June 27, 2007

Tomaree National Park

Tomaree is in Port Stephens, about 40 minutes northeast of Newcastle. We've been up that way three times now and it's been cloudy each trip. Can't wait to see the place on a clear blue day, but it's still a beautiful area and is a popular second-home location for Novocastrians and Sydneysiders. We went to Tomaree in early June to see the migrating whales, traveling south to north, headed for warmer equatorial waters. With binoculars, we were able to watch a pair of for quite some time, tracking their progress by the location of small boats that were trailing them beyond the islands.


The Sporting Life





June 10, 2007

Sydney Impressions

Made my fourth trip to the city last weekend. A one-day trip to have lunch with my cousin Steve and dinner with neighbors from Squirrel Hill. Still a lot to see, like museums, the botanical gardens, and a long ferry ride around the harbor.

The photos here, from earlier visits, include shots of Town Hall, an interior view of the Powerhouse Museum, the shadow of the Sydney Tower, a clock at Central Station, mileage markers at Kings Cross, the Queen Victoria Building (a fancy shopping mall/arcade), and the St. James City Rail station.








Sunday at the Beach, After the Flood

Novocastrians (people from Newcastle) flocked to Nobby's Beach Sunday to see the stranded coal boat.





June 8, 2007

Pictures from the Flood--Queen's Birthday Weekend

One day you're having lunch at Nobby's Beach (NOTE: This picture was taken in January, in summer), the next there's a six-story tall tanker running over your boogie board! (By the way, that's a salmon, sliced beets and lettuce sandwich, and a can of Kirk's Creaming Soda. Really delicious!)
Nobby's Light is in the background of the two photos. (NOTE: I did not take the tanker photo. It's from the ABC website. I tried to see the boat yesterday, but the pelting rain and fierce wind drove me back home.) In the aerial view, Sarah's hospital is located just behind and to the right of the row of white high rises reaching out toward the beach, just above the prow of the boat.

Here are Sarah's impressions from last night, in the midst of the storm: "It has been raining now for over 24 hours. An enormous Panamax size coal ship was stranded on the the beach today by high winds. The crew was rescued by helicopter. The eye of the storm came. Then the rain began again. The streets of Newcastle are flooded. I had to wade through a foot of water to get out of the hospital. On our way home from work today, we saw cars stranded in the flooded streets, water up to the windows. In outlying areas, rivers have filled that have been empty for seven long, drought filled years. People have been swept off of bridges. Newcastle is in chaos. We drove down street after city street, only to turn back when the flood waters became too deep at the intersections. We finally made it home, driving riskily through water as high as the body of the car, water washing over the windshield. That was almost 2 hours ago - and it's still raining. Pouring. The water drums on the metal roof of our house. But our street is high enough to stay dry. For now. It's still raining."

It was the biggest storm here in 3o years, and nobody could remember the streets flooding in Newcastle. The last big storm was also the last time a coal boat grounded and the last time a major helicopter rescue was undertaken. That ship, the Sygna, still sits at Stockton Beach, just north of town. It is a tourist attraction now and the largest wreck on the Australian coast. Good for that somewhat secluded location, but a similar landmark on Nobby's Beach would be a real shame.

These pictures are all from our neighborhood, Hamilton (North, to pinpoint it for the locals), within five blocks of our house on Buchanan Street. The SES van had been abandoned overnight--you can see the waterline mark just under the red stripe. All the cars at the big intersection of Samdon and Donald had also been abandoned.
Around 1AM to 2AM cyclonic winds hit town, blowing part of the roof off of a building at Tudor and Bridge Streets, one block from Nicholas and Peter's school. Big trees were knocked down, including the one below, across the street from the Hamilton Library. I will never forget feeling the house shake after one windy blast, then the bed gently shuddering a couple of times with the next gust.

Nicholas and I took a walk around 9:30 PM and were astonished to see water pooled on the sidewalk just two houses away and then the rest of the block flooded, cars parked in the middle of the street, and Gregson Park completely submerged. We walked up and down a couple of nearby blocks trying to find a way to get to the park. We waded through some water up to our shins, but otherwise, no go. Or at least, we didn't have any reason to go waist deep.

The next morning I expected to still see water everywhere, but it was all gone, except for huge pools remaining in Gregson Park and covering the Hamilton Bowling Club lawns. But the damage had been done. The entire block of Bibby Street, for instance, had been flooded 1/3 to 1/2 way up the front doors. Since most Hamilton houses are one-story, many people had evacuated overnight. Newcastle got 333 millimeters of rain; about 13 inches (approx. 25 millimeters = 1 inch). Some parts of the region got over 400 millimeters. For comparison, Pittsburgh averages 37 inches annually and just over 4 inches in June, the rainiest month.

Newcastle had a big earthquake in 1989, just after Christmas, and Hamilton was the epicenter. Many buildings in the Hamilton business district and beyond were knocked down or seriously damaged, a dozen or so people died and hundreds were injured. So there's no comparing the final impact of the flood to the quake, at least in Hamilton. However, the quake itself lasted only a few seconds, while this natural disaster--as officially designated by the New South Wales state government-- went on for 24 hours of wind and rain and hit Sydney, too. So in one sense, the flood was much more engaging for the community. People listened to and called in to ABC radio all day for reports of closed streets, etc., and everyone followed the progress of the boat grounding and helicopter rescue. And I'm sure many celebrated, at least in the backs of their minds, the (temporary?) end of the drought.

June 7, 2007

Around Hamilton Public School

Nicholas and Peter attend Hamilton Public School, founded in 1858. It's just a couple of blocks from our house, across Tudor Street from Gregson Park. (Here's the school's website http://www.hamilton.ps.education.nsw.gov.au/links.htm)

This is the view from Tudor Street, the main road through Hamilton and a major bus route into downtown Newcastle, about a 10 minute ride away.
The Tudor Inn Motel is across the street from the school's main entrance. I think the motel might be located here partly because of the huge horse racing track, Broadmeadow Racecourse, a couple of blocks away. Racing is fortnightly and it is apparently a regular stop on the Australian circuit.

The Hotel Bennett is also across the street from the school, a block up Steel Street from the Tudor Motel. It is one of about a half dozen traditional Australian pub/restaurants/slots and betting parlors in the neighborhood. The others are all located on Beaumont Street, the main business district, about three blocks from the school.

This is the main entrance to Gregson Park, across Tudor Street from the school's main entrance.

This is a view of the back of the school, across the street from the Bennett Hotel. The steeple in the background is St. Peter's Anglican Church. The school grounds once had both a high school and primary school, and the oldest buildings date back to when Hamilton was known as Pit Town, for the coal mines.






Historic Newcastle Buildings