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On Friday as we sat in the Australia Day long
weekend traffic jam, north of the airport, we were feeling quite dubious about
the eventual success of our planned walk along the Redcliffe foreshore.
On Wednesday afternoon Jenny and I had planned to
walk at the Gold Coast after completing our business near by, only to be
thwarted by the hot, salty, gale force winds blowing across the Southport
Seaway.
The next night, [Thursday] another heavily rain
laden thunderstorm hit at 5pm, causing chaos throughout Brisbane. At midday
Friday, dark ominous clouds again gathered but dispersed. Should we really be
travelling so far when the weather Gods were unlikely to be kind?
Thankfully the answer was a big YES!
The views, temperature and breeze were perfect,
giving us that 'so glad to be alive' feeling and making us comment "I
wonder what the poor people are doing?"
It’s hard to believe the
rusty hulk at the foot of the cliffs of Woody Point was in the 19th century the
Navy’s proud premier warship. As one of the newly established Australian
Navy’s first ships, a flat-iron gunboat Gayundah was built in Newcastle-on-Tyne
in the 1884 at the behest of the Queensland Maritime Defence Force,
commissioned to protect the many bays, inlets and estuaries along the east
coast from the enemy-of-the-day which at the time was believed to be the
Russians.
By 1886 it had been
acquired by the fledgling Australian Navy as one of its ten ships. In its short
lived defence career the ship never encountered the enemy, although other
achievements included the first warship in Australia to use wireless
telegraphy.Up until the end of World War I she was used as a mine sweeper and
sea tender ship and by 1919 had been decommissioned, sold to civilians and was
thereby stripped and demoted to a gravel barge.By 1957-8 she was retired and
towed to the base of these cliffs where she has since acted as a breakwater,
protecting the shore not from the enemy but from erosion.
Redcliffe's tribute to their son and world famous pop group, The Bee Gees.
Sunset colours encouraged us on the return leg.
Happy Australia Day
Life down under is hard to beat!
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