Thursday, September 15, 2011
Taking a rest...
Bob is taking a well earned rest.
After Months on the road we are currently back in W.A. Brett's working and Meegan is getting her brain cells moving again back at Uni studying Sustainable development.
We are also spending time getting parkup.com.au up and running for when we take off again for winter 2012.
A trip up to Canarvon for the Gascoyne dash is coming up for next month and hopefully before then we find some time to update the last of our travels and add some photos of the dash.
Until then xxx
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Trying to keep up.
We are now heading home so quickly It might just be photos until we catch up on the last few weeks.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Rubbish.
Over the last 10 months we have seen some beautiful beaches, but so many of these incredible places are littered with rubbish. Cigarette buts are the number one enemy, fishing gear (bait bags, hooks, fishing, line), come pretty close. We spend hours picking up all this crap of these amazing beaches, only to come to the next one to do it all over again.
Luckily there are people out there who do care, and one such group you can help right now is Save our Marine life, an unprecedented collaboration of Australian and international conservation organisations working to protect and secure Australia’s unique marine life.
The most important thing about this group is that they are fighting to create marine sanctuaries along our coast, specifically the south west of W.A.
It won't take you very long but it could save a life so please have a look, sign up and help to make a change and keep our coastlines protected and beautiful.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Tasmania
Cockle Creek would have to be one of the most beautiful and peaceful places in the world. The whole area just radiates a sense of calm. I think it’s the tranquillity, the colours, the sounds, creates a surreal serenity. After just an hour or two you feel like you never want to leave, if it wasn’t so bloody cold you would pack up and leave this material world and venture out into the unknown never to return to the realms of Woolworths and Caltex again. It really nearly is the end of the world as we know it. Antarctica is your next stop, and let’s face it the majority of us will never set foot that far south, even in our dreams.
Saturday, March 5, 2011
A quick loop through Tassie and a short stop in South Oz.
The Woodroffe family went separate ways the day after Australia. The Woody Wards headed back to W.A, the Big brother and Little Meegan headed south towards Hobart and The Honey Mooners and the oldies came with us to explore Tassie for a week!
We did a fair bit of driving during those 6 days, first down towards Hobart and Port author, down to Bruny Island and then across to Cradle Mountain, a day stop in Launceston then back out to Daves home town Campbell Town before spending the last night BBQing with the Woodroffe Clan of Westbury. Have a look on a map and we basically ticked off most of Tasmania, well a lot of it anyway!
One thing both off us have always wanted to do but never had the chance was Canyoning. Canyoning is very straight forward- first of all your kitted up in a 5mm wetsuit, gloves, booties, helmet and a specialised harness. Once your kit is ready you throw yourself off the edge of a cliff and abseil 30m into a freezing cold Tasmanian river in the middle of a canyon. After you enter the numbing abyss, the only way out is at the end of the canyon: everything in between is canyoning.
Initially you wade, swim, and in some peoples cases waddle down the river, you then reach a ledge with a 6m drop into the river there’s only one way forward and that is to throw yourself off the edge. Luckily for us our 2 guides had only just started there canyoning business, therefore they were very casual about the whole approach. So back flips, front flips, corkscrew flips, off the wall jumps and any other imaginative way you could launch yourself off the edge was encouraged.
Initially the group was a little cautious about flipping of a waterfall into a 2m wide pool which was 6m below. But with a bit of encouragement and some demonstrations from our guide Timmy, most of us were happy to attempt a flip or two by the end.
One of the highlights of the canyoning was the laundry shoot. To begin, you wedge yourself into a tight nook at the start of a narrow tunnel (or shoot). Slowly you nudge yourself forwards, once the water pressure behind you builds up behind you, your squeezed through the shoot at a fairly rapid rate until the shoot suddenly ends and your shot off a 3m high waterfall into the pool below. It may not sound like much but its pretty sweet.
At the end of the canyoning adventure a 1hr long hike is in order back to the car park, which isn’t too bad as you are hiking thru beautiful rainforest. The problem with the hike back is removing the legion of leaches which have been sucking away at various and very interesting parts of the body.
Photos and video coming shortly.....
At the end of our quick peak at Tassie with Leesh and Ric and the parentals, everyone left. Everyone but Brett. He was left in Tassie all by himself for a few days to surf, enjoy some rain and then jump on a plan to Melbourne to stay at the dodgiest hostel in Oz. Getting a little bit ahead of our selves let us take you back a few days.
February and March were our months of catching up with our WA friends and family on the other side of the country! We basically put Tassie on hold for a few weeks, leaving bob in the very capable hands of Mr and Mrs Scott and Maggie Woodroffe of Westbury, we crossed the Tasman in Tiger Airways style to head over to Melbourne and South Australia for some quality time with some of our favourite people.
First Stop was an all girls Weekend in Melbourne. Brett obviously wasn’t invited so Meegan enjoyed a few beverages, endless hours of playing shopping assistant, a Scary evening of Cabaret and a special Birthday Surprise of The Musical Mary Poppins.
The weekends climax would certainly have to be running through the flooded streets of Melbourne in black plastic Garbage bags to try and catch the start of Mary Poppins. It was all Farmers fault by the way.
Brett and Meegan (that’s us by the way, I know this blog is written from a very strange point of view but that’s just the way it is so if your not used to it by now then bad luck), finally met up in Melbourne. Brett booked the worlds worst hostel, the tiniest room you could fit a bed into as well as vomit, no exits, bodily hairs all over the bathrooms not to mention what else could be founds in the female toilets. Meegan was in the building for less than 2 minutes when she exclaimed “what would happen if there was a fire” I mean that generally isn’t the first thing that pops into your mind when entering a building which goes to show how dodgy this place was.
From Melbourne we boarded a plane to Adelaide to meet up again with Sue and Dave to spend a few lazy days floating down the Murray River on a Houseboat.
We had a little, major leak from the transfer case! All fixed!
We did a fair bit of driving during those 6 days, first down towards Hobart and Port author, down to Bruny Island and then across to Cradle Mountain, a day stop in Launceston then back out to Daves home town Campbell Town before spending the last night BBQing with the Woodroffe Clan of Westbury. Have a look on a map and we basically ticked off most of Tasmania, well a lot of it anyway!
One thing both off us have always wanted to do but never had the chance was Canyoning. Canyoning is very straight forward- first of all your kitted up in a 5mm wetsuit, gloves, booties, helmet and a specialised harness. Once your kit is ready you throw yourself off the edge of a cliff and abseil 30m into a freezing cold Tasmanian river in the middle of a canyon. After you enter the numbing abyss, the only way out is at the end of the canyon: everything in between is canyoning.
Initially you wade, swim, and in some peoples cases waddle down the river, you then reach a ledge with a 6m drop into the river there’s only one way forward and that is to throw yourself off the edge. Luckily for us our 2 guides had only just started there canyoning business, therefore they were very casual about the whole approach. So back flips, front flips, corkscrew flips, off the wall jumps and any other imaginative way you could launch yourself off the edge was encouraged.
Initially the group was a little cautious about flipping of a waterfall into a 2m wide pool which was 6m below. But with a bit of encouragement and some demonstrations from our guide Timmy, most of us were happy to attempt a flip or two by the end.
One of the highlights of the canyoning was the laundry shoot. To begin, you wedge yourself into a tight nook at the start of a narrow tunnel (or shoot). Slowly you nudge yourself forwards, once the water pressure behind you builds up behind you, your squeezed through the shoot at a fairly rapid rate until the shoot suddenly ends and your shot off a 3m high waterfall into the pool below. It may not sound like much but its pretty sweet.
At the end of the canyoning adventure a 1hr long hike is in order back to the car park, which isn’t too bad as you are hiking thru beautiful rainforest. The problem with the hike back is removing the legion of leaches which have been sucking away at various and very interesting parts of the body.
Photos and video coming shortly.....
At the end of our quick peak at Tassie with Leesh and Ric and the parentals, everyone left. Everyone but Brett. He was left in Tassie all by himself for a few days to surf, enjoy some rain and then jump on a plan to Melbourne to stay at the dodgiest hostel in Oz. Getting a little bit ahead of our selves let us take you back a few days.
February and March were our months of catching up with our WA friends and family on the other side of the country! We basically put Tassie on hold for a few weeks, leaving bob in the very capable hands of Mr and Mrs Scott and Maggie Woodroffe of Westbury, we crossed the Tasman in Tiger Airways style to head over to Melbourne and South Australia for some quality time with some of our favourite people.
First Stop was an all girls Weekend in Melbourne. Brett obviously wasn’t invited so Meegan enjoyed a few beverages, endless hours of playing shopping assistant, a Scary evening of Cabaret and a special Birthday Surprise of The Musical Mary Poppins.
The weekends climax would certainly have to be running through the flooded streets of Melbourne in black plastic Garbage bags to try and catch the start of Mary Poppins. It was all Farmers fault by the way.
Brett and Meegan (that’s us by the way, I know this blog is written from a very strange point of view but that’s just the way it is so if your not used to it by now then bad luck), finally met up in Melbourne. Brett booked the worlds worst hostel, the tiniest room you could fit a bed into as well as vomit, no exits, bodily hairs all over the bathrooms not to mention what else could be founds in the female toilets. Meegan was in the building for less than 2 minutes when she exclaimed “what would happen if there was a fire” I mean that generally isn’t the first thing that pops into your mind when entering a building which goes to show how dodgy this place was.
From Melbourne we boarded a plane to Adelaide to meet up again with Sue and Dave to spend a few lazy days floating down the Murray River on a Houseboat.
We had a little, major leak from the transfer case! All fixed!
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
A well awaited update....
WOW we are back! After a month back on the road we have become very slack with keeping the Trailing Bob Saaga up to date! We are spending a few lazy days now floating down the Murray River in South Australia so we now have no excuse but to catch up on the last few months!(well the murray was a couple of weeks ago which proves just how slack we really are)!
We’ll take you back to the beginning of the year…….Brett and Meegan are again back to bob and hitting the road after spending Christmas back in Perth, our bellies are full, our livers have been overworked and we have at long last found some sunshine!
We flew into Sydney on the 3rd January, stopped back at the Kemps to catch some shut eye after the midnight horror flight from Perth. After a few hours snoozing, we were on the train back into the big smoke to catch up with the Kemps for the night on their Boat in the darling harbour. The weather for the first week was pretty average so we decided to stay put and spent a few days chilling out at the Kemps place while the rain poured down around us.
Bob was starting to get a bit restless and Tasmania was calling, after a couple of days chilling out on the couch we packed up and headed for the Blue Mountains. It took about 3 days to cruise through the hills and valleys, checking out markets, taking in plenty of amazing views on some very impressive hikes and of course the Jenolan Caves. The caves themselves were worth the drive up there, however we didn’t quite have time to check out the 15 show cave tours they had going, let alone the 5 or 6 adventure tours. Luckily our cave crawling days saved us a few dollars with a friendly guide taking us though free of charge.
It was time to catch the up with the new and very well respected DR JAN in the nations capital! We were both actually pleasantly surprised with Canberra, after hearing many dud tales of the city. The war Museum is amazing and defiantly worth a few days of anyone’s time. Jan took us to the Tuesday night hotspot where we downed a few brews and munched though the gastronomic delights of some yummy Pizza.
Heading south from Canberra, we stopped in Jindabyne for Meegan's Birthday and rustled up some info about the coming snow season, jobs, accommodation and the like. Just in case we decide to head back there in a few months time. It was a little late in the day to climb the infamous Mt Kosciusko so we settled for a Birthday horse ride through the snowy mountains. There was no snow and the ride was a little bit slow but the views were breathtaking and the horses very friendly.
Mt Kosciusko ended up being a very expensive climb. We ascended the mountain through some patches of very heavy rain by the time we were half way up we were soaked through and very chilly, the patches of snow dotted along the way give you an idea of how cold it gets up there in the middle of summer. After taking some happy snaps from the top of Aus the decent was in order. On the way down the rain was not letting up so we put the cameras in the backpack with the waterproof cover over it.
When we got back to the car and started unpacking everything Meegan made the gruesome discovery of a much waterlogged, foggy, dead looking Nikon SLR camera.
All efforts were made to try and save our special little friend who had managed to capture a lot of our memories with amazing detail. Unfortunately the water had run its course and the damage was done, with the loss of a very important piece of equipment for the trip and our blog. Enthusiasm for writing the blog disappeared, without any pictures interest and passion just wasn’t there anymore.
But we have some new inspiration now courtesy of Helen and Scott. You see when Meegan received her camera for her birthday (thanks everyone we will be replacing it soon) it was under the condition that Scott and Helen would be able to take it on the 6 month trip around Aus. So when our camera packed it in; a brand new shit hot Sony SLR found its way into our hot little hands. And the results of this tidy piece of equipment speak for themselves.
After we left Kosciusko national park we made our way down into Victoria, which was very uneventful you just head past a sign, no armed guns no border checks no barking dogs just a sign. Unfortunately our first few days in Victoria proved to be just as uneventful as it absolutely pissed down with rain no stop for 3 days. At least all the dams are now full.
On the day when the sun finally came out we couldn’t really make much use of it as we had to wait for 3 hrs while all our stuff dried out. As we made our way through the Victorian highlands we tuned into the local radio as there was mass flooding across the state at the time and many roads were badly damaged. Unfortunately that meant we took a shortcut through some very narrow mountain tracks, in some areas that were badly washed out and it probably added at least 5hrs to our drive. Poor Bob doesn’t like hills, however he did manage to plough to the top of a fair few summits during those few days.
When we arrived on the Victorian coast it was still school holidays and every campsite was loaded like a refugee camp. To dodge the crowds we quickly located Dave on the Mornington peninsula and made a beeline for where he was staying with his cousin. Arriving at a campsite with hot showers right on the beach with some amazing views was pretty awesome and very much appreciated after our treck to Victoria!
Spending 2 nights at the camp we cruised around the Mornington peninsula checking all the overpriced tourist sights which were exclusive to the area, much the same as every other tourist area around Aus. The summer sun had still failed to shine and the surf was still very, very average therefore the beaches were a bit of a swing and miss. The natural sights in the area turned out to be more up our alley so we spent the days dawdling around lookouts and hovering around blowholes.
With Tasmania calling we made our way into Melbourne town to get bob loaded onto the massive ferry to Tassie. Having a bit of time on our hands we cruised around Melbourne and Brett dragged Meegan around another botanic garden. While we were there we came to understand what the fuss with Melbourne is all about, Brett came up with this conclusion; apparently every suburb is bohemian and alternative so what makes something crap in another city suddenly becomes chic and uber cool in Melbourne.
The ferry ride over to Tassie was pretty uneventful with the only thing coming to mind was if you fell of the boat at night there is no way you would be found again.
After arriving in Tassie and regrouping and welcoming new members of Brett’s family to our touring posse, we ventured south east towards Coles bay. This was to be our home for the next week along with all the Woody’s. Luckily we had a nice beach house with killer views and plenty of room for 10 adults and 5 kids.
Luckily most of the week fine weather prevailed with only a couple days of slight drizzle. Our time over the week was spent- walking up to the lookout over wineglass bay, fishing on Woodduck with uncle Scott, Hiking up Mt Amos, sampling some fine produce at the local wineries and berry farms (we didn’t purchase anything we left that to Brett’s cashed up brothers). A few surfs were had nothing amazing but some fun waves were scored, Ric and Brett even managed to throw the kite up one day but unfortunately the wind died when the were less than 10 minutes into it. Australia day was spent down the beach with the family playing beach games and other family things.
Of course we also shared a few customary Aussie day beverages, we quickly realised there was a shortage of alcohol so we took a quick trip across the bay into town to stock up. When we rocked up the chick behind the bar told us we weren’t allowed in without anything on our feet. So we scoured the car looking for something cover our toes. The only thing we could come up with were reef booties so we donned them headed back into the tavern and made our purchase. The look on Alicia’s face made the day, she didn’t stop laughing for most of the ride home.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Friday, October 22, 2010
Driving South.
It’s Friday night and we are down at the beach, its 7’oclock, the sky is slowly getting darker and we are trying to figure out when it will be safe to pop the top on Bob, a pretty common conversation for us at this time of night. I guess we figure as long as we haven’t popped the top of the camper we are not necessarily camping; and therefore can not really be fined the $300 per person penalty, which we are subjected to along most of the coast over here. The other night we found a pretty nice spot next to the railway track up in the hills behind Coffs Harbour. The noise of the trains coming past every few hours of the night was slightly unnerving to wake up to as it sounded as if the train was coming closer and closer to the car, ready to smash us into a thousand tiny pieces. After the first few we were a little more used to it, and once our heads hit the pillows we didn’t awake again until morning. What we didn’t realise was…. it was a train line for passenger trains, so I’m sure the workers heading into town for a hard days work were a little surprised to see a campervan parked up on route into the big smoke.
The last few weeks we have spent slowly driving down from the gold coast passing through the coastal towns of far north NWS. Yamba deserves a mention, a small town with beautiful beaches, Brett managed to sneak in a few surfs, the swell has been pretty miniscule and the rain is still hanging around but when you haven’t been working for the last 5 months, spending most of your life outside, eating awesome food, doing want you want when you want to, well, we can’t really complain to much!
Rainforest in Dorrigo National Park.
Last week we took a road trip, the weather forecast wasn’t looking amazing and decent waves were defiantly not looking promising so we decided to take a holiday from our holiday and we headed 500k inland to outback NSW. From Grafton we passed through a few smaller towns to hit the big smoke and hot artisan spa baths of Moree! Checking the weather over here at the moment doesn’t really do you many favours, its generally isn’t right and if it is it is only when it has forecasted rain and you would rather it be wrong anyway. The weather is all over the place it can’t make up its mind so you just take the days as they come and enjoy the sunshine when its shining down on you. We figured the hot springs of out back NSW would be hot, relaxing and something a little different rain hail or shine so that’s where our Road trip took us out west to the red dirt and cattle country of Moree, Burren junction and eventually back around to the Country Music Capital of Australia Tamworth!
The golden Guitar In Country Music Captital Tamworth.
Moree town itself wasn’t too much to write home about so I won’t waste your time. Luckily we had booked ourselves into the local caravan park which had a licence for 5 hot baths which draw water from about 900meter underground and its come out at a nice 40 degrees! So we spent most of the day and next morning kicking back with the oldies and drowning ourselves in the hot spas. We then trekked 200k to our next hot bath, a real one then time with no added chorine it was a little cooler about 35, and a fair bit dirtier but after a few dips we were cleaned than we had been the entire trip.
The road trip went pretty well, Meegan had a nice stack in one of the national parks, tripping on a rock and slicing up her hand on a glass bottle; luckily all the goodness of the hot springs cleaned it up pretty well.
Moral of the story: Do night walk on rocks with glass bottles!
T for Tom.
To finish off the Road trip we checked out a few national parks as we made out way back towards the coast and came into Coffs harbour on Thursday morning to stock up the fridge at the local Farmers market it town .It was nice to get back out into the bush again; the coast is so populated over here compared to back at home. Travelling around is awesome, seeing different things everyday, but its even better when you can’t find anything that comes close to what you have, back where the trip started in the beautiful southwest of WA.
Keeping the flys off during a road side lunch stop near Tamworth.
Brett taking a dip.
This Boat hit the reef the night before we arrived in Brooms Head follwo the link for the full story http://www.dailyexaminer.com.au/story/2010/10/19/cruiser-beached-at-the-broom/.
Leaving queensland and heading officially into NSW
We managed to get Bob bogged just north of Broom head lucky there were some old blokes around dieing to pull us out!
Brett had a little fight with some Rocks near Yamba
The last few weeks we have spent slowly driving down from the gold coast passing through the coastal towns of far north NWS. Yamba deserves a mention, a small town with beautiful beaches, Brett managed to sneak in a few surfs, the swell has been pretty miniscule and the rain is still hanging around but when you haven’t been working for the last 5 months, spending most of your life outside, eating awesome food, doing want you want when you want to, well, we can’t really complain to much!
Rainforest in Dorrigo National Park.
Last week we took a road trip, the weather forecast wasn’t looking amazing and decent waves were defiantly not looking promising so we decided to take a holiday from our holiday and we headed 500k inland to outback NSW. From Grafton we passed through a few smaller towns to hit the big smoke and hot artisan spa baths of Moree! Checking the weather over here at the moment doesn’t really do you many favours, its generally isn’t right and if it is it is only when it has forecasted rain and you would rather it be wrong anyway. The weather is all over the place it can’t make up its mind so you just take the days as they come and enjoy the sunshine when its shining down on you. We figured the hot springs of out back NSW would be hot, relaxing and something a little different rain hail or shine so that’s where our Road trip took us out west to the red dirt and cattle country of Moree, Burren junction and eventually back around to the Country Music Capital of Australia Tamworth!
The golden Guitar In Country Music Captital Tamworth.
Moree town itself wasn’t too much to write home about so I won’t waste your time. Luckily we had booked ourselves into the local caravan park which had a licence for 5 hot baths which draw water from about 900meter underground and its come out at a nice 40 degrees! So we spent most of the day and next morning kicking back with the oldies and drowning ourselves in the hot spas. We then trekked 200k to our next hot bath, a real one then time with no added chorine it was a little cooler about 35, and a fair bit dirtier but after a few dips we were cleaned than we had been the entire trip.
The road trip went pretty well, Meegan had a nice stack in one of the national parks, tripping on a rock and slicing up her hand on a glass bottle; luckily all the goodness of the hot springs cleaned it up pretty well.
Moral of the story: Do night walk on rocks with glass bottles!
T for Tom.
To finish off the Road trip we checked out a few national parks as we made out way back towards the coast and came into Coffs harbour on Thursday morning to stock up the fridge at the local Farmers market it town .It was nice to get back out into the bush again; the coast is so populated over here compared to back at home. Travelling around is awesome, seeing different things everyday, but its even better when you can’t find anything that comes close to what you have, back where the trip started in the beautiful southwest of WA.
Keeping the flys off during a road side lunch stop near Tamworth.
Brett taking a dip.
This Boat hit the reef the night before we arrived in Brooms Head follwo the link for the full story http://www.dailyexaminer.com.au/story/2010/10/19/cruiser-beached-at-the-broom/.
Leaving queensland and heading officially into NSW
We managed to get Bob bogged just north of Broom head lucky there were some old blokes around dieing to pull us out!
Brett had a little fight with some Rocks near Yamba
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Schools Back.
Brett trying out some romancing!
We have been having a few problems with the broadband stick, so heres and update from earlier in the month!
7th October 2010
School holidays finally end tomorrow! I guess the weekend still counts but we will be in Toowoomba busting moves at Powder Finger so it doesn’t really count.
We have spent the last two nights in NSW and the days surfing in Queensland. Lucky enough, on Tuesday morning Meegan had an encounter with a fella by the name of phil, who gave us some directions to a brilliant little camping spot just inside the NSW border. Coincidently, a few weeks ago we posted an advertisment on Gumtree asking the general public from Noosa down to Byron if we can park up out the front of their houses. The only response we did receive was on from Phil from Brisbane. He lived in an apartment so couldn’t put us up however he did provide us with some advice of where to stay where not to stay. This same Phil jut happened to bump into Meegan as she stopped back at the car to change some headphones that were not working whilst a run. They had a chat and after 20mins he realised he was the one who responded to us a few weeks ago. Of all the surf spots on the gold coast, of all the times in the day, the one off chance Phil drove down from Brisbane for the day for a surf, and there we were parked up in the car park! Small world!
We managed to fit in a surf early most mornings before the crowds became too crazy, the sun was out most days with a little bit of rain here and there.
The first week of no school holidays has come and gone. This week we didn’t manage to do much surfing but we did see Powderfinger in Toowoomba, met up with Borello in Surfers, went to Dream World 3 times and spent too much time in the rain. This October is the wettest October they have EVER had in Queensland, and it was named so, only 10 days into the month! At least Bob is looking pretty clean!
Powder finger in Toowoomba last Saturday night was awesome! The rain cleared up for a few hours for the show the finger played to perfection, the over cast night meant nice comfortable warm weather. The crowd was a little dismal but by half way through we had found a good little group who were happy to jump around and go crazy with us so it up being a really good night!
Raw Carrot cake before we hit dream world for the 10oth time!
The reason we visited Dream world 3 times was because the first time was school holidays so it was very busy, the second time was a little chilly, too chilly to attempt White Water world next door, so the third time was nice and warm and we didn’t have to line up for an hour just to get on a slide! The rides were pretty good, the food was crap and the lines were too long but we still had a great time and our stomaches managed to do a few flips on “The Giant Drop and “The tunnel of Terror”. We spent the last half hour on the flowrider. Brett was pretty good and Meegan basically just enjoyed falling off and being thrown back up to the topof the wave again!
So we have finally, officially left Queensland and are now on our way down to Sydney to fly home for 2 weddings, hens nights, bucks nights, leavers, a few birthdays and of course Christmas!
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