We have arrived in Glenrowan, home of the infamous Ned Kelly
of course. We were having such a good run that we just kept on trucking,
straight past Wagga, straight past Albury-Wodonga and right into Bushranger
country, Victoria. It really looks like the kind of area you picture when you
hear the stories and there is a Ned Kelly animated theatre here which we
attended. The guy has set up a number of rooms to look like the saloon, the
railway station, the hotel and the executioner’s room which were the setting
for the last great battle to capture the Kelly Gang. He has gone to so much
trouble and expense and his imagination and creative talent are superb. He has
it all rigged up with lights and robotics and sound effects and when you enter,
you become one of the people who were there at the scene. There is the gun
fight, the troopers arriving, the execution, the waiting at the station, the
burning down of the Inn and the scene inside. There are ‘rats’ running over the
bar, babies crying in prams, life size musicians playing fiddles, people
drinking and even a kid swinging from the lamp etc. So life- like and all
animated-well worth a visit as it goes for 40 minutes.
Last night we stayed at a place called Temora. It has an
aviation museum with aircraft from WW11 and the Korean and Vietnam wars. They
all fly and of course we missed a big flying day by being there three days too
soon. That is the story of our trip-too late for the cotton harvest, too late
for the mini country music festival in Tamworth, too early for the flying day
and the school band competition in Sydney etc. Not that we care, if you wanted to
be at the right spot for all those things, you’d have to plan and implement
pretty carefully and that doesn’t sound too relaxing. It was very interesting
and we had a private guide volunteer tell us all about the planes. They had
some motors on stands too so that really was a talking point. But it was
FREEZING overnight. Check out the pictures of the frost. We were not cold in
our bed but the spot was very open being at an airfield so a prime target for
cold. It wasn’t operating after dark so no worries about noise because it’s
only a recreational and specialised strip. Apart from one other van, we were
the only ones there.
Our other main stop was at Parkes where we toured the CSIRO
observatory which tracked the moon landing. They also had a 3D theatre of space
missions and planetary exploration. We will post a picture of two dishes set up
outside, similar to the dish on the telescope. They are set about 100 metres
apart and if you speak normally facing one of them, your partner at the other
dish can hear you and it’s possible to carry on a conversation. No telling what
we told each other! If it works as simply as that, it’s not surprising that
they can pick up electronically enhanced sounds from space.
THE SAGA OF THE CAMERAS
A concerned brother in law stressed that we should take a
camera with a proper lens along on our holiday because the iphone photos simply
wouldn’t be acceptable. Camera 1 was fine until the recharger and its batteries
decided they didn’t like each other anymore. Camera 2, borrowed from Leah and
brought along as back up, was fine until it too needed charging. For some
reason, even though we left it on for hours, it wouldn’t spring back to life.
Irene took it home when she went for Dad’s 90th but had no further
success. Borrow Mum E’s-Camera 3. Now we have recharging without a problem but
guess what? Nothing to transfer photos onto the computer with. So, dear ones,
iphone photos will have to do to chronicle the time until we get home and we
can get some off the proper camera. Good night.