This Adventurous Age

Adventures travelling and working around Australia.


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2019 Life and Travels June (3)

JUNE  2019  (3)   BIRTHDAY PARTY WITH A DIFFERENCE

On a Saturday in June we departed home, mid-morning, to drive to Melbourne. For me, it would be my first trip back to the Big Smoke since our move last year. John had been back once, when he drove down and stayed overnight, to attend a sister’s birthday party.

Couey was to be left home alone. She was quite used to us going out for shopping trips and the like, but this was going to be for a longer time. I was fairly confident she would be fine, but did organize with one set of neighbours – also dog people – to keep an ear out for any distress signals.

The drive to Melbourne was quite straightforward. Even enjoyable. The Calder Highway extends between Mildura and Melbourne. Conversion of its busier southern end to a freeway standard road began in 1972, the year my daughter was born, and continued in increments until last year. The completion of the Ravenswood junction then meant that, effectively, Bendigo and Melbourne are linked by some 135kms of freeway. Said daughter had now turned 46!

The drive from home to Fitzroy took us two hours. Once we left the freeway, the Saturday morning traffic through Brunswick and Carlton was slow going.

The reason for our journey was to attend a friend’s 80th birthday celebration – and his wedding! The venue was St Mark’s Church – old and traditionally atmospheric.

St Marks Church, Fitzroy

We were an hour early for the service and sat on the lawn area outside, eventually finding some people John knew to chat to. The couple being married were long standing friends of John’s from before he and I met; in fact, he had been at uni with the bride. So the couple had been together for many years, but had now decided to formalize things.

After a very pleasant service, afternoon tea type foods and drinks were served as all the guests mingled outside on the lawns. Apart from the newly married couple, I knew no-one. Their home is in Canberra, so our social circles have not overlapped.

By 4pm, John had enough socializing and standing around and suggested we leave, even though the speeches were yet to begin. I was quick to agree. We had managed to find a parking spot in a side street not too far from the church, for which I was grateful, given the state of my back after all the standing about.

On the way home, stopped at the big service centre at Diggers Rest – toilet and coffee! John asked for an expresso coffee. He really did need to brush up on his coffee terminology. What he  thought he was getting was a cappuccino. What he received was a black coffee. Not happy.

Stopped off at a Chinese restaurant in Kangaroo Flat, where we’d had food from before, and bought some takeaway to be our evening meal.

All was fine at home. Our lovely neighbour had earlier texted that she’d gone to check on Couey and all seemed well. Dog seemed pleased to have her pack back, though – especially he who feeds her dinner.

I was pleased to have found out for myself what the drive to Melbourne down the Calder Freeway was like. It was new to me because, before we’d moved here, our route from these parts to the outer east of the city had been the “back way”, via Heathcote, Seymour and Yea.

A good day, but tiring. My back was sore from all the standing.

I doubt very much that we will ever again attend an 80th birthday party like that one!


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2019 Life and Travels June (2)

JUNE 2019   (2)     MICROBAT

Our home has a small, high portico sheltering the front door. Going in and out, one tends to be focused on what is straight ahead – either a keyhole, or a step not to trip over. But, coming home from drinks with the neighbours, for some reason John looked up whilst I was fumbling with the keys. No, not too much wine, just a number of still unfamiliar keys on the ring!

He noticed a small brown blob up in the porch corner. It kind-of looked like a little critter of some kind, but nothing I had seen before. We studied it for a while, using our bird binoculars to get a better idea of its appearance.

Large spider??

Some Googling told me that we probably had a microbat sheltering up there. I was familiar with fruit bats, but had never heard of microbats. So…

There are 24 different species of microbat in Victoria, all protected wildlife and some very rare. They are small, weighing only a few grams, even if the fur/hair(?) makes them look slightly larger. They have large ears and small eyes – guess that’s because they navigate by sonar signals?

Insect eaters, microbats will eat their body weight in insects in one night of feeding. Some prefer moths, others different bugs, some mosquitoes. So they are amongst nature’s pest controllers and thus really important, environmentally.

Microbats give birth to a live baby bat, or two. Some prefer to live in caves, others in tree hollows or even cracks and under bark. If there is access, some will live inside roofs – but they don’t cause any damage.

Some of the bats that John used to see flying about in the caves when we were at Pungalina were no doubt NT varieties of same. Since the AWC took over Pungalina I have read of their research work on the ghost bats that live in the caves there. These are Australia’s largest microbat.

I had no idea what type of microbat our little critter was, but really liked that it was there. It had the sweeetest little face. When we looked closely, there were some little droppings under where it was perched – like little mouse poo. So it must have been there for a little while. However, it disappeared after a few days.

Like much of our native wildlife, microbats have been affected by clearing of forests and bushland habitats.

I decided to buy a microbat nesting box to put up on a sheltered area of wall, in the hope that we might attract a permanent resident.

Our microbat visitor