residentjudge posted: " "What's she doing in Bunbury??" you may ask. Well, you know those COVID figures of cases and hospitalizations?...they're real and some of those patients are aged 38 instead of 98- and one of them is my son. So, there was a quick scramble onto a plane a"
"What's she doing in Bunbury??" you may ask. Well, you know those COVID figures of cases and hospitalizations?...they're real and some of those patients are aged 38 instead of 98- and one of them is my son. So, there was a quick scramble onto a plane and over to Western Australia. He's much, much better now, and I'll be heading home on Monday. But in the meantime, there's walking to do and places to see, other than a hospital ward.
I decided that I'd walk to the hospital and went via the Big Swamp, which was absolutely teeming with wild life and birds. There has been lots of building development on what must have been swampland in the past. There are South Western Long Necked Turtles in the swamp, which cross the road to nest in a dry watercourse on the other side of the road. In a bit of an evolutionary blip, they can't withdraw their necks into their shells, so they are pretty defenceless against predators.
I wonder if this is the last Civic Video store still standing? Someone had a sense of humour with the parking bays.
The Blind Man of BunburyFormer Boys School, now Bunbury Museum and Heritage Centre
I visited the Bunbury Museum and Heritage Centre in what had once been the Boys School, built in 1886 to replace an older convict-built structure. They had a nice little exhibition about 'The Blind Man of Bunbury'- K. C. Lewis who ran a canvas goods store in Bunbury between 1955 and 2021.
Then up to the Art Gallery in the former Sisters of Mercy Convent School. There was a little exhibition called 'Museum of Loss' which attracted my attention. They had left one of the nun's rooms intact. A pretty sparse life.
Then a walk up to the Pioneer Park, which had been the site of the first cemetery. Most of the paperwork over who had been buried there had been lost, so they don't really know who is buried there. I had hoped that there might be gravestones, but there were only interpretation panels telling of the history of the graveyard itself.
Then across the road to the beach- absolutely beautiful. I was fascinated by the Back Beach Sea Baths which were built in the 1930s, but only lasted a few years before being destroyed by the waves. Still, those foundations have held on for nearly 90 years.
My phone tells me today I walked 8 kms but it feels much more than that!
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