I got up early and caught the bus to the Blue Mountains. The driver was a charming Aussie bloke who offered to take any pictures I wanted for me because I was traveling alone. Bless.
Once we were back on the way, the driver assured us that he could shave off the time lost and keep us on schedule.
The drive up was lovely, the mountains aren't particularly
tall, but the range itself is very old and very long. There are a lot of
small communities clustered around the main road, but once you get a
little away from them there's a whole lot of unexplored land - just two
years ago, some hikers discovered a tree in a forgotten valley that had, up to that point,
only been seen in fossil form. This tree strain dates back to the Jurassic period.
There are a lot of cliff faces throughout and valleys that dead end, so the only way through the mountains is along the ridge line.
We stopped at Echo Point, which is just outside of the
resort town of Katoomba. The view was stunning. The Blue Mountains get
their name from Eucalyptus trees, the oil of which has a blue sheen
under the sunlight.
There are three limestone formations here called the
Three Sisters. Legend has it that a gunji (medicine man) was out with
his three daughters, and while he searched for plants for his ceremonies,
the girls threw rocks off the cliffs. This had the unfortunate effect of waking a bunyip (a local bogeyman
creature). The bunyip threatened the girls and the gunji used his magic
bone to turn them into stone to protect them. He then had to run from
the bunyip, but couldn't get out of the valley. He turned himself into a
lyre bird, which made it so he could escape, but in the process he
dropped the magic bone so none of them could be turned back.
The views really were fairly spectacular.
There was an Aboriginal cultural center at the first lookout, and the tour company paid for our tickets to
watch their cultural performance by way of apology for the delay. I found the legend of how the didjeridu
(as spelled in the display) was discovered. A young warrior named Yidiki was out
walking one day and heard a strange sound, and he soon realized it was the sound
of the wind going through a hollow log. He picked up the log and blew
it to the sky, and the sawdust and termites that came out created the
Milky Way. He went back to the village, but after a few days they kicked
him out as initially he was only blowing directly through the log,
which created only one sound over, and over, and over. Eventually, out in the bush, he learned the
loose lip technique (which allows for variations in pitch and rhythm)
of playing by trying to mimic the animals he saw. He was eventually welcomed back to his village.
From there, we continued on to the next leg of our tour, the Jenolan Caves. Tune in next week, for a whole bunch of pictures of, well, that.

















Wow, Janet that is beautiful!!! It sounds like you are having the time of your life!!!
ReplyDeleteIt has been a really amazing adventure!
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