I
thought we had a misty morning but Steve pointed out there was no breeze and
cars were going past on the main road so it was just dust!!
A
new van came in through the night. Berkeley is a friend of Tassie Mick’s. He
had a memorable visit to Cairns when they were up at Cape Melville he had a
heart attack and had to be helicoptered out. Doing well now though. He had
built his own caravan so we checked it out.
Gayle’s
friend who runs Gold Prospecting Aust told her that she and others were meeting
the Minister for Environment or something regarding keeping National Parks free
and open for prospectors in Victoria. There is an election coming up.
Into
town for a sightseeing day. Into the Info centre to purchase tickets for the
Talking Trams. It is situated in a lovely old building, the Bendigo Post
Office. Found a good Australia gold
detecting book by Doug Stone with maps so “Merry Christmas Steve”. A lot of the
others had these maps so thought it might help. Headed down to the Central
Deborah Gold Mine where the Trams leave from. Decided not to do the mine tour
as we had done one at Hill End.
This
Tram looked like an art gallery – even had paint brushes etc inside.
Went
inside to check out the displays and listen to the videos about the mines in
Bendigo. Amazing to think all these mines are underneath the town and some go a
kilometre down and spread for kilometres under the town.
A
16 year old Bendigo boy, Frederick James Kelly, designed and built this model
between 1891-1894. It was a replica of
the mining equipment used during that time to recover gold from the
depths below Bendigo. It is still functional over100 years later which shows
his master craftsmanship. I videoed it working – great.
They listed the gold process along the edge of the display.
The
Tram was fun, open air and the driver was a laugh – very much living the role.
The commentary was great. It is the oldest tram in the fleet - 100 years old.
The
Sacred Heart Cathedral was huge. They started building it in 1897 but it wasn’t
finished. Years later work started again and it was completed in 1977.
The
Cenotaph is identical to its counterpart in London’s Whitehall district.
This
intersection called “Charing Cross” is like the one in London – bit confusing
to get around and there is a big fountain in the middle of it. The area off to
the right is called “Pall Mall” named after the area in London too.
Lots
of old buildings around the intersection.
Soldiers
Memorial Museum was completed in 1921 by public subscription to remember those
fallen from the Boer War to Iraq and includes lots of memorabilia. It is built
on the site of the Hustlers Royal Reserve Mine.
Lansell’s
Monument is made out of quartz and is of George Lansell who arrived in
Australia aged 30 and invested in many of Bendigo’s mines. He became known as “Bendigo’s
Quartz-King” and was one of the richest men of his time.
Two
beautiful buildings – the original Post Office built in 1887 was the largest
outside of Melbourne.
And
the Bendigo’s Law Courts which opened in 1896.
I
spotted a green house but it wasn’t mentioned in the tour.
Passed
the Golden Jubilee Monument which was erected in 1901 to mark the Goldfield’s
Golden Jubilee. It depicts the goddess of good luck, Fortuna, dropping a nugget
into the dish of a Bendigo digger.
Golden
Dragon Museum is home to the Chinese Dragoon Loong, the oldest Imperial Chinese
Dragon in the world and Sun Loong, the longest Imperial Dragon in the world and
it tells the story of the Chinese in Bendigo.
St
Kilian’s Church is one of the largest timber churches in the world. It was here
in 1852 that Dr Backhaus (a German catholic priest) pitched his tent chapel and
became the first permanent clergyman on the Bendigo diggings.
Lovely
old houses – one with a modern shop front attachment – just doesn’t look right.
We
stopped at the Tramways Depot – got a shot of Steve and our very old open air tram.
The
Depot was completed in 1903 for the operation of the electric trams. The first
depot was constructed in 1890 near the railway station. Bendigo’s tram depot is
the oldest continually operating tram depot in Australia. Originally they had
steam engines but everyone complained about the noise and soot and they
required too much water to run. When the use of the trams died off over the
years due to cars etc the government shut it down but the locals signed a
petition in the 1970s and got the tramway working again as a tourist
attraction.
An
old jalopy drove out in front of us – looked original. Got to be quick on the camera shots around here!!
Another
lovely house and great shaped trees.
Lake
Weeroona was created in 1876 when 45 acres of land was set aside by the
Sandhurst Council (what Bendigo was called originally till the townspeople
voted to change it to Bendigo). They wanted to create a lake for boating and
recreational activities. There are lanes on it for rowing.
Found
the old jalopy again.
The
end of the tramline stops near the Joss House which was constructed in 1860 and
was originally part of the Ironbark Chinese camp. It is one of the few
remaining original buildings of its type in Australia. You can do a tour and it
is still a place of worship. We stayed on the tram. It is a hop on hop off tram
but you have to wait and hour for the next one and we weren’t doing the tour of
the Joss House. The driver just went to the other end of the tram and we
flipped over the seats to face the other way and off we went again sitting at
the back of the tram.
The
streets are all lined with lovely trees – not so good for caravans though.
The
town has these great drains – all lined with old pavers.
I
have a thing for these houses!!! I missed the Vahland House – designed by
German architect, Wilhelm Vahland, who came to Bendigo in search of gold but
instead ended up designing many of Bendigo’s finest buildings.
Whilst
the main street is wide as the tram goes up the middle – the side streets can
be a bit interesting.
We
got off at Charing Cross tram stop to check out Pall Mall.
This
intersection around the fountain is interesting.
Our
tram leaves.
The
main street has old ornate street lamps that used to be gas run.
Wandered
through Rosalind Park where these beautiful pansies were in bloom. Well I think they are!!
Will
have to ask someone why there is plastic wrapped around some of the trees.
The
park runs beside the big drains so there are these old bridges over them.
The
green house we saw before was surrounded in lovely roses.
Beautiful
scents. He checked for bees first!!
Some
are so huge.
There
were only a few plants in the green house, some had these lovely flowers.
Unfortunately
all the lilies, etc have just finished so only the stems were left.
Crossed
the road to get a close up of the Golden Jubilee Monument.
This
was the building of the Bendigo School of Mines and Industries and now houses
the TAFE.
Wandered
into the Golden Dragon Museum area – unusual shrubs under the cherry blossom, I think (or is that Japanese).
Some
modern plant sculptures. The kids love them.
Bamboo
everywhere. Didn't go in the Museum - leaving some things to do next time.
Skinny
building. Stopped at a secondhand bookstore near here - very fascinating - had two stories of wall to wall books and he knew where to go when I asked him about bird books - bit overpriced though.
The
tram lines in the middle of the street.
The
Town Hall apparently has stunning interior featuring elaborate plasterwork,
extensive hand painted decoration, delicate gold leafing and is one of the most
remarkable boom time buildings in Victoria.
In
the Mall area there is a street full of restaurants/cafes. This pub must have
jelly wrestling by the pool in the back - Steve might pop back!!!
In
the Mall itself it is full of normal retail stores – just the same as home. A
violinist busker in a full tux was playing the theme song from The Titanic –
very haunting.
We
looked at the timetable wrong so had 45 mins to kill and the pizza shop was
calling us.
Bendigo
bank is huge.
Another
great car.
“After
the Procession” Sculpture to celebrate the 140th Easter Procession
on 5th April, 2010.
Found
an information plaque so will have to do the history walk next time. The
Beehive Mining Exchange was housed here during the 1860-70s. This building was
built in 1871 after the original one was burnt down.
The
original National Bank is one of three bank buildings that Wilhelm Vahland
designed in “Modern Italian Renaissance”.
Jean
Baptiste Loridian, a local miller and investor who later helped to establish
the sugar cane industry in Queensland, had this hotel built in 1872.
A
Ford Shelby Cobra drives by.
Back
on the Artist Tram and back to the Mine. They had free art postcards so collected a couple to send off.
Steve
liked the snow/gold cones.
Decided
to check out the Cathedral as they said it was amazing and it was. So huge.
I’ve
never been in a confessional!!!
The
stain glass windows above the pipe organ was lovely and the organ’s pipe were
amazing.
Walked
around the outside.
A
lovely sculpture of Saint Mary Mackillop which was unveiled on the 17th
Oct, 2014. Glass in the middle covering her rosary beads etc.
Called
into Bunnings for gas bottle exchange then onto the Railway Station to organise
my ticket etc for Thursday when I head to Melbourne to meet the girls for the
Melbourne Cup week. Got some groceries and bought a card to send to Grant for
his 50th Birthday.
Found
a park to have a cuppa and I did my updates etc. More birds to photograph too.
Back
to our van for happy hour with Mick and Berkeley from Tassie and Claude and his
wife Trish. Lots of stories of their gold detecting in Forsyth – we should be
there!!! Berkeley showed us photos of the gold (fist sized) the local
prospectors etc, who were showing the Minister around, had on display. They
even had the Minister using a detector and he found gold!!! Steve said someone
must have planted it!! Got the fire going later and the others joined us for a
great night.
Gayle
bought marshmallows so we all had dessert and everyone had their version on the
perfect cooked marshmallow – she said it has to catch on fire and go black.
Mick
poured some sweet chilli sauce on a log and told us to watch what happens. The
most amazing blue flames appeared – Gayle the avid scientist was trying to work
out why – looking at the ingredients etc, then Mick confessed it was a powder
he put on the log he just put in – it lasted for ages.
Great
night with lots of new friends.
The drain was the Bendigo Creek!
ReplyDelete