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Saturday, November 24, 2018

Gulgong Gathering

The dictionary definition of a gathering is a meeting or assembly held for a specific purpose. In this instance that purpose was a 4-day Spring ‘fly-in’ for members of the Australisian Comanche Society….owners and pilots of Piper Comanche airplanes. And so it was that last weekend some thirty odd members descended on the small picturesque  New South Wales town of Gulgong and where ZK-BAZ proudly joined an impressive line-up of Comanche aircraft on the privately owned Gulgong (YGGG) aerodrome.
 
Gulgong countryside
     


Some of the Comanche line at Gulgong (YGGG)



Besides being depicted on Australia’s first $10 bank note, Gulgong's unique appeal lies in the fact that it abruptly came into being in the 1870’s before surveyors could turn it into just another country town. Consequently the streets wind and meander through a picturesque and well-preserved settlement of weatherboard, iron, stone and brick buildings with old-fashioned iron-lace verandas, tiny wooden cottages, horse troughs and hitching rails. The result is a gold mining town that once was home to 20,000 inhabitants and is now suspended in the aspic of history. Long may it last…!







The commaradie and congeniality of the Gulgong Gathering is uniquely expressed in this poem by Bazflyer2...

They gathered at the bowls club
on a sunny Gulgong morn
The Comanche lads and lasses
taking the greens by storm

With no regard for bias and
their skips plaintive cries
They hurl the bowls from end to end
their eye upon the prize

Camaraderie and Mate-ship
kept them from a fight
At the rate they are all playing
the games could take all night

They all agree to grace the bar
and gobble down the lunch
Patted each other on the back and
declared them self a bunch, of

Talented aviators the skies being where
they loved it best
They all retired from the bowls and
gave themselves a rest.

Thanks to Jeff Hutchinson the weekends
been a great success
With so many varied personalities
it could have been a mess

But it’s Camaraderie and Mate-ship
that constitutes the prize
Safe flying all you aviators
enjoy the Aussie skies. 
  
Gulgong was also a curtain call for the Bazflyer’s current Australian safari. It was time once again to fly BAZ over the Tasman Sea and return home to Taupo. An assessment of forecast weather conditions confirmed a sooner rather than later departure. Even then weather conditions for last 150 NM into Auckland were greatly less than optimal and unavoidable. After experiencing turbulence, snow and zig-zag radar vectors due to a backlog of IFR traffic, the Bazflyers were pleased to park BAZ outside Air Centre One at Auckland International Airport. 

Once again Mike announces our safe return on his MRC Blog http://mrcaviation.blogspot.com/2018/11/baz-heads-offshore-and-returns-updated.html
 
Commencing from Port Macquire (YPMQ) to Lord Howe Island (YLHI) for customs formalities, then onto Auckland (NZAA) and Taupo (NZAP) was 1295 NM and took just on 8 hours. Total safari flight time from departing Taupo 18th September and returning 20th November was 64 hours.  
 

 
Sun-up departure from Port Macquire, Australia, for Taupo, New Zealand



Sunday, November 11, 2018

Rememberance Day

Visit almost any city or town along Australia’s eastern seaboard at this time of the year and you’ll be treated to the visually joyful and sensory splendour of flowering jacaranda trees. The tree is believed to have been introduced from Brazil in the 1850’s. Since then the widespread and prolific planting of this purple flowering tree, along streets, around houses and in parks, has literally transformed it into an Australian icon. Indeed, it is difficult to imagine a time when jacarandas did not rain purple.


The jacaranda tree is immortalised in one of Australia’s most famous paintings, called ‘Under the Jacaranda’. Painted in 1903 by R Godfrey Rivers. The painting is displayed at the Queensland Art Gallery. 




This morning while travelling by vehicle the Bazflyers stopped in the Queensland rural town of Beaudesert. It was approaching 11am as we joined a small assembly of women and men at the town’s WW1 memorial. Everyone stood silently together in remembrance. Precisely one hundred years ago, at 11am on the 11th of November, armistice was announced. World War One officially ended. A war that took the lives of more than 80,000 ANZACs. Many more were wounded.






Standing at the war memorial today it was difficult for a Bazflyer to imagine how the good folk of Beaudesert reacted when the news of armistice reached them that day 100 years ago. However, there is one thing that has not changed. On that day, just as it was today, the jacaranda trees were resplendent in their rich purple blossoms.




Every year on the anniversary of armistice, it’s as if the jacaranda tree had an ordained purpose, it weeps tears of purple rain. It is a tree that blossoms in remembrance of the men and women who gave their lives for us. Magically, this most beautiful flowering tree also inspires....


“The jacaranda flames on the air like a ghost,

Like a purer sky some door in the sky has revealed.”

Excerpt from ‘The Jacaranda’ by Douglas Stewart, from The Dosser in Springtime (1946)

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Botanical Wonderland

The value of having a clear vision for whatever you wish to achieve is often touted as the most important element of success. However, when combined with creative innovation the extraordinary becomes possible. The Bazflyers would say that Frank Shipp must have been driven by such ideals when in 2005 he set out to turn his cattle property into what is now the Maleny Botanical Gardens.


Maleny is a small settlement comfortably nestled high in the coastal ranges about two hours drive north of Brisbane. Using the geographicly unique Glasshouse Mountains and surrounding rainforest as a giant backdrop, Frank has creativity applied his brand of innovation to the steep bush-clad landscape. The result is a lush oasis of waterfalls, ponds, plants and walking paths; and 16 acres of botanical wonderland. 








Frank’s remarkable achievement was definitely not lost on the Bazflyers who in a past life created their own 5 acre rural garden. Furthermore, it was truly inspiring to learn that Frank’s vision continues...he is working to make Maleny Botanical Gardens the best in the world.







Sunday, November 4, 2018

Closing the Big Loop

It’s been eight weeks since the Bazflyers arrived at Gold Coast Airport following a 7-hour non-stop flight across the Tasman Sea from New Zealand in Piper Comanche ZK-BAZ. And so began a big loop out west. A journey of over 40 flight hours covering a distance of nearly 11,000 kms. The big loop was closed on Friday when BAZ touched down at Archerfield, Brisbane. 

The big loop out west


Jet Base Archerfield and an opportunity to wash the accumulated red dust off BAZ



Friday, November 2, 2018

Beechworth

The small picture-postcard town of Beechworth, tucked away in the Victorian High Country, came into being after the discovery of gold back in 1852. Like most historical gold strikes of that era, fast-tracked wealth delivered some colourful characters. So legend has it, one of the candidates in Beechworth’s first council election campaigned riding a horse with shoes of gold, a piece of local history that is celebrated every year with the town’s annual Golden Shoes carnival.


However, it was a rather different type of gold rush that bought the Bazflyers into Beechworth. The former railroad tracks that once linked settlements along the area’s picturesque valleys have nowadays given way to cycle trails. https://www.railtrails.org.au/trail?id=50&view=trail


The Murray to Mountains Rail-Trail attracts more than 100,000 cyclists each year into the area, supporting accomodation providers and all manner of eating establishments. Not only is cycling the new golf, it has every prospect of being a new gold rush for Beechworth.


Beechworth Post Office



Cycle Trail going into Bright



Breakfast at Lupo’s was as good it gets but the porridge was even better.


Great food all along the way could easily convert a Bazflyer into a foodie.


Bazflyers unequivocally recommend Nigel for the friendliest bike hire and shuttle service.