You’ve got to love those lazy Sunday mornings when some curious kookaburras come to hang out in your tree… a kooky trifecta!
You’ve got to love those lazy Sunday mornings when some curious kookaburras come to hang out in your tree… a kooky trifecta!
Travelling is always enlightening, often life-changing and mostly awesome. It also opens your eyes to the things you love about home.
Like family, friends… and little things you love about where you live. Like walking along the beach at dusk and coming across a sea eagle having a fishy feast…
These eagles have landed too (which thankfully didn’t involve fish gizzards).
It’s a long flight from NYC to Australia – even longer when you get a bonus three-hour wait on the tarmac at LA airport. Not that we’re complaining about technical difficulties with fuel tanks being solved before take-off!
New York was amazing… there are more stories to be told.
And more adventures to be planned. Because this trip confirmed what we’ve always believed in –>
In February, we moved into a new (old) place – another house near the coast that we’ll be renovating.
After finishing our Pottsville house, it wasn’t a great feeling to arrive in another house requiring way too much TLC. Until we met the neighbours…
At first, it was just spooky rustling in the bushes. Then they revealed themselves.
Now we share our urban space with about ten Eastern Water Dragons – from big daddy and bold mama to offspring in varying stages of development.
They are beautiful, fascinating creatures and not bad compensation for all that pesky moving stuff…
A little shameless self promotion – we would love you to vote for On the flight path in the People’s Choice for Best Australian Blog.
Just click on the pic below…
Voting opens today… thanks heaps. Love your work.
Lou & EB
I was jogging on the beach this morning. I say that with a certain air of nonchalance, but there’s nothing casual about it.
Taking up running is a major leap for someone who only ever runs in short bursts – like when there’s a basketball to chase or an opponent to beat.
Or when I’m about to be hit by a bus.
Just two hundred metres into it and the voices in my head are almost hysterical.
What’s the point? You (snigger, snigger), a runner? You’re so slow. EB is already halfway up the beach. You may as well be standing still.
Seriously, isn’t it a bit late in life to start doing this? Just walk. Walking is so much more civilized. And it’s such a lovely morning. Look at those birds… so relaxed. Running. Pfft.
But I just keep chanting to the beat of my bare feet: If not now, when? If not now…when?
Which got me thinking about a man I met at my daughter’s work last week. I’ll call him Joe.
Joe retired two weeks ago – but it wasn’t planned or voluntary. Almost two decades with the company is a long time to end with a hasty farewell.
He said he woke up the next morning and was shocked to find that someone had finished off two of his bottles of pinot. Then he realized it was him.
Somewhere between the hangover and the day I met him, he’d gone from feeling rudderless to mapping out back-to-back self-guided walks through Italy. He leaves in July.
Joe is like most of us – it usually takes a nudge, or a mighty shove, to get us living the life we’ve imagined. Many of us leave it too late.
Because those relentless naysayers in our heads tell us there’s much to be done and no time for acts of self-indulgence.
There’s the mortgage to pay off, the kids to help out (whatever their age), the job we should stick at for a few more years (even when we’re dying inside)…
If we hold off, we’ll make more money when we downsize. Besides, we don’t have time or a willing partner or a partner at all. But, of course, when we win lotto…
“The pathway is smooth. Why do you throw rocks before you?” says the old Chinese proverb.
The answer is fear. Fear of letting go, fear of taking a chance. What if you don’t like travelling indefinitely? What if you lose everything you’ve built up over the years? What if you end up broke and miserable? What if.
We throw excuses and perfectly valid reasons before us. And those ‘rocks’ become huge roadblocks.
As a writer (and potential, um, multi-lingual runner), I know all about those roadblocks – the fear of failure, the resistance to even begin.
That’s why I have Alain de Botton’s wise words (left) stuck to my computer.
The beauty of getting older is that you finally acknowledge (well, you can’t avoid the fact) life isn’t forever – you won’t always have your health, your fitness or even your mind.
And you realise your biggest fear – way bigger than the fear of failing – is never having given your dreams a fighting chance.
Back at the beach, I’ve pounded out my very first kilometre – then another few hundred metres (after some breathless staggering and a nudge from EB who’s ‘caught up’ to me… on his way back).
Small steps, the pesky voices remind me. Must you mention this insignificant moment… on a public forum?
But they’re oddly subdued now. Ah.
What roadblocks have you set up? Are they so high you can’t even see, anymore, where the path goes or if there are other paths you’d like to explore?
Be inspired by Joe and by all the people who look fear in the face and do it anyway.
Because I reckon today is as good a day as any to begin pulling down those roadblocks, even if it’s one pebble at a time, and start chasing down those dreams.
If not now…when?
Fruit bats and termites aren’t your usual cute and furry tourist magnets, but they’re still pretty amazing creatures.
Last night, we stopped at the local info centre in Boonah to fill up our water tanks – and we weren’t short of company. Thousands of squawking, squeaking fruit bats were roosting in the trees nearby. Here’s a few just hanging around…
But the thing that fascinated me were the hundreds of termite mounds dotted across the paddocks along the road from Beaudesert to Boonah.
Termites may be a No.1 pest on the urban hit list, but they play a vital role in balancing Australian ecosystems.
What do they do? Apart from building architectural mud masterpieces, these busy little creatures help to decompose dead plant matter and quickly turn it into nutritious soil (clearly not something you want in your woodwork at home).
They are also on the menu for wildlife like lizards, birds, spiders, ants, echidnas and other small marsupials. Some don’t just eat the termites, they nest in ‘the pantry’ or shelter from fire in the mounds.
From weird and wonderful to some dam fine scenery…
On the way home, we swung by Wyaralong Dam and the Mt Joyce Recreation Park, a fantastic place for kayaking, camping, fishing, waterbird watching and more.

In Queensland’s January 2011 floods, the new Wyaralong Dam filled overnight. Pretty spectacular since, when it’s full, it covers 1,230 hectares!
We also encountered wild life here, of the dusty, sweaty cyclist kind. These creatures are a clue to the fun to be had on kilometres of mountain bike trails in the surrounding hills. They assured us the trails were better than our favourites at Daisy Hill in Brisbane – and not as busy.
Of course, EB immediately decided it was time to dust off our trusty mountain bikes so we can come back here to test the trails ourselves…
Back to bird watching. Gotta hang onto the serenity while you can, hey?
What do you get someone like EB who has everything (including the spirit for adventure)? A flight in a glider of course.
So this weekend, we’re an hour west of Brisbane in the Scenic Rim in south east Queensland for EB’s glider flight, a taste test of the boutique wines grown in the region and camping at Lake Moogerah. First stop, Boonah Gliding Club for an experience that comes close to the flight of a bird…
The members of club are serious glider enthusiasts, spending most weekends flying or volunteering there.
Peter, EB’s pilot, tells us gliding is a great way to start learning to fly because your focus is on what’s going on outside the plane rather than mostly monitoring instruments inside the cockpit.
Glider pilots are switched on to everything around and below them – the shadows of clouds on the ground, the changing colours that indicate different heating intensities, and even the soaring raptors and pelicans. These are all clues guiding them to the best thermals…
Like Peter, many of the members have impressive military and commercial flying backgrounds. That’s their job, this is their passion.
EB is clearly in safe hands…
Flying (and being grounded, camera in hand) is thirsty work, so we make a bee-line for Kooroomba Vineyards and Lavender Farm. The building is amazing and clearly timeless. It won awards twelve years ago but looks as fresh as today. And the wine is equally as fabulous.
We stay for lunch and vino with a view – and tomorrow we’ll be back for their French music and food festival. As if we could resist.
The beaches near and not too far from us are so full of life, and not just human life (although there’s a lot of that). The ‘beachscape’ is always changing shape, carried away and built up again with the wild winds and shifting tides.
This weekend, on a visit to Byron Bay, the beach was back. Where not so long ago it was a strip of sand, now it stretches far and wide.
And on another beach wander closer to home, the shoreline at Pottsville beach is littered with pumice stone. Queensland University of Technology’s pumice expert Dr Scott Bryan explained the mystery to Sydney Morning Herald columnist Tim the Yowie Man:
‘ “It’s the result of the July 2012 eruption of the Havre Seamount, which is about 1000 kilometres north of Auckland”… the underwater volcano spewed out a ”raft of pumice estimated to be more than 20,000 square kilometres in size”. That’s a surface area bigger than Belgium.’ (SMH, 10 January 2014)
A closer look at the ‘moving’ volcanic stones littering our beach reveals that marine creatures have hitched a ride on the pumice. Sometimes they are welcome, like coral-building species, and sometimes they are invasive species.
There is something magical about wandering along a beach somewhere. Something that feeds your soul, connects you to the power and mystery of nature, and keeps drawing you back time and again.
Saturday dawned hot and still in Brisbane. It may have been perfect beach weather, but we were staying in the city for silly season festivities with clients that night.
What’s the next best thing to surf and sand? A (very long, very hot) stroll in the bush of course.
So EB and I headed to Mt Coot-tha, where a network of trails crisscross the forest, up steep hills and into valleys, and it feels like you could walk forever and never find a way out (especially if you’re directionally-challenged like me!).
It’s a favourite place for intrepid travellers to train those walking legs for their trekking adventures. We spent many challenging hours on these trails back in 2007 when we were preparing to walk the Annapurnas in Nepal.
We couldn’t hit the trails without our black kelpie, who may be getting on in years but adores her bushwalks and doesn’t know how to give up (she gets it from EB, I’m sure!).
Let’s just say that when we arrived at the Simpson Falls after walking for a couple of hours, she dropped into a rock pool and wasn’t going anywhere…
But half an hour of water therapy does wonders and, with a little gentle persuasion (for me, not the dog), we were on our way again.
Soon we noticed that two crows were keeping an eye on us along the trail. They would perch in a tree to watch us pass, then their shadows would slide over us as they soared ahead to wait in another tree until we were a few metres past them, then they’d glide ahead of us again.
Occasionally, they’d koww koww and eh-aw to each other, as if chatting about these odd, dusty creatures below.
I vaguely recalled that crows were believed to be a bad omen, a warning of danger to come, shape-shifting creatures with evil intent, or vessels for restless spirits. And who hasn’t seen Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds, where a terrified young socialite is observed and harassed by flocks of the black menaces and other winged avengers?
But being shadowed by these two crows was strangely comforting. It was as if we were being guided by the Keepers of the Path.
Back to reality. Perhaps they were curious about our four-legged companion, glistening black like them, but with no ability to fly? Or were they just tagging along in case we stopped for a picnic and they could swoop down to snatch up the leftovers?
About eight kilometres later and no picnic stops, they were still hanging in there. They arrived with us back at the car – waiting, watching, and clearly unimpressed with our pathetic attempts to bid them farewell in crow language.
It may be a bit spooky for some, but I’m going with the other myth that says two crows mean joy.
Because there is definitely something joyful about the distraction of two crows, when you’re out walking in the midday sun, your feet are sore and what you really need is a stiff drink…