Wednesday, 21. March 2007, 13:09:25

First stop this morning was
Mait's Rest, a 1km walk through rain forest about 15mins from Apollo Bay. The forest was very cool.

There wasn't anything really special there, but it was pleasant and green.

Back at the car we decided the fuel gauge was looking a bit too low for comfort, so we backtracked to Apollo Bay to fill up. Kate took the opportunity to buy a souvenir book.
Then it was back on the road to Cape Otway. Driving on the road to Cape Otway from the Great Ocean Road was very twisty. It started off in a tall and thickly wooded area, before opening out into pasture with cows and some horses, then back into other wooded area, this time the trees were shorter and more twisty.
The
Cape Otway Lighthouse area is very interesting. It was once a telegraph station

and is currently a weather station. The lighthouse

, the oldest in Australia, isn't in operation anymore, but has been replaced by an automatic electric light.
It's a narrow climb up to the top

, but you get a good view of the coast

and the various support buildings

. While we were up there we saw a black cat slink off into the coastal scrub. We also wondered about
Frederick Valentich, a Cessna 182 pilot apparently taken by a UFO in 1978, twelve minutes flying time south of the lighthouse!
Also checking out the Cape Otway lighthouse was a TV crew, probably from Postcards Victoria.
Our last stop at the site was the old radar station, used during World War 2 to detect German shipping, submarines in particular.
As we drove back to the Great Ocean Road, we noticed some cars pulled to the side of the road. They were looking at a number of koalas asleep in the trees, so we stopped and took some photos too.

The next stop was the
Otway Fly, but before the walk, we had lunch at the café to recharge ourselves. The Otway Fly is a large metal walkway, supported by big steel columns, and held in place by steel guy wires. Most of the platforms are about 25m above the ground, but at one point there's a climb up a spiral staircase to a tower top that's 47m high.

It's a great view from up there, if you can get your mind off the slight sway!
Next to the tower is a cantilever, with an observation platform suspended out into the trees.

That swayed a bit too. I took some photos looking down past my feet and metal walkway through to the ground far below.
The whole idea of the Otway Fly is to show you the forest from a bird's eye.

It does look quite different from high up and makes for some great photos.

From the Fly, we continued down the road a little to Triple Falls

. This is a 1km walk through rain forest past several waterfalls. A notable feature of this walk was the extensive use of metal walkways raised a few feet above the ground

. It minimized disturbance to the environment, and still allowed easy access and viewing. This walk had a LOT of ups and downs.

Near the end we saw some old logging rail cars

and what remained of a small steam engine.

We left Triple Falls and headed to our next destination:
The 12 Apostles. They are actually eight stone "stacks". There used to be nine, before one fell over a couple of years ago (3 July 2005 at 9:18). Amazingly, someone was right there to watch it as it happened, and took before and after photos spaced one minute apart. Today's photo is of the Apostles, sadly back lit (in hindsight, we should have tried for a morning visit, or as happened on Kate's previous visit, arranged for a cloudy day!), but it does show the rubble of that fallen stack in the foreground.
Nearby is a place Kate really wanted to visit, because it had been used as a location in one of her favourite movies "The Pirate Movie".
Loch Ard Gorge is a place where there are several beachy coves

among the sheer cliffs

. The gorge has a wooden staircase built so you can walk down to it.

The "Loch Ard" was a ship that sank just offshore with two survivors, a young girl passenger, and a young man, the ships' apprentice. They sheltered in a cave before the young man climbed up to get help from a nearby station.
It was getting late by now. We continued on and arrived in Port Campbell a bit after 7:00, only to find all the accommodation booked! We decided to travel 10km further on to Peterborough only to find everything there full too! We had no choice but to press on for Warrnambool, finally arriving at about 8:30. We felt lucky finding a hotel still open!
As soon as we'd secured a room, we headed into town to find something to eat. We settled on a pub/bistro with chicken satay skewers and chicken schnitzel, plus a couple of beers/wines. Then I navigated the return trip via some back streets using the GPS. We each had a shower, watched the late news on the TV and went to sleep.