05:31 AM05:31 AM05:31 AM

Barramundi angeln und mehr im Kakadu National Park

Of course we expected mosquitoes at the Kakadu National Park. There are quite many areas of flood and the rivers are filled up all the time of the year. But that we expected the next morning blew up my imagination. The mosquitogaze was full of these vampires that were waiting for us coming out of our tent. Continuously some of these mosquitoes were breaking in the tent. DSC03316Unfortunately there are many holes to get in. We were able to deal with these vampires but what was about the mosquitoes outside of the tent. Micha took courage flouncing down in order to get insecticide. Then the fight was just beginning. It was a carnage that caused an immense cough irritated by the toxic gas cloud that broke into the tent. The carnage was short but hard. The can was empty and all around were lying the dead bodies of the mosquitoes. That was enough time to inject oneself with insecticide. The mosquitoes, however, weren’t deeply impressed. The sun was getting hotter the mosquitoes were getting less. Now we could have breakfast with the remained bean meal in a relaxed way.

In the beauty farm, the so called facilities, we indulge in a long shower, shave, dental and skin care. In spite of all this care we need a mosquitoes repellent because the vampires don’t stop with stinging. At the reception desk we are drinking our cappuccino and are surfing through the internet.

DSC03457At one o’clock Dean picks us up to go fishing. With his boat on board we went by car through the flood area. By boat we went to a green with water plants extended scenic rivers. He talks much about the local marine wildlife, at the beginning in simply spoken english until he began to speak in common english when he noticed that we were able to understand it. During the sleep of a crocodile he told us, that the bigger ones had names. There are Tripod the three leg Croc; Blacky, which snapped off Crocs’ leg and which is being called Blacky as a result of his black colour because he just lives in freshwater. And Pluto, too.

Once an Aborigine have been walking in the everglades when his dog was eaten by an Croc. So he called the crocodile Pluto. This is an interesting and curious example of a gravestone.

Furthermore we saw the only stork of Australia, the Jabaru. We could also see other species of birds acording to Dean who haven’t ever had such a successful photo-safari with his boat. We could take a photo of the Rufus Night Heron from eye to eye. The Forest Kingfisher didn’t escape when we affraid him in order to get some photos. A famous meal of the Aborgines seem to be the Magpie Geese which appeared in droves or its eggs. The colourful Rainbow Bee Eater jumped into the water in front of us in order to catch the flying mosquitoes. Elegantly the White Bellied Seaeagle landed on the tree the secondlargest australian bird of pray and presented himself like a king for the photo shoot. The Whisteling Kite, also a raptor, is always at our side through all of Australia. We could see him like a successful hunter flying away with a snap in his claws. The funny Kakadus made us much pleasure with its curious acrobatics in the tree. Sometimes it seems to be that they hang in a helpless situation either upside down a tree or ore hingen in einer aussichtlosen Lage, entweder kopfüber an einem Ast oder gar nur noch am Schnabel mit Ihren Krallen nach einem rettenden Ast angelnd. Ein markerweichendes, aufgeregtes Geschrei kündigt einen Whisteling Kite an, der sogar noch die Dreistigkeit besitzt, auf dem kakadubesetzten Baum zu landen. Unter Protest wechseln die Kakadus zum Nachbarbaum. Lautes Schmatzen im Wasser, so Dean, bedeutet, dass der Barramundi wieder einen Fisch an der Wasseroberfläche eingesaugt hat. Die Jagdmethode ist nämlich ebenso einfach wie effizient. Der Barramundi reißt seine riesiges Maul auf und saugt durch den Unterdruck seine Beute einfach ein.

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DSC03369Es geht ans Angeln. Dean erklärt uns, dass der Wobbler (mit Haken besetzter Fischdummy) ruckartig durch das Wasser gezogen werden sollte. Dahinter vermutet der Barramundi einen kranken Fisch und stürzt sich auf ihn, so die Theorie. Er demonstriert die Praxis kurz und sehr beeindruckend, denn der erste Barrumundi hängt bereits am Haken. Dean drückt mir die Rute in die Hand und ich ziehe den 53 cm langen Barramundi an Deck. Leider liegt er mit dieser, für mich trotzdem beeindruckenden Größe, noch unter dem Fangmaß. Er wird wieder in die Freiheit entlassen. Micha und ich versuchen unser Glück und irgendwann fange ich einen, der leider mit seinen 54 cm immer noch unter den 55cm Fangmaß liegt, also zurück ins Wasser. IMG 1696 Wir fangen weitere noch kleinere Barramundis, bis Micha unser Abendessen sichert. Mit knapp über dem Fangmaß, hat dieser Fisch leider nicht so viel Glück und wird von Dean fachmännisch getötet. Später filetiert er ihn noch für uns, wir freuen uns auf etwa ein Kilogramm Barramundi-Filet zum Dinner. Um Deans Office, wie er diesen Teil des Kakadu National Parks nennt, beneide ich ihn. Überflutete Wiesen, Seerosen, überall kreischende und gackernde Vögel, gegenüber von uns taucht ein Saltie auf und geht wieder unter. Kanufahren ist hier im Übrigen zur Sicherheit der Kanufahrer verboten, denn diese scheinen von Salties manchmal attackiert zu werden, während ein Motorboot von der Form wohl weniger einem Konkurrenten ähnelt und in der Regel unbehelligt bleibt. Trotzdem scheint auch das Motorengeräusch vom machen Salties als Knurren eines Konkurrenten aufgefasst zu werden. Es gab auch schon solche Unfälle mit Motorbooten. Wir fühlen uns jedenfalls ziemlich sicher in Deans Boot und genießen den Ausflug in vollen Zügen. Gegend Abend sorgt die Sonne für eine besondere Stimmung. Die Landschaft reflektiert sich im stillen Wasser, die Vögel machen Lärm, die Fische springen und die Fliegen sind ebenso präsent.

DSC03461Unser Barramundi-Filet wird zu einem unserer köstlichsten Gerichte dieser Reise verarbeitet. Wir sind von dem zarten Fleisch überwältigt und sind uns einig, dieser Tag war definitiv einer unserer Reisehöhepunkte. Leider zwingen mich die Mücken in lange Klamotten, was unwillkürlich zu permanentem Schwitzen führt. Tja, schwitzen oder von Mücken maltretiert werden, das sind die Optionen. Trotzdem finden sie natürlich verwundbare Stellen, schon lange habe ich das Zählen den Stiche aufgegeben.

08:13 AM08:13 AM08:13 AM

Katherine Gorge und Kakadu National Park

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08:05 AM08:05 AM08:05 AM

Wie schmeckt Krokodilfleisch?

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07:18 AM07:18 AM07:18 AM

6500 Kilometer – wir haben fertig

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06:48 AM06:48 AM06:48 AM

Katherine

After breakfast we drove to Katherine and had a coffee. We searched the city for an open internet cafe and talked a bit with the owner. She told us that the restaurant next door served crododile meat – and as Staehler had not tried that before we decide to go there for dinner. In the meantime we strolled through the town and visited the tourist info to get an update about the local attractions. We booked the Breakfast Cruise through Katherine Gorge for tomorrow. They will show us the rising sun in the gorge there while we have breakfast on the boat… sounds good! Both staff there are very sure that we won’t get any croc meat in whole Katherine – we didn’t want to show them up so we didn’t say anything. Staehler enjoyed the crocodile meal although he could hardly tell any difference to the squid that was served with it. As I had to drive I could not help him with the 0.5 l red wine he had ordered … what led to heavy thirst attacks in the night ;-) . We drove about 30 km out of Katherine and parked our car right where the boat trip starts tomorrow.

03:49 AM03:49 AM03:49 AM

Tierwelt Australiens

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03:09 AM03:09 AM03:09 AM

Fahrt in den Norden

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03:08 AM03:08 AM03:08 AM

Perlen, Krokodile und Sterne – ein Tag voller Attraktionen

Today we worked through all the events we booked yesterday, well to be honest, it was more fun than work :-) . First of all we went to Willie Creek Pearl Farm. We learned a lot about the breeding and fostering of oysters. The guys aver there at Willie Creek are really competent and explained with humor and expert knowledge. We have actually gone out to the farm on a small boat and were shown some of the oysters and what has to be done so that they feel well and produce good pearls. We were told that a big saltie was living in the mangroves at the farm area and that you could often seee him. But although everyone on the boat was really trying to spot him, we saw… nothing.

But nevertheless the Trip to the cultured pearls Farm that is one of the best in Australia and a real attraction in the Broome area was worth it and contentedly we drove back to the campsite in Broome.

After some shopping in Broome, having filled up the gas tanks of our LandCruiser and the cappuccino tanks of ourselves, we headed over to the next australian attraction: DSC02894Malcolm Douglas’ Crocodile Park. Of course we could not miss the three o’clock feeding of the crocodiles. I was really impressive how these perfect killer machines that have not changed since the dinosaur ages captures their prey and slide back into the water like nothing had happened! They can see their prey on land even from under water and even when the surface is full of duckweed. It is not hard to imagine that people just disappered in the outback. Cleaning dishes in the creek in one moment, being crocodile chow the next moment… can definitly spoil the party. You should take the warning signs very serious, this much is clear. Malcolm himself had been there in the morning for a guided tour, too bad that we did not meet him personally. Especially in Germany he is very well knows and his “Walkabout with Malcolm Douglas” series is still running on german TV. He is 67 now and still very active for his Park. They still capture “problem crocs and bring them to the park, where you can see not only crocs but quite a few other rare and interesting animals.

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DSC02998The last attraction of the day was Greg’s Astro Show. We came there a little early and so we could watch Greg preparing for the show and assembling all the telescopes and stuff. We had followed his driving instructions and had seen a really huge building pit. His answer to the question what they were doing there was a very typical australian one: “They’re digging a hole” How funny… Later on we learned that the dirt for the dirt roads is dug out here…more or less what we expected. A little while later the show began and Greg started narrating. His soft voice was a perfect match to the starry sky above us and while he told us about the movements you can observe on the sky and how it all relates we began to grasp the bigger picture of it all. And suddenly all the astronomy stuff that we did not really understand before or were too lazy to think about became clear. Why are the zodiac signs moving how is the earth moving through the solar system and what does this mean in combinationwith the rotation of the earth…why does it make the stars move like they do. We play little bit with light years, the intensity of the light of the stars, the unimagable bigness and dimensions of the stars and the universe. And although quite a few clouds have appeared we can even see the rings of saturn in Greg’s telescope. Time flies and after what seemed to be only a short while we leave the scene with a content smile and not after having had a little chat with Greg about his website (www.astrotours.net) and the little astro website that I am running (www.lookatstars.com).

After a day full of attractions one better than the other we fall asleep.

03:07 AM03:07 AM03:07 AM

Staircase to the Moon – Broome

From our point of view calling Broome a big city is a bold statement. If you have travelled in the center and the north west of Australia for a while it definitly is. That is somehow the slight change of perception that happens to everyone after a while of travelling in Australia. Broome seems big enough to drive around for longer than five minutes and even big enough to drive around and get lost (well sort of… after driving another five minutes you end up some place you know ;-) )

We enjoyed strolling the mall only with a short interruption for a cappu in a nice little café.

We noticed how damp the air here in Broome is – quite a contrast to the rather dry places where we have been  before. We were sweating even more than on the days in the desert with the only difference that it doesn’t help here. The sweat does not vaporize any more and so we wait for the cooling effect in vain.

Broome has a lot more to see and do than for example Derby. There even is a museum which is open for full three hours a day. Unfortunatly we arrive about five minutes before closing time which means: No museum for us, instead we get another Cappucchino this time with view to the sea.

03:07 AM03:07 AM03:07 AM

Derby – Broome

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