Wednesday, 1 October 2014

The Great Ocean Road (Port Fairy 1 night and Apollo Bay 2 nights)
As an aside…after leaving the Grampains, on a grey dizzly day, we passed through a town called Hamilton and spotted this sculpture (Nucleus Divides) in the middle of a roundabout…..people from Christchurch will recognise this as being very similar to the one on High Street (same sculptor) umm..
Sculpture in Hamilton
Once we got to Portland we followed the coast and stopped at Port Fairy for the night, a cute historic town with a stunning port, one of the busiest fishing ports in Victoria.  
Port Fairy
The next day we set off for Appollo Bay along the infamous Great Ocean Road.  The road is a “permanent memorial to those who died while fighting in World War I, carved in rock, it winds around the rugged southern coast. Built by returned servicemen it was a huge engineering feat ending decades of isolation for Lorne and other coastal communities”. The first section through to Appollo Bay features dramatic cliffs and rock stacks where the cliffs have eroded over time.  There are multiple lookouts along the way, it is very tiring getting in and out the car, the boys declined after the third stop.  By the time we got to the 12 Apostles it was pouring and we weren’t feeling the love but we did spot hundreds of tourists, they probably only stop at that feature and neglect the lesser known features such as the bay of Islands, the Grotto and London Bridge.
Part of the Bay of Islands group

The Grotto

London Bridge
Appollo Bay is located at the foothills of the Otway Ranges.  We had intended to stay in one of the Great Otway National Park campsites but the weather was still grim and our enthusiasm for bush camping was waning (travel fatigue had spread through the entire party).  From Appollo Bay we visited Cape Otway (the oldest lighthouse in Australia).  The road leading to the cape is where you can spot koalas, once we again we developed ‘koala neck’ looking out for the little cuties, along with all the other vehicles, I suspect they have a high accident rate along this road!  We found loads of them making Enzo very happy!  We went for a walk out at the cape and came across a red bellied wallaby – more cuteness! We then checked out the Maits Rest Rainforest Trail, a walk through ferns and tall myrtle beech (Nothofagus cunninghamii) and mountain ash (Euculyptus regnans) – beautiful!.

Sleeping Koala at Cape Otway

Red Bellied wallaby

Enzo on Maits Rest Rainforest walk

Maits Rest Walkway
The second part of the Great Ocean Road from Appollo Bay to Lorne is very scenic but pretty much like the Drive to Kaikoura.  We stopped at Torquay further up the coast for a snack and watched the surfers/paddle boarders in their hoards.  Then we arrived in Melbourne - job done!  I will post a trip epilogue shortly.
Surfer central

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