Australia. The Land Down Under. The only country that's also a continent. Fascinating on a
number of levels. "Discovered" by Europeans in the early 17th Century (the indigenous
inhabitants discovered it many thousand of years earlier), its coastline wasn't fully mapped
until the start of the 19th Century, and European colonization didn't begin until 1788.
Significant European interest in the continent probably began in 1770, when Lieutenant James
Cook, having continued west after mapping New Zealand, mapped Australia's eastern coastline,
claiming the entire area for Britain and calling it New South Wales.
Captain James Cook
HMS Endeavour
Unusual for voyages of exploration at the time, Cook's ship Endeavour carried two
naturalists, Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander, who had a very busy time documenting and
collecting samples of the peculiar flora and fauna of the region.
Joseph Banks
Daniel Solander
Some years later back in Europe, England found itself in a difficult position, with a
surplus of convicted lawbreakers and a scarcity of places to put them. The North American
colonists had had the temerity to revolt and establish their own country, removing places
like Virginia as potential dumping grounds for the convicts. "Prison hulks", or old ships
used as jails, proved to be effective incubators for a number of ferocious and deadly
microbes. Joseph Banks, by this time president of the Royal Society, suggested Botany Bay
(named by Cook in honor of Banks and Solander, who were primarily botanists) on the east
coast of Australia as a likely place to establish a penal colony. Accordingly, an
expedition of eleven ships, carrying mostly convicts, was put together and sent off to
Australia to do just this. The flotilla, now known as the First Fleet, arrived at Botany
Bay in January of 1788 but found the location unsuitable because of poor soil and
difficulty in finding fresh water. They relocated a few miles to the north, to another
natural harbor called Port Jackson, which worked out much better.
The First Fleet
When it became time to name the settlement established here, the name "New Albion" was
considered, but instead the name Sydney (after British Home Secretary Lord Sydney) was
chosen, and the settlement has developed noticeably in the ensuing years. Many more
convicts arrived at this and other settlements over the next few decades, most of whom
were treated badly. As were the indigenous peoples (collectively labeled "aborigines"
by their new neighbors), who were mostly on the losing end of various conflicts, both
armed vs. Europeans and unarmed vs. devastating European diseases. So for a time there
was plenty of misery to go around. Australia started moving away from being a penal
colony around 1825, and has gradually developed into the cosmopolitan, multicultural
nation with the checkered past that it is today.
But with people being the creatures they are, practically every nation has a checkered
past to call its own. Speaking for ourselves, when we think of Australia, we think more
of its natural history, which makes the country so startlingly unique. All connection
between Australia and other continents was severed many millions of years ago. Since
that time, a vast number of plant and animal species have evolved which are not seen
anywhere else. Several climatic zones are also represented on the continent, leading to
great diversity in the life found there. The heartland of Australia is an immense desert,
and it is surrounded by less arid coastline which is cool in the south and tropical in
the north, with intervening subclimates on the east and west coasts, and life has adapted
to all of these regions. Some of the more familiar animals include kangaroos, emus,
wombats, koalas, possums, dingos, tasmanian devils and cassowaries. There are also
gigantic (and aggressive) salt water crocodiles and insanely venomous snakes, spiders,
jellyfish and octopi. And the odd great white shark also stops by for an occasional visit.
Humans are found throughout the continent, but most densely in the southeastern coastal
area.
Planning a ten-day visit to Australia is not an easy thing to do. It's simply impossible
to cover a continent in ten days, so one has to decide on a small number of areas on which
to focus. We decided on two: Sydney and the Brisbane/Gold Coast area (the Gold Coast being
the area between Brisbane and the northern border of New South Wales). This was somewhat
arbitrary, but we'd been to both places before and knew we wouldn't be disappointed.
Maybe next time we'll be a little more adventurous. We decided we'd visit Brisbane and the
Gold Coast first, and then fly south to Sydney via a commuter flight, eventually returning
to Los Angeles from Sydney. But first we had to take a flight across the Tasman Sea on a
QANTAS 737 from Auckland to Brisbane, a flight which took about four hours, crossing two
time zones.
QANTAS 737 and Jetway, Auckland
Downtown Auckland and Harbour
New Zealand Coastline
Nella and Bob
Approaching Australia
Immigration and customs in Brisbane were straightforward, as we'd applied and paid
for visas on line in advance, and didn't attempt to bring any food into the country
(they're touchy about that, and will likely give you a choice between throwing it
away or eating it on the spot). We hit an ATM at the airport for some local currency
and hired a taxi to take us to our hotel, the Brisbane Hilton, in Brisbane's Central
Business District.