An Eating Frenzy - Flinders, Victoria, Australia

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Sat 20 Mar 2010 05:55
38:28.595S  145:01.315E
 
On February 7th, we left Min and her soon to be shifting-in beau John, and continued northeast along the last of the Great Ocean Road.  The beach houses grew bigger and flashier (or more 'glam' as the Aussies would say) and the surfer towns more touristy as we drew closer to the outskirts of Melbourne.  We stopped in the small city of Geelong long enough to see the harbor, have lunch and drop Kate at the train station so she could get back to Melbourne in time for work on Monday.  Ah yes, some people in this world still have to work.  After hanging around with retirees so long, it comes as quite a shock when someone actually has work obligations to fulfill. 
 
Melbourne sits at the top or northernmost part of giant Port Phillip bay, so to get back to the city, we had the choice of driving around Port Phillip to the west, or backtracking a bit and taking the car ferry from Queenscliff across The Rip (narrow and sometimes unfriendly entrance to Port Phillip from the sea) to the Mornington Peninsula on the east side of Port Phillip, and then on to Flinders, where Ray and Helen have a home.  Easy choice.  We went for Queenscliff, the ferry, Mornington Peninsula and a night at Ray and Helen's marvelous 'country home'.  Country home only in that it is located in the small town of Flinders, which compared to Melbourne, is definitely country.  Not so country in that the home's design is modern - very clean, strong lines - and it is large enough to comfortably house their two kids, spouses or significant others and one grandchild when they visit.  Or, as the case may be.....comfortable enough to house Sue and John and another half-handicapped couple when they visit. 
 
Ray and Helen's Flinders home is situated near the top of a gently sloping hill so the view from their elevated veranda encompasses the Bass Strait (body of water that lies between the Australian mainland and the Australian state of Tasmania) and nearby Phillip Island.  As the Kiwis would say, 'not tooooo baaaaaad'.  Or, as the more reserved Aussies would say, 'lovely'.  Below are pictures.
 
Picture 1 -  Helen in the overcast morning light, taking in the view of Bass Strait with the small port of Flinders in the foreground.
 
Picture 2 -  A couple of the many different colorful, noisy and unusual Australian birds (unusual to us, anyway).  These are galahs.
 
Picture 3 -  Ray and Helen are expert gardeners, and this is a not-so-great picture of a portion of their incredible garden (which has been featured in at least one Australian home and garden magazine with much nicer pictures).  The garden on the other side of their house is mainly dedicated to edible items, but you would never know it at first glance given the artful way it's been cultivated.  The front hedge leading up to the front door of the house is entirely composed of rosemary - no shortage of sprigs to spice up a nice rack-of-lamb here.  There are olive trees, lemon and lime trees, basil, mint, parsley, tomatoes, potatoes, pumpkin (Aussie-talk for squash), beans, berries, rhubarb, lettuces and on and on.  Marvelous. 
 
Picture 4 - Starting with Don and going clockwise, that's Helen, John, Sue and Ray.  Nearly everything in the dinner Helen prepared for us came from the garden.  All was excellent, and we felt spoiled as this was the fourth exceptional dinner in a row (ten course meal at the Royal Mail Hotel, dinner at the Merrijig, roast beef and all the fixings from Min and John, and chicken with garden-grown accompaniment extravaganza from Helen and Ray).  We vowed never to eat again.
 
Picture 5 - We ate the rhubarb cake Helen baked for dessert, and then renewed our vow never to eat again.
 
The following day, it was back to Melbourne.  This, after a compulsory stop at one of the Mornington Peninsula wineries.  Surprisingly, at noon on a Monday there was no one else there and we had the place to ourselves.  After some wine tasting and a leisurely lunch (so much for the vow, but at least we only ate cheese and crackers and some grapes), we arrived back at Sue and John's apartment in Melbourne -completing the long weekend road trip circle.
 
Anne

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