I have taken the last few days in Australia (three in Hobart and one in Melbourne) totally unspectacular. And good photos did not really come around. Nevertheless, I want to hide nothing, I've made a lot of nice ...
So here is the little chronicle:
- I was at the 30th edition of the "Taste of Tasmania" festival. Almost 100 local producers, eg many wineries, offer their fine items for free (and lots of money to sell) for free! Hello, how cool is that? My concept: only try two white wines per winery (only two, three sips). I kept going until the ninth winery ...
- Discovered the sensational combo "Uncle Gus and the Rimshots" at the festival. Big fun. Evidence video below.
- The next evening a pub concert of said band visited in a home brewery! Indirect proof photo: old post office building in front of sensational evening sky (opposite the pub).
- visited the hobart "Salamanca Market", the most popular weekly market in Tasmania. Photo proof: Döner is a delicacy here ... See prices!
- Visit Australia's best disc golf course - with river and city views. A shame: Saturday afternoon and except me only two others on the way. Photo proof: "Home of ... Disc Golf" and view from the drop
- Walk in the botanical garden. Photo proof: something with a garden
- Randomly walked past an international WTA tennis tournament on the way back. Admission free and the very exciting three-place victory of the world ranking 96. seen ? Photo of the photograph: Mrs. Blinkova (whom I did not know before) shortly before the blow
- In the Natural History Museum Hobart again stuffed seen all the animals that I have already seen here alive. But also two animals that I have not seen in the wild: the Tasmanian devil (but I saw times in the zoo) and the Tasmanian Tiger (considered extinct for 50 years).
- Planetarium and Scienceworks, the Science and Technology Museum in Melbourne. Exactly my level ... these museums, which are actually for children. You can touch everything, try it out, play around. Glorious. Photo proof: including an Apple II Datasette and a model of the moon of a slack seven meters in diameter