Showing posts with label bicycling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bicycling. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 February 2014

Riding the coast: Wamberal to Newcastle

Perhaps this ex-hire tandem wasn't such a great idea. On our last evening in Wamberal, Patrick's seat post socket snapped. We were so relieved it happened here and not between Tallangatta and Tumbarumba or somewhere really remote, and we were additionally relieved because another sweet family that we'd met in a children's playground invited us to stay for the night. 


Meet Andrew, Mandy, Krys and Marie. We swam in their pool, admired their chooks and hugelkultur, and were treated to dinner. The central coast certainly shared its love.


Also meet Kevin from Cougar Fabrications in Erina. Kevin and Phil fixed the tandem and had us back on the road in fifteen minutes (for a mere fifteen dollars!). These kind men really brought us much relief with grace and warmth and good cheer. 


And then, after an easy morning's ride, we stopped in a park for some lunch near The Entrance and were graced by fellow bike tourer Tom.


We invited Tom to camp with us, but warned him we are slow travellers. He was in no rush himself and we set about looking for a camp spot together.


We swapped notes on touring and the art of free camping in an increasingly private world. We pedaled and sniffed and sighted a little laneway that led down to the water's edge north of The Entrance.


It was a brief co-existence with Tom but he wasted no time immersing himself in family life. We hope to see him again at some point down the track. A truly beautiful dude.


We parted ways the next morning and continued our slow trawl up the coast to Budgewoi where we rode this old bridge onto a little island to camp for the night.


We are getting pretty used to camp life. Every tool and resource we carry must have at least two purposes, as Meg demonstrates here with some local olive oil, used for cooking and for cleaning skin in a post-bathroom reality.


People often ask about Zephyr's schooling as we travel. Our simple reply is this is school on the road, for all of us. However, a minimum of half an hour of reading a day applies and Zeph has just finished writing an article for NSW youth magazine unleash, which explains our project from his (almost twelve year old) perspective.


On leaving our little Budgewoi island we shouldered the busy Old Pacific Highway and came across telling signs of the times,


signs we didn't even have to hack or bust or edit. They seemed to already speak for themselves.


While the Abbott government is selling the country off to more global corporate power, gas frackers, big coal and every other colossal polluter he can rustle up from his big black book, we are biking the country, poaching free camping spots, and improving our fishing.


We exchanged fishing knowledges with fellow free campers, Gary, Rob and Maé in Swansea,


and learned from experienced fishing folk such as Abdul,


and these fellow non-Abbott voters.


We also practiced more Artist as Family trash retrieval while teaching our boys about the ecological problems of line fishing, not just large-scale indiscriminate commercial fishing.


For the first time on our trip we came across patches of autonomous Warrigal Greens (Tetragonia tetragonioides), also known as Indigenous, sea or New Zealand spinach.


And we were relieved to jump on another rail trail utopia, the Fernleigh Track, which enabled a cruisey and very social ride into Newcastle,


where we were spontaneously chaperoned by a fellow Fernleigh Track cyclist into the city


where we did a little shopping,


and restocked our local honey stores.


Within the first hour of our arrival in Newcastle we received two invitations to stay. The first from this awesome couple, Fiona and Phil, who we'll stay with tonight.


The social warming dimension of this trip is truly astonishing. We look forward to a couple of weeks getting to know Newcastle again. Last time we were here, nearly five years ago, we worked on this project. Coming into Newcastle today reminded us of why we love this big town so much.

Thursday, 9 January 2014

Utopian glimpses, dystopian blitzes

Some months ago we contacted the Moss Vale Community Garden to request a visit having heard from a friend it is well worth investigating. We spoke to Jill Cockram, the facilitator, who invited us to meet up when we came to town.


Jill gave us a tour of this wonderful garden based on permaculture principles and social-ecology,


she told us even daylilies (Hemerocallis fulva) are edible, all parts,


and pointed out hundreds of other edible roots, bulbs, fruits, herbs, leaf veggies and nuts, such as these hazels coming into fruit.


We picked and dug and munched and shared our knowledges,


before Jill put together an enormous bag of goodies for us to take. Thanks Jill and thanks MVCG!


Moss Vale has been good to us. We've caught up with family and old friends, we chatted on local radio and problem solved our bike situation...


We decided to take the bikes to Sydney by bus as we felt it was too dangerous to ride into the city. We wanted to have the electrics looked at to see whether they could be repaired. We also had a number of other things to do, such as visit our old friend the Surry Hills Food Forest.


In just three and a half years since we planted out this flat church lawn, incredible things have happened involving free access to the sun, rain and soil; tended by a loving community.



While in Sydney we also stopped in at the Art Gallery of NSW to witness our small part in the earth-sensible show The Yeomans Project, which was produced by artists Ian Millis and Lucas Ihlein.


We visited a small group of gentle folk held in limbo by Dickensian ASIO bureaucracy at Villawood Immigration Detention Centre.


We staged our own feed-in outside a restaurant where a few days earlier a mother had been asked to finish breastfeeding her child in the toilets as she was offending customers (our intention was to feed inside but it was closed when we arrived). We took this photo as part of an online campaign.


And, as a novel tourist caper, we rode across the Sydney Harbour Bridge to family digs in the northern burbs.


Near Artarmon we found naturalised bananas growing in a public reserve,


and in Willoughby we killed two unwanted backyard roosters,


which we roasted gratefully, stuffed with homegrown lemons.

We have had a full plate of a time in Sydney, and we are looking forward to returning to the bush where we will have more opportunities to forage, hunt and glean, pedal and camp in air that is clean and practice, once again, a logic that is lean.

Friday, 3 January 2014

Preserving fruit, extending kin

We made it to Moss Vale! 929 kms from our home in Daylesford, Victoria to the Southern Highlands of NSW, averaging a leisurely 24 kms per day.


We joined kin from far and wide to become artist as extended family for a lovely, warm but nonetheless strange little timezone between Christmas and New Year.


We caught up with some old friends and reunited with Zeph so that finally all our bike seats are full.


It feels good to have onboard again what Zeph brings to the gang.


We have yabbied and swam in the Wingecarribee River,


and foraged for wild cherry plums to turn into fruit leather.


Although not all reached the bag...


The ones brought home we squashed and mashed with our hands,


and then pushed the pulp through a sieve


leaving all the pips and skin.


We spread out the pulp over grease-proof paper on a large-sized pizza tray


and dried in a low oven for about 8 hours. Alternatively you can dry the paste in the sun over several days.


The result is a delicious, sweet and nutritious fruit leather which is preserved for many moons with no additives or added sugar.

From we five here, we wish you a happy and health-filled year ahead.