The return trip on the Spirit of Tasmania was just a teeny bit rockier than our first trip across Bass Strait (Kwell may have been consumed by the ladies of the party). Once off the Ferry, we made our way over to Williamstown to meet up with some friends for breakfast. Stu managed to confound us non-Melbournites by ordering a 'Blue Heaven' milkshake (the blue equivalent of lime apparently). He still looked in good health by the time we set off again, heading north along the Hume Highway.
We were about 20 minutes south of Albury when I thought I felt a very light fluttering of the tyres, so being the eternal optimist I anticipated a blow-out until we made it to the border town. There was a distinct juddering as we made our way through some of the streets of Albury, and managed to track down the sole Tyre shop still open. The good folks at Bob-Jane T-Mart couldn't see anything obviously wrong with the tyres, but dutifully took the car for a spin (with the kids and myself still in the car). Nothing. It turns out that the streets of Albury that I travelled down just happened to be of segmented concrete construction (entirely accounting for the juddering). Suffice to say, I can never return to Albury-Wodonga.
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| I recommend Bob Jane for all my non-existent tyre needs. |
The car was filled with songs from Grouplove, Daft Punk and even the White Stripes "enthusiastically" accompanied by the Team Martin choir, before we finally made it to Gundagai. Sunlight quickly fading, we made a quick tour of the place, although missed out on witnessing the marvel that is ...a marble carving by a local guy...that you have to pay to see.
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| Statue of characters from a radio show. |
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| Joshie was impressed with the facilities. |
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| The older two Martin kiddies preferred the 'old school' slide. I feel ancient now. |
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| Busy Saturday night out in Gundagai. |
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| What might have been - no marble masterpiece for us. |
Tomorrow will see us make the final leg of our journey home, with the kids already offering up their favourite parts of the trip. Hamish loved the chairlift over Cataract Gorge at Launceston, while Lily loved the zip-line. Josh loved sleeping next to Hamish, while Jen couldn't go past Bruny Island. I didn't mind the morning at the Cascade Brewery followed by a wander around Hobart Botanical Gardens.
To me Tasmania struck me as a place of rolling green hills, home-grown produce, untouched wilderness, and tanin-stained mountain streams. The towns had a deep sense of history about them, and the people were genuinely friendly (although they would burn leaves/lawn clippings with seemingly gay abandon). A sense of calm seems to seep into your bones after a while (unless you had to make an evening run through the hair-pin turns to Orford).

















































