Phillips Island – Penguin Parade (Melbourne, Australia)

Penguin Parade (photo: www.visitphillipsisland.com)

The highlight of our Phillip Island tour was the iconic Penguin Parade, one of Australia’s most popular tourist attractions. Frolicking, friendly fairy penguins from Australia’s largest colony of Little Penguins (smallest species of penguins in the world) arrive at sunset every evening and the access doors of the new Penguin Parade Viewing Center to the viewing areas open approximately 1 hour prior to estimated penguin arrival time.

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Little Penguin (photo: www.visitphillipisland.com)

More than six hectares of prime penguin habitat from the important Summerland Peninsula (which the penguins land on to find their burrows each evening) were restored on the site of the old visitor center building and coach parking areas, creating homes for an additional 1,400 breeding penguins.

Leaving the Penguin Parade Visitor’s Center for the parade grounds

These penguins breed in burrows, held together with native grasses and Bower spinach, usually made in the sand dunes during the winter months. Around The Nobbies and the rehabilitated areas of the Penguin Parade Visitor Centre, the penguins nest in wooden nesting boxes provided by Phillip Island Nature Parks. Egg laying (two whitish eggs are usually laid) starts in winter and can continue until December.

The wooden boardwalk

As soon as the access doors opened, we made our way, together with the others guests, along the viewing boardwalks, to the beach.  Along the way, we passed by a number of the aforementioned wooden nesting boxes. At the end of the boardwalk, we were all made to sit down at wooden bleachers along the beach.  As the bleachers were already full, we just sat down on the sand.

Wooden nesting boxes

Photography was strictly forbidden from the stands, where we sat or anywhere else as penguins have sensitive eyes and a bright, sudden flash or unusual light can frighten or disorientate a penguin. To ensure penguins keep coming back to this special area we were asked to not use cameras, camcorders or camera phones at the Penguin Parade.

The Penguin Parade viewing area

At the appointed time, the Little Penguins came out of the water and made their way, across the beach, to the sand dune burrows and the wooden nesting boxes they now call home. Since the beach was very dimly lit, we had a hard time seeing the penguins as they came out in small groups of four or five at a time. It was only when we walked back to the Visitor Center entrance that we saw the penguins clearly at the sides of the boardwalk.

Back at the center, we had dinner at the Little Penguin Café before returning to our coach for the 144.8 km., nearly 2 hour drive back to Melbourne and our hotel.

Penguin Parade (photo: www.visitphillipisland.com)

Penguin Parade: 1019 Ventnor Rd., Summerlands, Victoria 3922. Tel: +61 3 5951 2830. E-mail: info@penguins.org.au.  Open daily, 10 AM (2PM on Christmas Day). Admission: $26.60 (adults), $13.20 (children, 4-15 years of age), $66.40 (family) and $18.55 (Concession).

Phillip Island – Penguin Parade Visitor Center (Melbourne, Australia)

Penguin Parade Visitor Center

From Cowes we again boarded our coach for the short 7.4-km. drive, via Coghlan Rd and Phillip Island Rd/B420, to the brand new (it was opened just this July 2019) Penguin Parade Visitor Center to see Australia’s largest colony of friendly, frolicking fairy penguins (Eudyptula minor) at the iconic Penguin Parade, one of Australia’s most popular tourist attractions.

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Main entrance

With an area of 4,785 sq. m. plus over 1,800 sq. m. of interpretation & public spaces, this AUD58.2 million ($48.2 million from the Andrews Labor Government, along with a $10 million contribution from Phillip Island Nature Parks), world-class center, by itself a unique Australian experience like no other, can manage visitor demands (there are over 700, 000 visitors every year), including a peak of over 3,000 people expected on at least 15 days a year. By 2030, it is expected to cater for 840,000 visitors annually.

The modern, environmentally sustainable Penguin Parade Visitor Center, sitting between three distinct landscapes on the important Summerland Peninsula (the site of a historic buy-back scheme which saw an entire 6-hectare residential estate bought back, rehabilitated and returned to wildlife habitat), replaced and doubled the capacity of the previous Daryl Jackson-designed center built in 1988.

Strategically nestled in a junction of wetland, dune and headland, this exciting and visually breathtaking center showcases the surrounding spectacular landscape and places the much-loved Phillip Island Little penguins at center stage in their unique habitat.

Lobby

Designed by Terroir (a Hobart architectural firm) and built by Kane Constructions, its spectacular architectural design, inspiration and form, combining elements of the Peninsula’s basalt bluff, coastal dunes and wetlands, has been internationally acknowledged, winning at the 2019 International Architecture Awards, out of a field of over 380 submissions from 41 countries. Its complex roof and façade geometry comprises composite glue-laminated timber, steel and concrete with a zinc shingle façade.

This architecturally acclaimed star-shaped building’s overall environmental credentials are impressive, with low carbon building materials used throughout the center’s construction. It also has an array of 666 solar panels on the expansive roof, a water filtration system to recycle rainwater for non-potable use, increased roof and floor insulation, and double-glazed windows.

Its robust interior, consisting of exposed timber structure and plywood panels with integral color and texture, is structured around a major circulation path that has the capacity for large crowds and which forms a spine off which are arranged a series of dedicated spaces for ticketing, education, retail and restaurants.  The impressive laminated beams, at angled timber-clad ceilings, used sustainably sourced Victorian Ash hardwood.

The new visitor center has a wide range of new facilities including a host of fun and interactive activities for the whole family.

The interpretive habitat space provides a ‘penguins-eye’ view of the world, complete with life-size grass tussocks and cinematic projections.

The state-of-the-art, in-house theater, with seating for 100, is used for teaching and education groups, lectures, small conferences and conservation seminars, as well as the nightly showing of the Penguin Parade experience video.

Little Penguin Cafe

The dedicated education wing includes flexible activities classrooms for education rangers to deliver school programs. These will also be used as special group facilities for guided penguin viewing experiences (VIP or Guided Ranger Tours, etc.).

Gift shop

The center also has a café (Little Penguin Cafe) and a restaurant (Shearwater Restaurant), catering to all tastes and budgets (open 11 AM – 5:30 PM), where guests can enjoy an evening meal before or after their penguin viewing experience.

Two modern retail spaces, aligned with environmental priorities, also offer merchandise for sale, one of which is a specialty store focusing on Australian-made and responsibly sourced indigenous products as well as its best-selling plush penguin toys, dressed in jumpers knitted by volunteers, whose proceeds go into the park’s wildlife rehabilitation center.

Kyle

Penguin Parade Visitor Center: 1019 Ventnor Rd., Summerlands, Victoria 3922. Tel: +61 3 5951 2830. E-mail: info@penguins.org.au.  Open daily, 10 AM (2PM on Christmas Day). Admission: $26.60 (adults), $13.20 (children, 4-15 years of age), $66.40 (family) and $18.55 (Concession).

Phillip Island – Cowes (Melbourne Australia)

Cowes

From the Nobbies Ocean Discovery Center, we again boarded our coach for the 15-km. drive, via the Ventnor Rd./C473, to Cowes, the main township and largest town on Phillip Island, for some sightseeing.  Phillip Island Road, the main road of the island, led us into Cowes, becoming Thompson Avenue, the town’s main road.

Facing towards French Island and the Mornington Peninsula, Cowes has a small 2016 population of 4,839.

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Originally known as Mussel Rocks, it was renamed, in 1865, by government surveyor Henry Cox after the seaport town of Cowes on the Isle of WightEngland.

In fact, many of the town’s roads are named after other towns and villages on the Isle of Wight, the island that inspired Cowe’s as well as the town of Ventnor‘s names. A Post Office was opened here on August 1, 1869.

In recent years, Cowes, in the Gippsland region on the northern side of the island, has rapidly expanded in its size with many estates and apartments being built, on what was previously rural farmland, in and around the town. An estimated 70% of the houses here are owned by absentee owners, most of whom live in and around Melbourne.

An ideal base to explore Phillip Island’s many attractions, Cowes is 12 kms. from the famous Phillip Island Penguin Parade at Summerlands, 14 kms. from the scenic Nobbies rock formations and visitor center, 6 kms. from the Phillip island Grand Prix Circuit, 7 kms. from the Koala Conservation Centre and 9 kms. from the peaceful fishing village of Rhyll.

Cowes Beach

We were all dropped off at Thompson Avenue whose distinctive features are Golden Cypress trees (recognized by the National Trust of Australia), planted in the early 20th century, which lines the road for 1 km.

Walking further into commercial center of Cowes, the road began a gradual descent, terminating with a T-intersection at the waterfront. As we approached the waterfront, the density of restaurants, cafes, gift shops, hotels, supermarkets and general retail outlets, all catering to the busy holiday crowds, increased.

At the end of Thompson Avenue was the waterfront boulevard of The Esplanade and the attractive, not too crowded and well maintained Cowes foreshore which stretches between Mussel Rocks and Erehwon Point.

Cheska, Bryan and Kyle among the rock formations of Cowes Beach

The foreshore, consisting of wide expanses of lawn shaded by a mixture of native and cypress trees, complete with barbecue areas, picnic shelters and pathways, slopes down to the clean, sheltered, golden sand Cowes Beach whose inviting waters are popular with swimmers and families. Showers, changing rooms and toilets are all located close to the beach.

Nearby is the Cowes War Memorial, a granite memorial obelisk erected in 1920 in memory of the 13 men of Phillip Island who made the supreme sacrifice in World War One. Names of the fallen from World War Two were added at a later date.

War Memorial

On the beach, opposite the Isle of Wight Hotel (which was built in 1870), is the Cowes Jetty.

Cowes Jetty

Built in 1870, it remains a focal point of the town. At its entrance is an outdoor café.

Its T-shaped jetty structure, the departure point for several ferries and tourist boat cruises, is also suitable for fishing.

Outdoor Cafe

Cowes: Phillip Island, VictoriaAustralia.

How to Get There: Cowes is about a 2 hours’ drive, by road to the mainland via a bridge at San Remo, from Melbourne and can also be reached by coach, or passenger ferry from Stony Point on the Mornington Peninsula.

Nobbies Ocean Discovery Center – The Antarctic Journey (Melbourne, Australia)

The Antarctic Journey

An immersive, dramatic and pedagogic exhibition, The Antarctic Journey, a joint venture between Phillip Island Nature Parks and WWF (one of the world’s largest and most experienced independent conservation organizations) Australia, is claimed to be the world’s first interactive virtual reality Antarctic experience.

Featuring over 159 sq. m. (1,700 sq. ft.) of digital high-definition screens showing footage of the Southern Ocean and Antarctica, this $5 million project was opened in December 2015.

Structured around an artificial interior landscape, it draws its inspiration from the geology of this spectacular site and the incredible forces of wind and water that define this place.  The exhibition provokes questions about our natural world and the life of the southern oceans.

Here, I immersed myself in a spectacular multimedia wildlife experience as I embarked on a virtual journey to Antarctica, the world’s most extreme continent.

I enjoyed its fun, hands-on activities designed to entertain and educate.  Consisting of three distinct levels, the first level features Phillip Island as the gateway to Antarctica, although the island is almost 4,000 kms. (2,500 mi.) away from Antarctica.

At the second level, known as The Lab, I was able to “feel the freeze” as I entered the Antarctic Chill Zone, experiencing the same sort of conditions as an Antarctic researcher.

The Antarctic Chill Zone

Questions such as “What is more likely to sink – a bowling ball or a marble?,” “What is the Cocktail Party Effect?,” “How does my thermal image compare to an Emperor penguin?” and more are  answered by an array of hands on activities, ensuring that the unique wildlife, the ongoing research activities and the critically important conservation values of remote Antarctica come alive to guests.

At the Sound Lab and Research Station, I was offered an insight into the sights and sounds of Antarctic wildlife through animal calls, microscopes and fascinating specimens.

Sound Lab and Research Station

The unique wildlife, ongoing research activities, and the critically important conservation values of this remote continent, with the remarkable Antarctic landscape as the backdrop, came alive before my eyes.

The author at The Chamber

At The Chamber, the final, state of the art multimedia experience, I found myself blown away by the screen as I was enthralled by a breathtaking audio-visual spectacle which placed me right in the heart of the action level via cutting-edge “augmented reality” technology.

Whale Migration Game

I found myself able to stand on an ice floe and feel like I can reach out to pat a penguin, stroke a seal or marvel at a whale or shark, all of which appear on the screen with me, this up close and personal experience making me feel part of it all.

I felt that the animals were real and I can’t even imagine how they made the “augmented reality” screen. This complete immersion can only be described by me as stunning and breathtaking.

Nobbies Ocean Discovery Centre: Ventnor Road, Summerlands 3922, Phillip IslandVictoriaAustralia. Open 10 AM daily and closes approximately one hour before sunset each day to protect the native wildlife – approx. 4 PM (Winter), approx.5 PM (Autumn), approx. 6 PM (Spring) and approx. 7.30 PM (Summer). Admission (include daily guided tours, 11 AM, 1 PM and 3 PM): $18.00 (adult, 16 years+), $9.00 (child, 4-15 years), $45.00 (family – 2 adults and 2 children) and $12.60 (Australian Pensioner, ID required). A proportion from each Antarctic Journey ticket sale will go towards WWF-Australia’s conservation work including Antarctic whale research. The 20 min. guided tours commence by the Ticketing Desk.

Phillip Island – The Nobbies Ocean Discovery Centre (Melbourne, Australia)

Nobbies Ocean Discovery Center

After our visit to The Colonnades, we again boarded our coach for the short drive to  The Nobbies Ocean Discovery Centre for some snacks and toilet break. An ecotourism destination located at Point Grant, on the western tip of Phillip Island, the center is managed by the Phillip Island Nature Park.

Grace, Kyle and Jandy

Opened in April 1998 as the privately operated “Seal Rocks Sea Life Centre,” Stage one of the development, including the Nobbies Centre seen today, was completed at a cost of $13 million. Stage two, costing $50 million, included a 1.9 km. long undersea tunnel leading to an observation tower at Seal Rocks.

The center features educational displays, a cafe, a children’s play area, and a gift shop.

Nobbies Cafe

Overlooking Seal Rocks (1 km. offshore), Australia’s largest colony of fur seals (an estimated 16,000 seals inhabit the area), it currently attracts over 310,000 visitors per year (53% being international visitors). In 2014/15, the Nobbies and Phillip Island Nature Parks received a record 1.2 million visitors (with 58 percent being from overseas).

Gift shop

Inside Nobbies Café, we enjoyed a meal of fish and chips while enjoying the great view, from floor to ceiling windows, looking out to Bass Strait and Round Island.   The Nobbies Centre is also home to the exciting, interactive Antarctic Journey.

Bass Strait

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Outside the center, a network of boardwalks allows visitors to view The Nobbies, the seal colony, and The Blowhole.

The boardwalk

Round Island

Prior to our departure for The Penguin Parade, we observed and were enthralled by a hedgehog crawling at the center’s lawn area.

Hedgehog in the grass

Nobbies Ocean Discovery Centre: Ventnor Road, Summerlands 3922, Phillip IslandVictoriaAustralia. Open 10 AM daily and closes approximately one hour before sunset each day to protect the native wildlife – approx. 4 PM (Winter), approx.5 PM (Autumn), approx. 6 PM (Spring) and approx. 7.30 PM (Summer). The Nobbies Cafe closes approximately 30 minutes before the above closing times while the Gift Shop will remain open until the centre closes.

Phillip Island – The Colonnades (Melbourne, Australia)

The Colonnades

After our Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park visit, we again boarded our coach for the 76.1 km (1-hour) drive, via S Gippsland Highway/M420 and M420, to the 900 m. long The Colonnades (also called Ocean Reach Beach), the western extension of Woolamai Surf Beach. Rock reefs in the surf form the boundary between the two beaches.

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Facing southwest, it is bordered, in the west, by the red basalt cliffs of Forrest Caves. From the parking lot, it was a short walk down to the beach via a beach access boardwalk and stairs.  Visible along the beach are columnar basalt, unusual rock formation resembling organ pipes on the tall cliffs that gives The Colonnades its name.

Viewing deck overlooking the beach

Jandy, Bryan and Cheska at the beach access stairs

Each column, typical of the joints that form in a flow of basalt after it has solidified and as it cools, represents the depth of one lava flow. The column’s length is indicative of the thickness of the lava flow and the contraction of the solid rock produces cracks to form polygons.

Basalt columns along the tall cliffs

At the Colonnades, the basalt has been extensively altered (likely occurring soon after the basalt solidified and may have been caused by hydrothermal chemical processes), is crumbly and soft and has a soft and pale texture, showing onion skin weathering in places. Nevertheless, although the face of the cliff is regularly falling onto the beach and being washed away, it still retains the original columnar texture.

The author at the beach

The exposed, high energy beach, used by surfers and fishers, isn’t suitable for safe bathing. If bathing here, don’t expect a few gentle waves. Use extreme care, stay close inshore and on the bar, and clear of the rips, rocks and reefs.

A surfer taking to the waves

The reefs and high waves ensure potentially good left and right breaks along this section. Waves here average 1.5 m., with strong rips dominating the wide surf zone, with permanent rips against the reefs.  The permanent rip holes, against the rocks and reefs, can be fished from the beach.

A lone surfer challenging the waves

A hidden gem tucked away out of sight but very accessible, The Colonnades is good to visit any time (but best at low tide) and is truly nature at its best. The cliffs and the beach were amazing for photography.

My family exploring the beach

The Colonnades: 85 Veterans Dr, Newhaven, Phillip Island, Victoria 3925, Australia.

How to Get There: From Phillip Island Rd., at the township of Cape Woolamai, turn into Woolamai Beach Rd and then into Lantana Rd to the right (west) which heads south-west to The Colonnades. There is plenty of parking at the end of the road. The beach is accessible in the east by the road beside the airfield, and in the west via Forrest Caves.

Phillip Island – Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park (Melbourne, Australia)

Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park

After our Brighton Bathing Boxes visit, we again boarded our coach for the 48.3 km. (45-min.) drive, via the M11, to the 10-hectare (25-acre) Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park, crossing over to Phillip Island via the 640 m. (2,100 ft.) long San Remo Bridge (opened in 1971).  We arrived at the park by 1:15 PM.

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Jandy, Cheska, Kyle and Bryan at the park entrance

Show arena

The Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park is a biopark within the Pearcedale Conservation Park located on the Mornington Peninsula near Melbourne. It aims to display the fauna that was found in the Mornington Peninsula and Western Port Biosphere Reserve, prior to European settlement, as well as working towards the recovery of threatened Australian fauna.

As part of Pearcedale Conservation Park, the sanctuary is an institutional member of the Zoo and Aquarium Association (ZAA) and is ECO Certified, at the Ecotourism level, by Ecotourism Australia.

A dingo

In December 1998, development of the zoo started with construction of a visitor center, a 0.81 hectare (2-acre) wetland habitat with a lake, and more than 30 animal enclosures, as well as many Australian trees and other plants. The zoo was opened in September 2001.

Cape Barren Geese

Over 400 animals kept at the Sanctuary, representing over 60 different species, call the sanctuary home. They include spot-tailed quollssouthern bettongssquirrel gliders, long-nosed potoroo, red-bellied pademelon, spinifex hopping mouse, fat-tailed dunnart, brush-tailed bettong, red-necked wallaby, feathertail glider, sugar glider, Tasmanian masked owl, tawny frogmouth, Cape Barren goose, bush thicknee, Victorian carpet python, blue-tongue lizard, and Gippsland water-dragon.

Bush-Stone Curlew

Moonlit has successfully bred a number of rare and endangered species including southern bettong (AKA eastern bettong) and the eastern quoll, both now extinct on the mainland and only found in the wild in Tasmania;  Julia Creek dunnart; fluffy glider (yellow-bellied glider) and squirrel glider.

Orange-Bellied Parrot Conservation Breeding Facility

In 2016 it opened a new breeding facility for the critically endangered orange-bellied parrots, designed to house up to 20 pairs. It operates education services for school children, and provides research facilities for graduate students.

Gang-Gang Cockatoo

Moonlit Sanctuary has won a number of awards such as:

  • Victorian Keep Australia Beautiful Award for Preservation of the Environment with an emphasis on local fauna and flora (2009)
  • Victorian Tourism Award for Ecotourism (2010)
  • Victorian Tourism Award for Ecotourism (2014)
  • Premier’s Sustainability Award for Environmental Protection (2017) – for their Orange-bellied Parrot Breeding for Recovery program.
  • Victorian Tourism Award for Ecotourism (2018)
  • Victorian Tourism Award for Tourism Attraction (2018)
  • Silver for Ecotourism (Australian Tourism Awards, 2018)

Major Mitchell Cockatoo

At the entrance, we bought seeds for feeding the birds, kangaroos and wallabies because that is the only place where they sell them. Walking through natural bushland and, at the Kangaroo and Wallaby Rest Area, Bryan, Kyle and I came into close contact with the abovementioned animals in their natural habitats as we fed them and observed their natural behavior.

Kyle feeding a bird

The author feeding a kangaroo

We had a great deal of fun hand feeding and petting the adorable, freely roaming kangaroos and wallabies, doing selfies with them, as well as seeing colorful birds in aviaries and other Australian animals such as wombats, koalas and dingoes up close. Too bad we weren’t able to pet and feed the koalas, Still.it was totally worth the trip

Bryan feeding a wallaby

The park wasn’t very big but it did have a nice range of native Australian animals. The friendly, very enthusiastic and knowledgeable caretakers, passionate about their charges, really enjoyed their work here and the animals were clearly loved and well cared for.

A cute koala

Moonlit Sanctuary was a different visitor experience from a normal zoo visit as we spent longer periods of time with a small number of animals, getting up close and personal with them.

Red-Tailed Black Cockatoo

Pacific Black Duck

Truly, an exceptional introduction to native Australian species in a tranquil sanctuary and a memorable part of our time in Melbourne.

Gift Shop-Restaurant

Moonlit Sanctuary Conservation Park:  550 Tyabb-Tooradin Rd., Pearcedale, Victoria 3912, Australia. Website: www.moonlitsanctuary.com.au. Open daily (except on Christmas Day).

Brighton Bathing Boxes (Melbourne, Australia)

Brighton Beach Boxes

On our third day in Melbourne, Cheska booked a Philip Island Day Tour for us.  After breakfast at our apartment, we were all picked up at 11 AM, at a pick up point near our apartment, by Sophia, our Go West tour guide cum coach driver.  After all the other participants were all picked up, we were on our way by 11:50 AM.

One house for the affluent at the Esplanade community

The first destination in our itinerary, a 13 km./20-min. drive away, was trendy Brighton Beach (actually called Dendy Street Beach) along Port Philip Bay where we were to visit the iconic Brighton Bathing Boxes, a row of 82 (it’s recorded that before the Great Depression, there were between 100 to 200 boxes on record) distinctive, multi-colored and uniformly proportioned wooden beach huts lining the foreshore of one of Melbourne’s most exclusive and affluent neighborhoods.

Brighton Beach

One of the most photographed spots in the city, these boxes do have a lot of history behind them and they still retain their charm and classic architectural features to this very day.  They were built more than 100 years ago when Australians were a little more modest in response to very Victorian ideas of morality and seaside bathing.  These boxes, made from timber frames, weatherboard sidings and corrugated iron roofing, were used by women for privacy when changing into their swimwear.

Some of the 82 colorful Bathing Boxes

In keeping with their classic 1800’s Victorian architectural features and style, even today, the boxes don’t have running water or electricity. Despite their lack of modern conveniences and the laws against camping in them, what the Brighton Bathing Boxes lack in amenities, they make up for in incredible views of Port Phillip Bay and towards the Melbourne city skyline. That view comes with a price tag. It is rare for the existing boxes to hit the market as they are tightly held and often passed down through generations.

According to Sophia, Brighton Bathing boxes can only be sold to locals living in the Bayside area.  There are also strict rules outlining what the boxes can (and cannot) be used for. Owners cannot sleep in them or use them for advertising purposes.

The much photographed Bathing Box painted with the Australian flag

They cannot also be rented out to others. Today, these colorful timber boxes are used for storing fishing gear, deck chairs and sheltering from the sun on a scorching day at the beach. In 2017, a Brighton Bathing Box did hit the market and it sold for a jaw-dropping $326,000 (AUD) to a local resident.

The author with Kyle and Grace beside a Beach Box

Each of the pastel painted Brighton Bathing Boxes had its own unique characteristic, all with vibrant colors that pop, and bearing the hallmarks of individual licensees’’ artistic and colorful embellishments. Box No. 2, which features the Australian Flag, seem to be the most popular as visitors, both local and international, queued up for photos outside of it during our short visit.

A pair of seagulls frolicking along the beach

Other designs include a boxing kangaroos (Australia’s unofficial sporting mascot), a space invader, a Katsushika Hokusai-inspired blue-and-white wave box and another with a Volkswagen van declaring that “Life’s a Beach.”  An eye-popping contrast to the turquoise waters of the ocean, you’ll have to walk the entire length of the beach to see each of them.

Jandy queuing for ice cream (AUD7) at an ice cream truck

Brighton Bathing Boxes: Esplanade, Middle Brighton (between Wellington Street and Dendy Street). 

How to Get There: the easiest way to get to get there is to take a train from the Flinders Street Station, on the Sandringham Line, to Middle Brighton. Though it doesn’t stop at the beach, it is closer to the Brighton Bathing Boxes than the Brighton Beach station (unless you fancy a longer, 1.3-km. walk along the beach). From the station, it’s about a 1.2-km./15-min. walk to the beach.  To guide your way, there are shops along the way as well as blue plaques with the beach boxes on them. If you’re travelling by car, you can park close to the beach. If you are getting there by bus, take the 216 or the 219 bus from Melbourne’s Central Business District.

 

Werribee Open Range Zoo (Werribee, Australia)

Werribee Open Range Zoo

Our second whole day in Australia was to be spent on a half-day tour of the Werribee Open Range Zoo, about 32 kms. (20 mi.) southwest of Melbourne.  After brunch at our apartment, we walked towards the Melbourne Central Station where we took a one-hour train ride to Werribee Station. We arrived at the station by 11:20 AM and, from the station, we caught the Bus 439 Werribee South to the zoo.

Check out “Melbourne Central Station

The 225-hectare (560-acre) Werribee Open Range Zoo, an African-themed zoo in Werribee, is ocated on the Werribee River in Werribee Park, adjacent to the Werribee Mansion.

Jandy, Kyle and Bryan at the Werribee Visitor Information Center

Gift shop

It is part of the Zoological Parks and Gardens Board or ‘Zoos Victoria’ which also includes Melbourne Zoo and Healesville Sanctuary.

Ticket Office

Meerkat Cafe

Cafe interior

Here’s the historical timeline of the zoo:

  • In 1975, the 120 hectares of land on which Werribee Open Range Zoo now sits was acquired to act as agistment for the surplus stock from Melbourne Zoo. The board aimed to use the property’s landscape to develop an open range zoo.
  • In 1983 Werribee Open Range Zoo was opened to the public and guests were offered a guided safari-like tour around the property. Species at the zoo were mostly ungulates including bison and deer along with ostrich and kangaroos. Whipsnade Zoo provided a pair of Southern White Rhinoceros.
  • For the next ten years, guests boarded a bus, paying an admission fee as they entered, from a shelter at the Werribee Park Mansion, across the road from the zoo.
  • In 1996, the zoo was completely relaunched with a bistro, shop, discovery center and walking trail opened to add to the experience.
  • The next year, the Volcanic Plains Trail, showing off the Western basalt plains which is an endangered grasslands ecosystem, was opened.
  • During 1999, four new rhinos from South Africa arrived at the zoo to begin a breeding program.
  • In 2002, the zoo’s first rhino calf was born and was named Ganini.
  • In 2004, the Lions on the Edge habitat was unveiled.
  • In September 2006, Kubu River Hippos, the zoo’s largest development ever, was opened.
  • In December 2008, an African wildlife habitat was unveiled.
  • In 2010, the zoo celebrated its 25th birthday.
  • Also in 2010, the Australian comedy duo Hamish and Andy, posing as gorillas playing with golf clubs and toy cars, appeared in the zoo’s under construction gorilla enclosure as part of filming for a TV show.
  • In 2011, a gorilla exhibit opened with three male western lowland gorillas (an adult silverback and his two sons) gained from Melbourne Zoo.
  • In 2014, a koala habitat was opened along with a bandicoot hideaway (a nocturnal house where people can discover critically endangered eastern barred bandicoots). Squirrel gliders, dunnarts, tawny frogmouths and striped legless lizards also live here.

The African-themed village

The zoo has a simulated African village whose educational and entertaining includes a mock scenario of an African ranger and his adventures tracking lions, and an interactive soundscape walk with simulated lion sounds surrounding the walker.

A Learning Center teaches more about the history and geography of animals in their environments. This very children-friendly zoo also has lots of animal-themed playgrounds (such as the monkey rope play) around the walking trail near the exhibits.

Children’s playground

Werribee Open Range Zoo also has an animal/adoption sponsorship program, which is used for gifts and other altruistic purposes.

We followed two independent trails with signs everywhere pointing us in different directions to each animal enclosure.

Meerkats

The Pula Reserve Walking Trail focuses on African animals, including a antelopes, rhinoceros, zebras, lions, hippopotamus  and meerkats at the picturesque grassy savanna.

The new Gorillas Calling, a 10,000 sq. m. (2.5-acre) island home sanctuary (one of the largest in the world), houses the 3 gorillas and features wide-open spaces, climbing structures and indoor facilities.

A pair of camels

Rhinoceros

This facility enabled Zoos Victoria to provide best-practice care for the bachelor gorillas and confirm the organization’s reputation as a world leader in gorilla management.

Hippopotamus

Kubu River Hippos, a 3-hectare (7.41 acre) hippo paradise, is Australia’s only drive through hippo river. It has a boardwalk that allows visitors to view the hippos from every angle while the Kubu Queen, a semi submerged barge, allows for a closer view.

The area also has an adventure trail, archaeological dig site, interpretive centers and a hippo water play area with 5 life size hippo sculptures.  It can also be experienced on the safari tour.

A pride of lions

Lions on the Edge, with its beautiful pride of lions, has many great interactive elements including an abandoned jeep, half in and half out of the exhibit, where you can sit face to face with a lion.

Smaller habitats for prowling cheetahs, a troop of 18 vervet monkeys  (the only one’s of their kind on display in Australia) at play, and serval are also available for viewing.

Kangaroos

The author

The Australian Journey Walk, through Victoria’s vulnerable basalt plains grasslands, focuses on free wandering Australian animals such as the brolgakoalaemu and kangaroo as well as the cassowary.

A pair of emus (Dromaius novaehollandiae)

An ostrich

Come 3:30 PM, we availed of a bus tour (included in the zoo admission price), which takes up to 140 people in a unique safari bus and normally lasts 35–40 minutes, multiple times a day.

The unique, open air tour bus

The tour takes us out into the 45-hectare open savanna section of the zoo where we could find animals such as the hippo as well as animals of the grassland, such as bisonzebrawaterbuckgiraffeostrich, eland, antelopes and rhinoceros, as well as the camel and the scimitar-horned oryx.

A small herd of zebras

Werribee Open Range Zoo: K Rd, Werribee South, Victoria, 3030 Australia. Open daily (except Christmas Day), 9 AM – 5 PM (entry closes 3:30 PM).  Tel: 1300 966 784. Admission: adult (38AUD), child (19AUD) on weekdays, free on weekends. Visitors can also book various ‘specialty’ tours, including the Off Road Safari, or close encounters where you can feed gorillas, stroke servals or giraffe. E-mail: contact@zoo.org.au. Website: www..zoo.org.au/werribee/.

 

Flinders Street Station (Melbourne, Australia)

Flinders Street Station

The Flinders Street Railway Station complex, served by Metro‘s suburban services and V/Line regional services to Gippsland, covers two whole city blocks and extends from Swanston Street to Queen Street.

Kyle, Grace, Cheska and Jandy checking out train schedules at station

Here are some interesting trivia regarding this railway station:

  • It is the busiest station on Melbourne’s metropolitan network, with over 1,500 trains passing through each day and 77,153 daily entries were recorded in the 2017/2018 fiscal year.
  • By 1926, Finders Street Station became the busiest passenger station in the world, surpassing Gare Saint-Lazare in Paris, Grand Central Station in New York City and Liverpool Street Station in London. On the January 11th1922, The Argus Newspaper reported 200,000 passengers passed through the station in one day.
  • Flinders was the first and oldest railway station in an Australian city
  • In the late 1920s, it was the world’s busiest passenger station.
  • The main building is one of the city’s most recognizable landmarks and a cultural icon of Melbourne.
  • An urban myth, widely reported, is that the design and plans for the Flinders Street Station and the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (originally named Victoria Terminus) in Mumbai (India) were switched, resulting in an Italian Gothic style station in India and a vaguely East-Indian style building in Melbourne.
  • The building is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register.
  • Prior to Federation Square, Flinders Street Station was a favorite and popular informal meeting place for Melbournians since the station’s opening and is often a congregation point for subculture. Although the station was not intended for this purpose plus there is no seating or other infrastructure to suggest it as a destination, the location (opposite the well-known Young and Jackson Hotel and overlooking two of the busiest tram routes in the city) meant it was accessible and visible to many of the city’s main pedestrian thoroughfares. “I’ll meet you under the clocks” (referring to the row of clocks above the main entrance) and “I’ll meet you on the steps” (referring to the wide staircase underneath these clocks) are popular Melburnian The site’s cultural significance extends beyond its main function as a transport hub.
  • The ghostly figure a man on platform 10 holding fishing gear, known as George, has reportedly been seen by commuters, seeming somewhat disoriented as he gazes out at the Yarra River before vanishing into thin air. Many believe he has been around since the days of Melbourne’s settlement, whereas others believe he is the spirit of George Mansfield (later identified as Ernest Leahy) who was pulled from the river, after a boating accident, on October 21, 1902.
  • Martin Kingham, former Victorian secretary of the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union, revealed that when he worked on the station’s refurbishment in the late 1980s, the builders incorporated heating into the steps so that those sitting there wouldn’t get cold.
  • The 708-m. long main station platform 1 is Australia’s longest and is also, reportedly, the fourth longest railway platform in the world. Servicing the South Morang and Hurstbridge lines, it was, once upon a time, home to the Milk Dock and the Parcels Office and, up until 1986, most of Melbourne’s milk was unloaded here off trains from Gippsland.
  • Flinders Street Station is responsible for two of Melbourne’s busiest pedestrian crossings, both across Flinders Street, including one of Melbourne’s few pedestrian scrambles.
  • Flinders Street Station has appeared on screen in films including Squizzy Taylor (1982) and On the Beach (1959, starring Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire and Anthony Perkins). It also featured in the background of Steven Spielberg’s TV mini-series The Pacific.

Check out “Grand Central Terminal

The Art Nouveau-style main station building, with its distinctive façade, has a prominent green copper dome, arched entrance, tower and clocks. Takeaway stands line the concourse, and the upper floors were purpose-built to house a library, gym and a lecture hall (later used as a ballroom).

Here is the historical timeline of the railway station:

  • In 1882, the government decided to build a new central passenger station to replace the existing ad-hoc station buildings.
  • In 1883, the first signal boxes were opened at the station one at each end of the platforms.
  • By the 1890s a third island platform had been constructed.
  • In 1899, a design competition, essentially for the detailed design of the station building, was finally held and 17 entries were received. First prize was awarded to to railway employees James Fawcett and HPC Ashworth, of Fawcett and Ashworth, who won £500 for their French Renaissance style “Green Light” project. It included a large dome over the main entrance and a tall clock tower over the Elizabeth Street entrance. A train shed over the platforms was intended to have many arched roofs running north-south, but only an alternative plan, depicting an impressive three-arched roof (running east-west) over the concourse, survives. The location of the concourse and entrances, the track and platform layout, the type of platform roofing, and even the room layout to some extent, were already decided.
  • In 1900, work began on the rearrangement of the station tracks, while the final design of the station building was still being worked on.
  • In 1901, work on the central pedestrian subway started
  • By 1903, the foundations of the main building were completed.
  • In 1904, in mid construction, the plans were extensively modified by the Railways Commissioners. The proposed train shed was replaced by individual platform roofs, and it was decided not to include a concourse roof. To increase office space, a fourth storey was added to the main building, which resulted in the arches above each entrance on Flinders Street being lowered, decreasing their dominance.
  • In 1905, work began on the station building itself, starting at the west end and progressing towards the main dome. Ballarat builder Peter Rodger was awarded the £93,000 contract. The building was originally to have been faced in stone, but that was considered too costly, so red brick, with cement render details, was used for the main building instead. At ground level, on the Flinders Street side, grey granite from Harcourt was used for many details. The southern facade of the main building consisted of a lightweight timber frame clad with zinc sheets, which were scored into blocks and painted red in order to look like large bricks. That was done to created corridors instead of what were to be open-access balconies inside the train shed.
  • In 1906, work on the dome started. The structure required heavy foundations as it extended over railway tracks.
  • Between August 1906 and November 1907, the Elizabeth Street clock tower was constructed.
  • In May 1908, work was progressing more slowly than planned
  • In August 1908, with the expected completion date of April 1909 increasingly unlikely to be met, Rodger’s contract was terminated.
  • In May 1910, a Royal Commission was appointed finding that Rodger could be held accountable for the slow progress in 1908, but he should be compensated for the difficulties before then. The Way and Works Branch of the Victorian Railways took over the project
  • By mid-1909, the station was essentially finished. The veranda along Flinders Street, and the concourse roof and veranda along Swanston Street, were not completed until after the official opening in 1910.
  • In 1919, the first electric train service operated from Flinders Street to Essendon.
  • In June 1933, the Railways Department established The Children’s Nursery featuring three cot rooms, two play rooms, a kitchen and a rooftop playground. The childcare facility was used by mothers visiting the city.
  • In 1937, a polio outbreak led to the closure of the Children’s Nursery.
  • By 1942, the Children’s Nursery was permanently closed.
  • In 1954, to cater for the increasing numbers of passengers, the Degraves Street subway from the station was extended to the north side of Flinders Street.
  • In 1962, the Minister for Transport and HKJ Pty Ltd signed an agreement for a £30 million redevelopment of the station that would have resulted in the demolition of the clock tower and replacement with an office building up to 60 stories high.
  • In March 1966, the length of Platform One was extended to 708 m. (2,322 ft.).
  • In 1967, a company purchased the option to lease the space above Flinders Street Station, planning to build a shopping plaza and two office towers, the dome and clock tower being kept as part of the design, but strong opposition saw this project lapse.
  • In 1972, Victorian Premier Henry Bolte unveiled another redevelopment plan, to cover 110,000 m2 (27 acres) of space above the Flinders Street Station and Jolimont Yard, for a complex of shops, offices, theaters and other community facilities.
  • In 1974, a newspaper report said that planning was still underway for the $250 million proposal
  • By 1975, public perceptions had begun to turn towards retention of the station. At the time, a Builders Labourers Federation green ban  helped preserve it in its existing form.
  • In June 1980, the 87-m. long ACMI’s Gallery 1, now holding major exhibitions, was created by converting the terminals for the Epping and Hurstbridge Lines at Princes Bridge Railway Station, which was incorporated into Flinders Street Station as platforms 14, 15 and 16.
  • In July 1980, television displays used to display next train information were added to each platform.
  • In 1982, a $7 million refurbishment, divided into four phases and designed by the railways architect Kris Kudlicki, was announced by Stephen Crabb, the Minister of Transport Minister for Transport.
  • Completed by 1984, the first escalators at the station provided on platform 2 / 3 replaced the ramps, and new public toilets were provided, replacing those over the platforms. The main station concourse was tiled and extended westward over the tracks, with skylights added above the ramps,16 new shops opened on the concourse.
  • In October 1985, a restaurant, built on the southern side facing the river, was opened.
  • In 1994, the restaurant was converted into the “Clocks on Flinders” poker machine
  • In June 1985, the main steps were embedded with electrical circuits to keep them dry.
  • In 1989, under the John Cain Government, an agreement to construct the “Festival Marketplace” was signed. Planned to feature shops, restaurants and cafes, it was designed by Daryl Jackson architects and it was to be built over the existing platforms in a style sympathetic to the existing station, and be completed by 1992.
  • In 1991, the project was abandoned after the inability of the financiers to come up with the $205 million required due to the early 1990s recession.
  • In 1993, the Elizabeth Street pedestrian subway opened at the Southbank
  • In 1997/98, the tracks to the east of the station were rebuilt to clear the way for the Federation SquareJolimont Yard was eliminated, with $40 million spent to reduce 53 operating lines between Flinders Street and Richmond Station to just 12. The number of points was also reduced, from 164 to 48.  Platform usage at the station was also reallocated, with country trains being shifted from platform 1 to platform 10, and Clifton Hill group trains being shifted from the deleted Princes Bridge Station to platform 1.
  • By 2007, the refurbishment of the building roof and concourse foundations, an upgrade of platform 10 with escalators and a lift replacing the ramp, the relocation of all ticket booking offices to the main entrance under the main dome and new LCD Passenger Information Displays installed on the platforms, subways and concourse were completed.
  • In 2008, the retail pavilions on the concourse were rebuilt, increasing their area.
  • That same year, an investigation of the potential of the abandoned spaces in the station, overseen by a task force comprising representatives from Connex, the Committee for MelbourneMelbourne City CouncilHeritage Victoria, was completed but the conclusions have not been made public
  • In March 2009, an escalator replaced the lift to platform 12 and 13, with platform 13 also extended westwards into daylight along the alignment of the former platform 11.
  • In January 2010, one of the first announcements by the new Minister for Public Transport was that the government was investigating the refurbishment of the abandoned spaces for “cultural uses.”
  • In November 2011, the Victorian Government launched a $1 million international design competition to rejuvenate and restore the station.
  • In October 2012, after receiving 118 submissions, six finalists were selected. The public could vote.
  • On August 8, 2013, the jury’s choice and people’s choice winner were announced. The competition winner was HassellHerzog & de Meuron, while the people’s choice winner were University of Melbourne students Eduardo Velasquez, Manuel Pineda and Santiago Medina.
  • In mid-February 2015, Premier Daniel Andrews and Jacinta Allan  (Minister for Public Transport) announced that $100 million would be spent for urgent refurbishment works to upgrade station platforms, entrances, toilets, information displays and the restoration of exterior of the main building.
  • By July 2017, the station had been almost completely repainted in the original 1910 colors.
  • In January 2018, as painting continued, a further round of works was announced including the renewal of the Elizabeth Street pedestrian subway and rebuilding of the subway’s south entrance to include direct access to platform 10.

At the concourse (or Swanston Street end), the building has three levels and four at the lower Elizabeth Street (or platform) end. Numerous shops and lettable spaces were provided.  Some are on the concourse (especially along the Flinders Street frontage), many at lower than street level, accessed by stairs which created a fifth/basement level.

The top three levels of the main building, particularly along the Flinders Street frontage, contain a large number of rooms, mostly intended for railway use, but also many as lettable spaces.

At each entry, numerous ticket windows were located while at the concourse (or platform level) are services such as a restaurant, country booking office, lost luggage office and visitors help booth. Much of the third floor was purpose-built for the then new Victorian Railway Institute, including a library, gym and a lecture hall.

The latter was later used as a grand, 400-seat ballroom where dance classes, ballroom competitions and concerts were held. During World War II, dances were held for Allied servicemen and, in the 1950s and 1960s, it was one of the most popular dance halls in Melbourne. The last dance was held on September 10, 1983.

Next door is a gymnasium, once used by the station’s male employees, which featured a boxing ring and billiards room. These rooms have since been closed off to the public and are largely abandoned, derelict and decaying. It also had a 440-yard long rooftop running track and it is completely normal to see men running across the station roof.

A clock tower has also existed at the end of Elizabeth Street since 1883. The first clock was known as the ‘Water Tower Clock’, after a wooden framed water tower erected on the site in 1853. This clock remained in place until 1905 when work begun on the new station, the clock tower being moved to outside Princes Bridge station.

In 1911 it was moved to Spencer Street station, where it remained until the station redevelopment of 1967. Sold to a private collector, it was returned to public ownership and in 1999 was put on display at the Scienceworks MuseumSpotswood. It was returned to Southern Cross station in 2014.

Clock tower

The Elizabeth Street clock tower was constructed between August 1906 and November 1907. The distinctive clocks, a fixture of the station’s façade under the main dome, are part of 60 Bathgate indicators purchased from England for use at the Flinders Street, Spencer StreetRichmond and South Yarra stations.

It has, since the 1860s, shown the departure times of the next trains. When the old station was demolished in 1904, those at Flinders Street were placed into storage.  In 1910, 28 were placed into the new station and are located at the main entry under the dome, the southern side archway, and the Degraves and Elizabeth Street entrances.

The clocks at the main entrance, changed an average of 900 times, were manually operated, during an 8-hour period, by a railway officer using a long pole. In 1983, as part of a redevelopment of the station, the original indicator clocks were removed from service, with their replacement by digital displays planned.

However, within one day, an outpouring of public outrage and sentimentality saw the decision reversed. The clocks at the main entrance were altered to automatic operation by computer but those at the Degraves and Elizabeth Street entrances were replaced by large airport-style split-flap displays.

The author

In the 1930s and 1940s, the building featured a creche next to the main dome on the top floor.  It had an open-air playground on an adjoining roof. Since 1910, the basement store, beside the main entrance, has been occupied by City Hatters, a hat store known as since 1933.

The station as seen from St. Paul’s Cathedral

The Swanston Street concourse, which has undergone the most change of any part of the station, is now three times the depth of the original structure with only the canopy and roofed area on Swanston Street remaining of the original. 

The author, Kyle, Grace and Jandy

Flinders Street Station: cor. Flinders and Swanston Sts., MelbourneVictoria, Australia. Website: www.flindersstreetstation.com.au.