For our last road trip of the (southern hemisphere) summer, we drove to Eden, a fishing and former whaling port on the south coast of New South Wales, almost at the border with Victoria. |
The town is not touristy at all - a world away from the crowded beach resorts further north. |
Grabbing an afternoon coffee on the harbour. |
Eden is located on Twofold Bay, with miles of stunning coastline stretching in either direction. |
Disaster Bay is named for the many shipwrecks that occurred here between the 1850s and 1950s. |
Fishermen are a common sight along the rocky coastline. |
We visited Greencape lighthouse on an unseasonably cool and stormy evening. |
There was no one there but us and these guys... |
a Swamp Wallaby... |
and an Eastern Grey Kangaroo. Aren't they adorable when they chew? |
The weather was better for our coastal walk the next day. |
We enjoyed a sunny afternoon on the rocks with silver gulls, cormorants and terns. |
The unbelievably blue water of the "Sapphire Coast". |
It sits on a bluff that is now part of Ben Boyd National Park. |
From every direction, there are breathtaking views across the Tasman Sea. |
We also visited what's left of the historic Davidson whaling station, which was in operation on Twofold Bay for over a century, from 1828 to 1930. |
Gate to the caretaker's residence. |
Several rivers empty into the calm waters of the bay, making it ideal for kayaking. |
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