Sunday, 13 April 2025

The Great Ocean Road

We're including everything from Portland to Geelong in this The Great Ocean Road update.



Portland
We hit the coast at Portland, a fairly large town south of Coleraine.

Near the port was a "Rocket Shed."
Intrigued, we learnt that lines were attached to rockets which were fired to ships in distress. 


Trucks are tipped up to a 60 degree angle to have their wood chips, bound for Japan to be made into paper, unloaded. Super efficient operation

Pine wood chips.
There was also darker stuff; plantation planted blue gum.

A really beautiful botanical gardens.



The Portland Tram is too central to the town to not do it :) 


We drove to Warnambool for the day. Was a little blowy!

Port Fairy is a pretty little town, full of BnB accommodation.
Unfortunately, a fuel spill or similar was clearly evident the day we were here.

Muttonbirds, hunted and eaten in Tasmania, are called Shearwaters here in Victoria and are protected. They nest in the vegetation. 


It's an incredible trek undertaken each year.



Koroit
Near Warnambool, Koroit is known as the Irish town, and given we were here over St Patrick's day, it seemed appropriate place to pull up.

The volcanic rock is evident in all the historic buildings in this corner of Victoria. 



Port Campbell
Port Campbell is right in the thick of the action regarding the iconic GOR images.
I don't know where Victoria is advertising, but whatever they are doing, it's working. 
This is probably the busiest place we've been to in the past 11 months.
Lots of Asian tourists, possibly doing long day tours from Melbourne.



Pretty rugged wharf at Port Campbell!





There's still one place you can walk on the beach, just near the 12 Apostles.
In the past there were more, but I think they are trying to reduce the footprint for the little penguin colonies along this stretch of the coast.


Nice walks here in the Otways.


Camperdown town




Apollo Bay
We stayed at Marengo, a kilometre or two shy of Apollo Bay.
A new record for accommodation this trip. There's no free camping anywhere on the coast, and we didn't want to stay an hour inland, so we sucked it up and paid $87 per night for two nights in a powered site in a caravan park. $87 per night!!
Thank goodness the caravan park was right on the beach, a really nice spot.



While here we drove to Cape Otway to Australia's oldest lighthouse.

V







We drove up to Lorne for lunch. Busier than Apollo Bay, but a great spot nonetheless.




Geelong
After a couple of nights at Apollo Bay, we headed to a caravan park on the Bellarine Peninsula at Marcus Hill, just east of Geelong between Wallington and Queenscliff.
We stayed here near Geelong as we've never explored this area. 
Was nice. We'll more than likely come back.









Off to Melbourne for a house and dog sit.

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