Saturday, March 5, 2011

Eden

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".


We visited Boyd tower, named for the pioneering Scotsman Benjamin Boyd, who established a whaling company, among numerous other business ventures, along the NSW coast in the 1840s. The sandstone tower was formerly used as a whale lookout.

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.

The whale men of Eden were joined in their hunts by a pod of killer whales, led most notably by "Old Tom". The Orcas would herd larger whales into the harbour and actually assist the whalers in killing them. The men rewarded their helpers by allowing them to feed on the carcasses of the dead whales.

Several rivers empty into the calm waters of the bay, making it ideal for kayaking.

No comments:

Post a Comment