Wednesday, 24 June 2015

The Blue Mountains

The Blue Mountains

The Blue Mountains are a national park mountain range situated 31 miles west of the city of Sydney. It is an extremely rugged and wild area very close to the heart of Australia, and is a beautiful place. Characterised by sheer cliff faces, some of which are over 250m high, and vast swathes of rainforest and eucalyptus forest within the valleys, caves, gorges, waterfalls, rivers and wildlife, the Blue Mountains also contain some small towns and are fairly well populated. 

The Blue Mountains are names as such due to the blue haze that sits over the valleys as a result of UV rays being scattered by volatile terpenoids released by the eucalyptus trees in the valley rainforests. This haze hovers over the trees, making far-off objects appear blue-tinged.

We were initially taken to the Blue Mountains by Darrel and Margaret during a day trip away from Sydney at the weekend. They showed us around Leura and Katoomba, taking us around some of the shops and cafes, as well as places like Wentworth Falls and a few other lookout spots! It was a great and busy day spent seeing the major sights and eating good food, which made a nice change from our tinned travel lunches!


 The 'Three Sisters' rock formation in the background


 Mount Solitary and the famous Blue Mountain blue-haze
 Orphan Rock


 (Darrel somehow managed to take a selife and put it within the photo of us - no idea how!)

 Wentworth Falls

My favourite drinks shop and Darrel!

On our second trip to the Blue Mountains, Darrel and Margaret very kindly let us stay in their mountain home in Leura! It was a lovely little house very close to the town centre and very close to all the major sights! We took the time this time to pop down into the valley floor via trains, cable cars and sky lifts!

 This was the view through the mountainside from the world's steepest train - a 56 degree descent down sheer cliff face!

 Charlotte on the sky train
 View of Katoomba falls from above

 Exploring the valley floor, amongst the trees and wildlife
 Charlotte on a horse! The mountains have hundreds of kilometers of coal mine shafts throughout them, this was a scuplture of a miner and horse pulling coal.
 A demonstration of mining life through a shaft
 The world's steepest railway

Taronga Zoo!

Taronga Zoo


After arriving in Sydney, we visited Taronga Zoo.  Taronga Zoo sits on the far side of the harbour slightly east of the Opera House and as such has amazing views over the Sydney Harbour and the Bridge. It has over 4,000 animals of 340 different species and is a lovely walk around for a day. It's also the second zoo in Australia to successfully breed, and display, an animal that has been extremely elusive to us in Queensland as we searched for it - the platypus!

This is a Lace monitor lizard - the second largest lizard in Australia and absolutely enormous, up to 7 foot in length. We saw a few of these in the wild, notably in Noosa and Byron Bay.

The view over the harbour from the zoo


A mountain goat, making the most of an artificial mountain

A baby chimpanzee, looking directly at me.

Snoozy chimp

Giraffe


This guy is a Fennec Fox. A tiny little fox with huge ears - and extremely cute.

Meerkats

A very large Tapir

Tiger, posing as best it could!

Gorilla and baby gorilla!

The seal during the show. It's crazy how intelligent seals are.

Sun bears

Alpha-lion

Lioness came to see what we were doing! Gave us a great shot!

Baby gorilla - it was alarmingly human in the way it behaved

Aisan Elephant

Hairy-nosed Southern wombat! Wombats are our new favourite Aussie animal. They're great!

An emu. These are everywhere here. We've driven past a few and a couple have ran across the road in front of us.
The cutest little thing - I can't remember what it is though!

This is a common wombat, and they are the cutest animals in Australia, even more so than Koalas!

A very large and enormously muscular Grey Kangaroo. Over 6 foot tall, you don't want to get on the wrong side of one, or hit it with your car.

A red kangaroo. A bit smaller than the grey.

A very sleepy Tasmanian devil!