Saturday the 23rd we arrived in Port Lincoln. We
were there for the Tunarama 2016. This is the tuna festival that is held there
every year. We made the booking back in early December when we knew we wanted
to be on the Eyre Peninsular and worried about getting in somewhere. It turned
out the timing was pretty good to be there for Tunarama. We stayed at the PL
Tourist Park. We were right on the water of Boston Bay.
Firstly a couple of views of the Boston Bay foreshore at
Port Lincoln.
Then the festival parade came through.
That night was fireworks from the jetty. The scene of the
fireworks over the bay was aided by the many boats that had come in for the ‘blessing
of the fleet’.
On Sunday we watched the Tuna Tossing World Championship on
the beach. The winning toss from the men was 18m 300mm. The record toss was
just over double that in 1989. He had to be an Olympic athlete to make that
toss.
Following that was the boat race of the boats that were made
earlier that morning of plywood and silicon, nails and staples by the sailors
that were to man them.
On Monday we went on the Whalers Way drive. This is private
property and is the most southern part of the Eyre Peninsular. It is $30 a
vehicle if you pay at the gate and $35 if you pay at the Port Lincoln Visitors
Centre. We saw some spectacular and rugged coastline.
There is a sink hole on the property that we had a look at.
One corner is Cape Wiles which is a haven for sea lions.
There was plenty of them.
A couple more pics of Whalers Way.
We then left the property and went to Mikkira Station where
we paid $15 to use their grounds and view all the koalas in their habitat. We
had lunch and then walked around. We would have seen close to 20 koalas. Some
very cute shots, the first koala holding a young one.
On the property there are also some ruins of the early
homestead.
As we were walking around we started speaking to two
couples. I quickly realized they were people that we had met two and a half
years ago when we were on our first big trip. We had met them at Menindee Lakes
in May 2013. We wound up going to the same caravan parks at the same times, all
by coincidence, at Broken Hill, Kings Canyon and Alice Springs. We got on
great with them and they were a lot of fun. It is almost unbelievable how we
bump into them now two and a half years later at the bottom of Australia.
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