"Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale - a tale of a fabulous trip - that started from a tropic port with a two-hour trip - a two hour trip."
With midwinter's shorter days and cooler temperatures and quiet times on the garden front at home here in Brisbane, the opportunity to join the family on a trip north was too good to pass up.
Last Saturday, I headed to the airport for a one hour flight to Gladstone - this story's 'tropic port' - a regional city about 500 km north of Brisbane. From there a connecting bus whisked me directly to the marina where I met up with my brother Tony's family, and we boarded the boat for the two hour cruise to Heron Island, a coral cay about 90 km from the mainland at the southern end of the Great Barrier Reef.
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Looking back at the mainland as we leave Gladstone harbour. |
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One of the little islands just off the mainland. |
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A humpback whale migrating to warmer waters. |
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Our destination, Heron Island. |
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Arriving at the jetty. |
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First glimpse of the beach adjoining the jetty. |
There were friendly locals waiting to greet the new arrivals. This was the view from the jetty - luckily human-'friendly' black and white tip reef sharks and lemon sharks.
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Swim little fishies, swim! |
Heron Island was first settled by Europeans with the opening of a turtle canning factory in the 1920's. Fortunately for these beautiful creatures, it quickly became unviable as a business due to the fluctuating turtle population. The island has been a tourist resort since the 1930s. In 1943 it was declared a national park, and eight years later the University of Queensland's (my alma mater) research centre was established.
Today the resort accommodates about 200 guests and 100 staff, and the research centre is one of the world's foremost specialising in the ecology of the coral reef.
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The island's namesake herons - now reclassified as the Eastern Reef Egret. |
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Happily installed in our beachfront apartments |
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A pair of egrets - the different colours are still the same species. |
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Views of the beach in front of our apartments at high tide. |
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A little further along North Beach. |
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Dusk - Day One |
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Just offshore this group of about four sharks were carving through a school of fish. |
The same beach looked quite different at low tide the next day when we joined a reef walk with one of the marine biology students as our guide.
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Sea cucumbers were all over the reef. This black one is alongside a clump of turtle weed once believed to have been a staple of the sea turtles' diet. |
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The blue zigzag towards the centre of the picture is the mantle of a giant clam. They come in a great variety of colours, and each mantle is as unique as a fingerprint. |
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Another clam |
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This mauve and the brown coral below are referred to as day corals, because the coral polyps are active in the daytime, unlike most which are nocturnal. |
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This reminds me of cornelli embroidery. |
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Looking back to the main administration building, bar and jetty (far right). |
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The mauve tips on this coral remind me of asparagus. |
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Clam with black mantle. |
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Beautiful turquoise-coloured mantle |
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Hannah, our guide, with a sea cucumber - a relation of sea urchins and starfish. |
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Starfish and turtle weed |
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My niece Yasmin and the starfish |
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Another variety of sea cucumber to the top of this clam. I think this was called a Feathermouth (or feathertop?). |
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The gantry once used to unload passengers and cargo. |
Hope you enjoyed this look at my first few days on Heron Island. Up to this point, the photos are from my faithful Lumix DMC-FH25 'point and shoot', but I finally lashed out and bought a new digital SLR. In my next post I'll show you my first experiments with it as I focus my attention (pun intended) on the island's birdlife.
I really ENJOYED this family trip with you Marisa, and I learned so much.
ReplyDeleteI have always wanted to visit the Great Barrier Reef, but knew I would have to learn to snorkel/dive first.
It's nice to know that there are some areas of the reef that can be visited at low tide.
What lovely creatures and lovely colours. Great photos by the way.
Heron Island seems like paradise.
I didn't care for the turtle canning in its history though.
Thanks Virginia. It is a lovely place and I think you can have a very pleasant visit without scuba diving. It is great to snorkel though; the variety of brilliantly coloured reef fish is amazing.
DeleteOh, the sand, the water, the herons, so beautiful, and all those interesting little creatures in the water!
ReplyDeleteYep - the perfect winter mini-break, Mac.
DeleteThank you for taking us along, and for taking enough photos to give a real sense of the place. The waters around here are so full of stuff, plankton and otherwise, they are never that clear and blue. It is rare thing to go into the water and still see your feet.
ReplyDeleteIt really is pretty special everywhere along the Great Barrier Reef. I just hope we are smart enough to protect it and all its inhabitants properly.
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