The entrance to MONA. It is all distorted metal that reflects everything.
Wineglass Bay from the lookout.
Some of the hundreds of steps.
Wineglass Bay at the bottom of the hike.
Cook's Bay.
Some of the locals.
Wednesday,
March 30th.
I
woke up earlier than I wanted this morning because of noisy
neighbours leaving early to catch a flight, so I used the time to
type up the last couple of days. Then I had the breakfast, packed up
and left. I drove back through town to MONA. This is the largest
privately funded museum in Australia (apparently funded with gambling
money). MONA stands for Museum of Old and New Art. It is a complex of
museum, winery, hotel, and bars. It is built on a peninsula and they
have a large private (camouflaged) ferry that shuttles people from
the city. You can also drive to it, which I did. The museum itself is
built underground. The entrance is at ground level but as soon as you
go in you take stairs (or a circular elevator) down three floors. The
building is incredible and a work of art in its own right. The walls
and ceiling are all different, at different angles and some of the
walls are the cut bedrock. They tell you to start at the bottom and
work your way up. They provide a smart phone with a GPS that locates
you and tells you what piece of art you are looking at and some
details. It also indicates if there is audio information as well and
they provide you with headphones to listen to that. It also tracks
your route and if you provide your e-mail they will send you all the
information about what you saw.
The
art itself is ancient (mummies and sarchagous), bizarre (a hall with
plaster casts of about fifty vaginas), incredible (an overhead water
fountain that spells out words with the water as it falls), and
unfathomable (a video of two people with hugely bulbous, obviously
fake noses and hands acting and arguing about something) and strange
(a man with a totally tattooed back sitting on a bar stool type chair
looking away from everyone. I asked and he sits for 5 hours with a
break on the hour. I wonder is he the art or the artist?). Art is not
my thing and I never go to galleries, but everyone who hears that you
are going to Tasmania says you have to go here and I am glad I went,
just to see the building if nothing else. I spent a few hours there
and then headed out again.
I
realized I don't have time to go to the Bruny Islands so I headed
north to go to Frycinet National Park. This is where there is one of
the world's most beautiful beaches that regularly shows up on the
list of top ten beaches of the world. It is called Wineglass Bay.
I
drove the Tasman Highway which is another scenic, under traveled,
winding road through some very dry rural areas in brilliant sunshine.
The east coast gets less rainfall than the west and is much drier. I
arrived at Frycinet about two thirty and after checking out the
visitor centre I took the steep two kilometre long hike to the
Wineglass Bay Overlook. The view was spectacular, with turqoise
water, white sand and mountains all around, but from this vantage
point you cannot see the wineglass shape. I think it is really only
visible from the air.
Since
I had time and it felt good to be walking I decided to take the hike
down the other side to the beach. It is all a steep descent (which
means you have to climb back up). Down at water level it was very
beautiful with the sounds of the waves, the colour of the water, sand
and rocks. I walked around for a while before undertaking the ascent.
When
I got back up, I drove back to the highway through Coles Bay where I
stopped to buy a few things to eat. Then again conscious of
positioning myself for tomorrow, I decided to drive as close as I
could to Launceston. The roads were again winding and deserted. I
finally reached the main highway from Hobart to Launceston. It was
much more direct, flatter and 110 kms (which I could do). I drove to
the town of Deloraine where I found a local bar/hotel that had a room
for the night. It is a little divey room in an old hotel. I sat in
the bar and typed for a bit, but the lady told me they were closing.
What kind of bar closes at 9:30? I retired to my room and went to bed
early for an early start tomorrow.
Drove a total of 451 kms today.
Drove a total of 451 kms today.
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