Skip to main content

Hey Hay it's Tuesday



Happy New Year! 

Maybe.

Anyway, it's our first trip for 2022. A road trip to Adelaide and South Australia. Assuming that the reason I'm feeling a bit rotten right now is just because of a long day's driving and not covid.

We are at Hay, roughly the halfway point between Sydney and Adelaide. You could tell it was Hay because there was hay in the back of the ute at the motel, along with a pig eating more of it around the back. 



The first half of the drive was the familiar journey down the Hume Highway, under cloudy, showery skies. We stopped for lunch at the Dog on the Tuckerbox, north of Gundagai. KFC for the others, a Chiko roll for me.

South of Gundagai was the departure from the usual drive, the turnoff to Wagga Wagga. We stopped in the summer heat outside of Wagga, at the Air Force base, where a Canberra bomber, F-111, Meteor, Mirage and other retired aircraft were on static display. The museum itself was closed.



The onwards without stopping, following the path of the Murrumbidgee River. Past sheep farms and nut farms, fields of grains and maybe rice. It was hard to tell. Wetlands and flood plains.

I recall once finding the countryside boring, but now I revelled in the golden flat expanse of emptiness beneath the silver-grey skies.

We spotted emus, which are common in the area. 

We reached Hay before 5pm and, after checking into our motel, took a drive up the main street, across the Murrumbidgee, and past shops closed for the day. The railway to Hay closed long ago, but the station is beautifully preserved and features a small museum about the European and Japanese interned outside of the town during the Second World War.







Dinner was at the South Hay Pub, the servings so large that neither B nor Alex could finish their steak and veal parma (my burger was a more tractable size). The annoying flies no doubt ate the rest. 

At least it's a dry heat out here. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

My first overseas trip: Singapore and Malaysia

I've always loved to travel. My first memory is of sitting in a an aircraft, aged 18 months or so. Yet I never believed that I could travel overseas. To me, it seemed like something you did when you retired, or if you were rich. That all changed when I met B. She had not only travelled overseas, she was from overseas . B was born in Malaysia and arrived in Australia, with her family, in 1988. She still had relatives and friends in Malaysia and Singapore and she, along with the remainder of her family, planned to return for a visit during the Australian summer of 1995. At the time I was staying in B's mother's house while we were studying at university. After B's father passed away the year before I was the nominal "man" of the house and its high maintenance garden; her brother Michael was studying up in Queensland. B and I were quite inseparable and her mother kindly offered to pay for me to join them on their vacation. So it was that I obtained my very firs...

One night in Canberra

It's the April school holidays and we are too busy to have a break but need one because of that. And because it's the Easter weekend the options are limited, so we just drive down to Canberra for the night. No, this isn't our first trip for 2023. I wrote about Japan on another site .  I refuse to wake up early so we depart after 8.30 AM. There is not much to say about the drive except that the clouds seem so low and Lake George is very full. We stop at a rest area and at the lookout up the hill to take it all in. Everyone is hungry so we first stop in Dickson and then can't think of anything to eat, so I drive us to Civic, where we can't decide and end up eating at the Singaporean Killiney Kopitiam branch.  The Canberra Centre has nice shops. I dream of getting an iPad from the Apple Store, we buy a blanket and toothbrushes from Muji and wish that Lego wasn't so expensive. Nothing we can't get in Sydney, but then we rarely go out shopping in the city. It...