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Kings Canyon

Kings Canyon Resort has a pub and a restaurant. It was still freezing and after comparing meal prices - not much different - we opted for the restaurant, which was also a shorter walk.

The next morning, we checked out the helicopter tours and were able to get a flight almost immediately. This proved to be a highlight of the trip and had the added advantage of identifying a walk into the canyon to do and another to avoid.

 

Kings Canyon Kings Canyon
Kings Canyon Kings Canyon
Kings Canyon Kings Canyon
Kings Canyon

Kings Canyon helicopter tour

 

Then came the slightly harder part - exploring some of it on foot. We took the low road.

 

Kings Canyon
Kings Canyon Kings Canyon
Kings Canyon Kings Canyon

Kings Canyon walking track

 

At one time this was cattle country. Wild cattle were herded into the canyon to be rounded into a mob that could then be taken to market. The remains of the old yards can still be seen.

 

Kings Canyon
Kings Canyon Kings Canyon

The remains of the old cattle business

 

The following day all that remained was the 320 kilometre drive back to Ayres Rock Airport this time on good roads. 

Yet it was clear on the trusty TomTom that the distance as the crow flies is only 130 kilometres. 

 

Kings Canyon to Uluru

 

The huge diversion is needed to avoid Lake Amadeus, the largest salt lake in the Northern Territory, and the adjacent Lake Neale.

In 1872 the lake's expanse proved a barrier to the explorer Ernest Giles, who could see both the as yet undiscovered Uluru and Kata Tjuta but could not reach them because the dry lake bed was unable to support the weight of his horses.

And so, it was back to Sydney where it was both cold and raining.

 

 

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Travel

South Korea & China

March 2016

 

 

South Korea

 

 

I hadn't written up our trip to South Korea (in March 2016) but Google Pictures gratuitously put an album together from my Cloud library so I was motivated to add a few words and put it up on my Website.  Normally I would use selected images to illustrate observations about a place visited.  This is the other way about, with a lot of images that I may not have otherwise chosen.  It requires you to go to the link below if you want to see pictures. You may find some of the images interesting and want to by-pass others quickly. Your choice. In addition to the album, Google generated a short movie in an 8mm style - complete with dust flecks. You can see this by clicking the last frame, at the bottom of the album.

A few days in Seoul were followed by travels around the country, helpfully illustrated in the album by Google generated maps: a picture is worth a thousand words; ending back in Seoul before spending a few days in China on the way home to OZ. 

Read more: South Korea & China

Fiction, Recollections & News

A Womens' view

 

Introduction

 

The following article presents a report by Jordan Baker, as part of her history assignment when she was in year 10 at North Sydney Girls’ High School.   For this assignment she interviewed her mother, grandmother and great-grandmother about their lives as girls; and the changes they had experienced; particularly in respect of the freedoms they were allowed.

Read more: A Womens' view

Opinions and Philosophy

Australia's $20 billion Climate strategy

 

 

 

We can sum this up in a word:

Hydrogen

According to 'Scotty from Marketing', and his mate 'Twiggy' Forrest, hydrogen is the, newly discovered panacea, to all our environmental woes:
 

The Hon Scott Morrison MP - Prime Minister of Australia

"Australia is on the pathway to net zero. Our goal is to get there as soon as we possibly can, through technology that enables and transforms our industries, not taxes that eliminate them and the jobs and livelihoods they support and create, especially in our regions.

For Australia, it is not a question of if or even by when for net zero, but importantly how.

That is why we are investing in priority new technology solutions, through our Technology Investment Roadmap initiative.

We are investing around $20 billion to achieve ambitious goals that will bring the cost of clean hydrogen, green steel, energy storage and carbon capture to commercial parity. We expect this to leverage more than $80 billion in investment in the decade ahead.

In Australia our ambition is to produce the cheapest clean hydrogen in the world, at $2 per kilogram Australian.

Mr President, in the United States you have the Silicon Valley. Here in Australia we are creating our own ‘Hydrogen Valleys’. Where we will transform our transport industries, our mining and resource sectors, our manufacturing, our fuel and energy production.

In Australia our journey to net zero is being led by world class pioneering Australian companies like Fortescue, led by Dr Andrew Forrest..."

From: Transcript, Remarks, Leaders Summit on Climate, 22 Apr 2021
 

 

Read more: Australia's $20 billion Climate strategy

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