Showing posts with label Queen Victoria Market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queen Victoria Market. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Melbourne gardens and museum.

May 21

We began the morning listening to the movie Bob took of the kookaburra serenade on our last day in Tassie. Fortified with muesli and yogurt  we set out to explore the Royal Melbourne Botanical Gardens. 
We walked along the Yarra River where we saw rowing clubs and sculls out for a morning row.

We must have walked almost every track in that park and spent a lot of time with our binoculars and bird book.
View from Guilfoyle's Volcano.


Inside the greenhouse.

We added some new birds to our list and Bob had fun taking lots of photos of a kookaburra. It was a sunny but cool day so all that walking was a good thing.




We climbed up into the large Shrine of Remembrance, a war memorial that had great views all over the city.
View form the top of the Shrine of Remembrance.

We wove our way back to our hotel with a few stops for more gift shopping. Bob rested while I did more blogging and photo uploading. Our plan for dinner was to find Lygon Street, we had some trouble and ended up walking for about an hour before we found it. It is known for it's Italian restaurants. We picked one at random, Bob had a nice whole soft shell crab sauce over spaghetti and I had an ordinary cannelloni stuffed with spinach and ricotta.


May 22

The weather was cold with a few showers in the morning. We were glad that the Queen Victoria Market was mostly enclosed. We headed over there for a more relaxed perusal of all the food there. Lots of fresh seafood, whole fish, meats of all kinds, amazing cheeses, breads, pastries, deli fare, fruits and vegetables...my kind of heaven as you can imagine.
Bob loved these sandwiches with the eggs on top.

Amazing chocolates.

One giant crab !!

Lots of odd prepared meats.

We took lots of great photos, bought cheeses, pastries, wine, and more raw oysters. Bob tried his first meat pie and loved it. We dropped our purchases back at the hotel and headed out to walk to the Melbourne Museum.
The architecture in this city is so varied, one street will have ornate Victorian buildings and across the street will be something ultra modern. We came across Drummond St. by luck and were enchanted by it's buildings. Shades of New Orleans ??


The Melbourne Museum is a combination of Melbourne history, natural history and Aboriginal heritage. We started with the history of Melbourne, it was a very good combination of displays and text that spotlighted points of historical interest through the decades. Their history is similar to that of California, with gold rushes, mechanization, social issues and economic depressions.
We took a break at the museum cafe for lunch then entered the Forest Gallery, a multistory indoor forest. We got to see a Satin Bower bird, busy at work on his bower, a ground nest he must build to entice the female to mate.
Satin Bower bird in the Forest Gallery of the Melbourne Museum.

We thought we would just spend a short time in the natural history section...their insect exhibit was the best Bob had ever seen. We spent at least an hour looking through the rooms of amazing displays of both, live, dead and models of insects and other arthropods.

We thought we would not spend long in their multi-tiered two story room of mammals, wrong again. While I am not a fan of taxidermied specimens, this room had the most amazing touch screens, large ones with the animals you were seeing right on them. A young girl showed us how to work them. You would touch an animal  and the screen would open a window with the animal's  range and level of endangerment.

Around the room were smaller touch screens on pivots that you could point at an animal, touch and get even more information about habitat, diet, etc...we were in awe. Another hour went by as we enjoyed this very cool technology. It was hard to leave this museum without having seen the rest of their displays. We were saturated and needed to do a bit more souvenir shopping before heading back to the hotel.
We were so glad we had purchased another dozen oysters at the market in the morning. We ate them slowly this time savoring each one. That was our "entree" which is what they call appetizers here in Oz. Bob was too tired to go out again so I slipped out and bought some takeout sushi and seaweed salad to complete our dinner.

Salamanca Market, our last day in Tasmania.

May 19 Salamanca Market

Our camp at Mt. Field was only a little over an hour from Hobart, so we took advantage of that fact to go into the special Saturday market there on Salamanca Street. It is down near the harbor.  Bob got to take more photos of sailing ships !! 

Salamanca Market is a combination farmer's market, arts and crafts fair, food court with lots of different kinds of live entertainment. Many of the crafts people are local with local products.

We loved all the wood. Bob bought himself several nice items from two different old Tassie woodturners. I was taken by all the local wool (no big surprise with all the sheep we saw) and other lovely handcrafted fare. We wandered through the whole thing buying gifts for family and friends.

Lunchtime found us over at the fish markets nearby sampling more of the Tasmanian oysters, we each ate a  juicy dozen. Two more stops, one for local whiskey available only on the Oz mainland(so smooth, ed.) and one at a bakery I had seen during our last trip to Hobart for dinner fare. It was time to head back to Mt. Field before it got dark and the pademelons came out on the highway. There is an amazing amount of roadkill on the roads here, Bob did not want to add to the slaughter.

Back at camp we grabbed our headlamps, which we could not use as we approached the bugs because it would turn them off thinking it was daylight, and headed for the short hike to Russell Falls. At night you can see glow worms, which are actually fly larva that are bioluminescent to attract their prey to their sticky webs.

On the way back we were treated to a new bird sighting, the nocturnal Tawny Frogmouth !! It was quite large.
Our food from the fancy Hobart bakery made a lovely last dinner in Tassie. Smoked salmon and caramelized onion quiche, asparagus and gruyere quiche and a roasted veggie and rice salad, yum !! For dessert I had a huge pistachio rosewater meringue.


May 20
Bob woke up early and went out to hunt for animals on our last day in Tasmania. As dawn he was treated to the serenade of a kookaburra. Their sound is truly unique and complex and they deserve their full name Laughing Kookaburra !! We did a quick hike back to Russell Falls to see it in the daylight.



It was bittersweet to turn in our camper and eventually arrive at the Hobart airport. We had one close call when the main bridge across the Derwent River was closed for a foot race of some kind. Luckily we could follow the flow of other cars detouring to another bridge that would get us to the airport. Hobart Airport was small and dingy.

Arriving in Melbourne was a bit of culture shock after the wild and wonderful national parks of Tasmania. We took a shuttle to our hotel right next to Victoria Market in the city center. After a refreshing shower we headed to the market in search of dinner.

Queen Victoria Market has been around since 1878, it is mostly enclosed halls of seafood, meats, dairy and prepared foods. Roofed but open air structures hold both organic and commercial fruits and vegetables and beyond them were halls of trashy clothes, souvenirs and other stuff all probably made in China.
We started with a dozen oysters to fortify us before we walked the rest of the market and eventually we purchased some tasty deli fare, tabouli, marinated mushroom, stuffed peppers, cheeses and bread and sweets( great almond macaroons and a fudgy brownie).


We took this back to our room then headed out to find a park with a view called Flagstaff Park, near our hotel. Besides the view we found a large lawn bowling club and enjoyed watching a dozen folks play.

Final bird list update from Taz:

Wedge Tailed Eagle
Brown Falcon
Tasmanian Native Hen
Galah
Green Rosella
Kookaburra, Laughing
Tawny Frogmouth
Pink Robin (not our kind of robin)
Flame Robin (yeah, not the same family as ours)
Scarlet Robin (yet again, not a thrush)
Dusky Robin
Satin Flycatcher
Yellow Wattlebird
Little Pied Cormorant
Magpie Lark
Black Currawong
Grey Currawong
Tasmanian Magpie
Common Blackbird