecting on how infrequently we get to see this beautiful species of wallaby when one appears right in front of me!  So, from what I can recall this morning's sighting brings the total of swamp wallaby sightings here at Maryvillle to five.  So a rare treat, indeed.

An early morning walk along Martins Road

And an apology, dear reader. I should have taken my camera so that you could enjoy some of the sublime beauty that I enjoyed this morning. I promise I won't be so silly next time and I'll post some photos soon, once I've done the walk again.
I tend to wake up early these days and so this morning the great idea occurred to me that I should get up and go for a walk along Martins Road (Martins Road is the road that leads to the Billen Cliffs community). Steve is currently in Newcastle, so there was no early morning cuddling to keep me in bed. It was a perfect morning of what looks to be a perfect day. So there I was at 6.20am walking down McGuinness Road on my way to Martins Road, pausing for a minute or so as a young red necked wallaby remained in the middle of the road, allowing me to approach to within a metre and a half before roo-crawling off to enjoy some of the lush grass growing along its edge.
The air was cool, but not cold, and the calls of magpie, kookaburra and lorikeets accompanied me as I strolled along the tree-lined Martins Road. Drops of water hung on strands of fencing wire and the steamy mist rising from the paddocks created a golden glow as the sun back-lit it. A small flock of white-headed pigeon flew out from a tree, not because they were disturbed by my presence, (I don't think), but more likely because they were just getting on with their day.
Another red necked wallaby hopped slowly out of my way, still with a long stem of grass in its mouth, and I mused over the macropods that live in this area. As you would know, the red necks are by the far the most common here, but we also have swamp wallabies, which are much shyer, tend to live by themselves and not anywhere near so abundant. Another twenty minutes or so north of us you can find red necked pademelons and I've seen a dead grey kangaroo just on the outskirts of Kyogle. And I know there are pretty faced wallabies (an absolutely gorgeous wallaby) about two hours away in Lammington National Park.
Anyway, I kept walking as far as the entry to Billen Cliffs community ("where children and animals have right of way" as their welcome sign proclaimed, proudly) and thn  turned around and headed back home. The air was warmer, the sun higher in the sky and the greens and blues more vivid as I strolled back to Maryville, admiring the boys as they grazed our hill paddock. I need to do this more often. (And take my camera).

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Five Years in the Northern Rivers


Today is the 5th anniversary of my moving to the Northern Rivers.

Steve and I drove up with our Suzuki Vitara packed full of essentials (including my four Gillen's pygmy monitors, two pilbara smooth knob tailed geckos and Kimba, the woma python) on a fairly wet, cool, day, arriving at my friend and colleague, Mieke's place around 8pm (after picking up a badly needed unwooded chardonnay at a rowdy bottle shop in Ballina).
Time has flown!
I spent today enjoying the gorgeous weather. I took it easy and slow. I landscaped my remaining lizard enclosure. I swung in the hammock stretched out under one of the mango trees. I took time to enjoy the fact that I am alive and I live at a beautiful place. And for a huge number of reasons, I am just really fortunate.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

My 'blotchies' settle into their new home

 I liberated my two alpine blotched blue tongues into their new enclosure on Saturday and they spent much of the day (which was gloriously sunny and warm) investigating their new home, slithering under the log, nosing their way through the leaf mulch and entering their special water-proof hide-aways that I had made from plastic cake boxes and buried under the ground. Alpine blue tongues are brightly coloured pink, red and yellow and the colour of these guys is much brighter in real life than the photo suggests.
 Anyway, it was wonderful to see them in their bushy habitat home, although I suspect they won't often be out once the days turn a little cooler. It will be lovely to see them again in spring, however.
I finished landscaping the second of my three lizard enclosures on Saturday, once more to go.  I was very happy with how this one turned out. Not sure what I shall keep in it, though yet...maybe land mullet, maybe major skinks, maybe another type of blue tongue.

Currumbin EcoVillage field trip with my masters students

  I took the students studying the masters subject I teach, Environmental Management for Tourism and Hospitality, to Currumbin Eco Village last Friday. A perfect day in all ways. The village is a strata title development in the beautiful Currumbin Valley, about seven minutes west of Currumbin Beach. To build here you need to have your plans approved by the Community - these will need to conform to their sustainability code. Each of the dwellings in the village harvests its own water, so the entire development is independent of town water.  Oh and the guy with the dark hair and his back to us is Jerry - who was accompanying one of my students. But I coincidentally taught Jerry back at Uni of Newcastle about ten years ago...he didn't realise who the lecturer was taking the fieldtrip until he arrived.  Jerry now lives in Ewingsdale which is adjacent to Byron Bay.
 Lots of really interesting homes are at the eco village, including several like this one being built, made of straw bales. I'd love to see if we could construct some kind of structure from straw bales.
 Most homes have a lush, productive vege garden, chooks, and of course water tanks. I think all homes also must have some level of solar energy capacity as well.
 Another view of some of the homes. There are 144 lots to be sold all up in the village, I think there are about a third of those already sold and have dwellings on them. Even though the village is an intentional community and has fairly solid eco-credentials, it's quite mainstream - which is part of it's appeal for me. It demonstrates how you can live much more sustainably without departing too much from the way most people would still choose to live.
Sharing the ecovillage is a fairly large mob of eastern greys which have the run of the village (or should that be 'hop'). They rest under trampolines or the shade of a verandah, they graze in people's back yards...it's all very cool. I'm pretty amazed though that there haven't been any nasty conflicts between the big bucks and young kids. Anyway, this was my second visit and I left feeling just as inspired as my first trip. I think my students felt the same, too.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

The Lizard Palace

 This is a bit of a dream come true. Not since my oh-so-tolerant parents allowed me to have a couple of fibro pits (yes I do have some concerns about spending much of my youth breathing in the asbestos fibres of my lizard pits, but a GP told me once that the asbestos used in the sheeting was not so troublesome, so I like to believe that) in which I kept blue tongues, land mullet, bearded dragons and freshwater turtles, have I had outdoor lizard enclosures. But with the forebearance of an amazing partner, Stevie, and the skill of Shane (not forgetting the involvement of Kevin and Antonin and Claire), I now have an almost complete set of three lizard enclosures that together make up my Lizard Palace.
 Shane was able to re-use the steel piping that we pulled out of the area that has now become the middle deck, and use it to create a frame onto which he and Claire riveted some lovely spanking new corrugated iron.
 Claire and Shane (and Bluey) proudly standing in front of their masterpiece. We still have to make it predator proof by attaching bird wire to it, but hopefully that should be done by the end of the week (it's off to Bunnings I go tomorrow after work).
And Claire and I did some landscaping this afternoon and created the first habitat - for my pair of blotched blue tongues which will be liberated into here once we have completed predator proofing it. I hope to get some other species of blue tongues (I already have my western blue tongue babies but they are too small to put in one of these enclosures just yet).

Friday, April 12, 2013

Brush turkey baby investigates Larnook


                                                      source of image: ozanimals.com
As I was turning into the driveway a few weeks ago I noticed a small brown bird scuttle into the rainforest garden at our entry. It was too short and plump for a buff banded rail and so I wondered whether it might have been a baby brush turkey. But I had more important things to think about like what were we having for dinner and should I wait until 6pm before I open that bottle of chardonnay, and so promptly forgot all about it. That was until a few days later when the bubba bird was seen again scratching around the front garden at the entry to the house. This time it stayed much longer in view and I could definitely identify it as a baby brush turkey. Now I had mixed feelings about this. I was kinda stoked that this little baby had found its way here and was now part of the fauna, but did we really want a brush turkey setting up camp here, as they can be very destructive to gardens when they rake together huge mounds of vegetation and mulch. But such activity would be a year or two off I would think, and anything could happen in the meantime. Which, it appears, it has. We made quite a few sightings of the little bird over a period of about a week, but alas, it hasn't been seen now for a few weeks. This means it may have wandered away or it has ended up in the gut of some predator, such as one of our carpet pythons. It wouldn't have made much of an impression in the pythons we have seen lately around the place, and remember, we have snakes here that eat adult chooks. Let's hope that the little fella is scratching happily somewhere else in Larnook.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Kev and Antonin

 This is Antonin enjoying the magnolia we bought him to plant at Larnook as a bit of a reverse souvenir of the guys' stay with us. The variety is called Coco and that is what we called Antonin from time to time while he stayed with us (it's a long story)...anyway when we saw this tree we knew we had to buy it for our own Coco.
 Kimba still proves to be a hit with our Helpers. I think this was the first time that Antonin had held a snake and initially he was a little apprehensive, but he was soon charmed by our gorgeous Kimba the woma python.
 Kev was a little more relaxed as he had met Kimba on the first day that he and Antonin arrived at Larnook.
So after just over three weeks with us, the boys washed and cleaned their van and headed off the next morning to Byron for a couple of days before heading northwards, hoping to get up as far as Cairns in the six months they have left in Australia. Adieu, boys.

This and that


 Kev and Antonin fitted in very well at Larnook and were a delight to have staying with us. They worked hard, they laughed a lot and they even surprised us a few times by making dinner when we weren't expecting them to. HelpX is an excellent means by which people like us can open up our place and our lives and share what we have here with young travellers from all over the world. I really enjoy the fact that it is based on reciprocal exchange - we provide the accommodation and meals and the Helpers provide in exchange, their skills and capacity for work. We've hosted close to 40 Helpers now, with I would think about 60% at least from France, as were Kev and Antonin, from Marseilles and Cannes.
 Last weekend brought another visitor, Russell, from London. We met Russell a couple of times when we were in Sydney just before the end of the year (he's a friend and colleague of a friend/colleague of mine, Gordon, who is a professor in geography at University of Wollongong. Russell is also a geographer who works in the area of sustainability and interior climates. I had invited Russell up to Larnook last weekend and so he flew up last Friday to the Gold Coast where he gave a guest lecture to my masters students on his research. We overnighted in Coolangatta and then we were met by Shane who drove up to get us and return us to Larnook. Russell enjoyed himself and on Sunday we meandered around the Lismore car boot markets where we bought plants for Kev and Antonin, Russell and also Claire, who is another (French of course) Helper who arrived last Wednesday, to plant in our garden.  So Russell is looking very proud of himself after planting a ruby ginger.
 The weekend before last Shane and Steve spotted this lovely carpet python in our shed so I invited it to slide around my neck and shoulders to give the guys a closer look.
 One of the excellent projects that the boys (though much of the initial lantana clearing was the work of Kevin) completed was installing this bench seat on the side of our hill as you head down to the creek. Kevin had spent quite a few days removing the lantana from this area (and almost fell off the side of the slope in the process - he would have fallen completely off, had a pile of lantana that he had already cut not slowed him down. He ripped his pants open on some barbed wire in the process so he was very lucky not to be hurt). Anyway once the lantana had been removed it opened up a lovely view down over the creek so I suggested to the guys they dig out a platform, line it with pavers and place one of our bench seats on it. So once this had all been achieved last Sunday we had an official seat inauguration ceremony complete with ribbon cutting and sparkling wine drinking. So Antonin and Kev cut the ribbon while Claire, Russell, Shane and Steve look on.
Another view of the seat looking down towards the creek. I will enjoy sitting here reading and taking in the lovely view.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Easter at Larnook


 Easter at Larnook is a time of year that Steve and I eagerly look forward to. The weather is usually lovely and mild, the four day holiday means that you can really start to relax, and, we get to share it with good friends. This year was no different. Our friends, Graeme and Simeon arrived on Thursday in their kombi, from the Central Coast, bearing a huge wicker basket filled with all kind of delectable goodies, which we still haven't finished enjoying. Warwick arrived on Friday afternoon and soon slid into the spa with a glass of champagne. We had a fun night but then Warwick had to drive to the Gold Coast airport for his flight home to Melborne the next morning.
 Leaving Steve to have the house to himself and get on with making costumes for Metropolitan Players (Newcastle) production of Phantom of the Opera, I took Simeon and Graeme along with Kev and Antonin to one of our favourite places, Bald Rock, just north of Tenterfield. It is a bit of a hike, and three hours there and back didn't really suit (French) Kev's tummy, as he gets car sick, but the Rock itself is worth it. The walk to the rock takes about 40 minutes and it's a delightful stroll through eucalypt forest strewn with huge boulders of granite.
 Once on the rock itself the sense of scale becomes apparent and we spent a good hour or so clambering over it, having lunch, and watching colonies of Cunningham's Skinks, bask in the sunshine. The day was mostly cloudy so the view wasn't as spectacular as when we visited last August with our friend, Ryan, but the softer light revealed the colours of the rock much more readily.
 Two Kevs on a Rock
 Easter Sunday was lots of fun - and we had a full house, with the arrival of Glen and Vaughan for lunch. Lots of champagne drinking (thanks Antonin for the champagne cocktail), great food, followed by an easter egg hunt inside the house and a game of bocce outside in the gentle rain. One of the intense pleasures for Steve and I is to welcome so many old and new friends into our place at Larnook and enjoy the great times that are created. Oh and we had a game of hide and go seek on the Friday night (inside the house) which was a hoot, as well.
Kev and Antonin having a friendly hit on Graeme and Sim's totem tennis they brought up with them, in the late afternoon Larnook light.