A Taste of Tasmania – Part Two ‘To Linger In Launceston’
Despite the fact this town shuts down at 9.00pm at night, day time Launceston has a lot of charm, unexpected surprises and the Boags Brewery.
For the second largest town in Tasmania the city centre is pocket-sized and easily walkable in a day. Based in the Tamar Valley Launceston is the gateway to a large wine growing region and Ben Lomond national park. Delve into this city and you will come up with a fistful of surprises.
The first surprise was when I decided to walk to Coles through the City Park to buy some food for breakfast and found Japanese Macaque Monkeys.
Flowers I expected, quaint cottages and botanical wonders were anticipated
but the monkeys were an unusual addition.
Now in yesterdays post I mentioned that the hostel we stayed in had an interesting history and one that I only found out about when I hung around the lobby waiting for people to turn up so we could go explore the city.
How about that Melbourne City sprung from a meeting in this hotel – heady stuff indeed.
First call of the day was to the information centre to purchase a national park entry ticket – 60 dollars for the car and passengers for two months (entry to all national parks in Tasmania). Definitely the way to go as an individual park entry fee is 24 dollars per time. I then decided to walk down to the river to Queen Victoria Museum because and this was the second surprise of the day the museum and art gallery were free. On the way I passed colonial buildings and the Boags Brewery (which has tours). Under the old signage I met a stranger from Melbourne who was drunk, very happy and extremely chatty.
He informed me that he loved Tasmania and had come over to live because he had “had to get out of Melbourne”. I decided not to pursue that line of questioning, move on and miss out on sampling some of the local brew in the specialist pub we were also standing outside of because I had a feeling that he would follow me in and tap me up for a beer.
The walk along the river was delightful, the boardwalk was the old railway line and I mooched along in the sun watching the black swans dip and sway gracefully in the shallows and checked out the scenery.
Now for the third surprise – the Moscow State Circus was in town and some of its star performers were chilling out in the field next to the museum.
The museum is centered in and around in the old working factory that produced steam engines. It has a free bus that will take one back to town to the other part of the museum which is an art gallery (also free of charge).
All this tramping around was exhausting so we caught the free bus back and headed for the nearest coffee shop. In my next post I will take you to the stunning Cataract Gorge, just a 10 minute walk away from Launceston town centre.
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Some truly lovely photos here!
Wonderful photos!
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I Love it! Thanks for sharing! I am even more sad now that I missed out on visiting Tas! Next time I’m in Aus for sure!
Sounds like you were having a fab time! You are making me long for a holiday!!! 🙂
Now there’s a place I’d never think to visit but from your description it would be worth bypassing a grand tour of main Australia to spend some time in Tasmania. Good selection of photos – really gives a sense of your experiences.
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I’ll never be able to go there…but thanks to you I can certainly see what I’m missing…
Fascinating to see ‘the ancient capital of Cornwall’ on the other side of the world. Lovely pictures.
thanks GK – – good point and Launceston in England is very different – although when I saw the watermill ………….
Nice post…..I like the monkeys and the angle you photographed the pot of flowers.
thank you Barbara, The monkeys shorts came out well – I had two gos at it and used my telephoto the second time.
What a fantastic gallery … wonderful – thanks for bringing me with you – never seen a black swan in real life .. they are stunning. Baby monkey .. adorable.
baby monkey desperately cute 🙂 aned I love black swans – rare in England – not in Australia
It’s the second photo I seen from Australia this week of black swans … don’t know if we have them wild in Europe at all ..
UK used to have black swans but even then they were quite a rare sight. I’m not sure of the situation now. There are a lot of white ones though
Yes, the Queen is the … guardian for all swans in UK – so that’s why they have so many *smile
ahh that would explain it 🙂
Your photos are lovely. I wish we’d had your weather when we were there. It was pouring rain and freezing cold, so we really enjoyed the museum and spent several hours there!
it has to be said that we were extremely lucky with the weather – the only bad day we had was leaving melbourne – mind you nights in a tent were a bit brassic
The rain didn’t stop us doing anything…we just got out the raincoats and umbrellas!
Looks fantastic would love to visit Tasmania one day
Lovely to travel virtually along with you. Pretty eclectic shots, historic buildings, loved the brewery and the blacksmithing, but couldn’t quite get the Japanese macaque context! Were they in an enclosure, or roaming free?
in an enclosure 🙂
Thanx for sharing this great shots so we can go around these places by pics. 🙂
Love those aimless days exploring a city on food, going where the moment takes you. Reminds me of my time in New Orleans. Great post and great pictures.
thanks Hazel
Looks interesting!! You take really good photos, and I’m particularly interested in the blacksmith shop…
thank you RR
Enjoying this trip with you…
Love your photos, a different way of looking at something I have seen many times before.
I love cataract gorge, can’t wait to see what you show us.
Love that they had a free bus to take you between the museum and art gallery, that $60 National Park fee is great after 3 parks the rest are free and there are so many NP in Tassie
A very interesting tour of the area. I enjoyed it
What a great set of photos.
It’s interesting how all our major cities (or states?) have a different feel..I’d like to have a wander round Launceston after seeing your photos :-), thanks
Lovely photos – you’re really tempting me…
wonderful pics – looks a gorgeous place, lovely post thank you
thank you for the tour, wonderful photographs 🙂
glad you enjoyed it – just wait for the cradle mountain instalment!
Thank you for taking me with you through your pictures
pleasure Chris – very glad you enjoyed them
Nice photos. How I wish I could visit this place one day. (crossingmyfingers) ^_^
Keep tuned and I’ll take you on a virtual tour 🙂
Loved looking at your photos.
Great shots! 🙂