Monday, March 7, 2016

Western Australia, Part 2: Shark Bay--Dolphins, Pearls, Pelicans and More

Pelican at Monkey Mia, Shark Bay
Recently, I was cleaning out and found my diary from our trip to Australia in 2007, when we toured the west coast with our friend Mike in his camper van, traveling from Augusta to Shark Bay and back to Perth. As I read through the entries I was reminded of the uniqueness of that landscape–different from anything else we had seen in Australia. Here is the second installment of some highlights from the trip.
Dolphin at Monkey Mia
Shark Bay, located about 500 miles north of Perth on the westernmost point of the Australian continent, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site famous for its friendly dolphins, dugongs (relatives of the manatee), ancient stromatolites, and rich marine life. After spending the night camping nearby in Denham, we got up early to go to Monkey Mia to see the dolphin feeding at 8:00. A crowd of onlookers waited on the beach for the dolphins to appear.
Feeding the dolphins at Monkey Mia
Bottlenose dolphins have been visiting the beach at Monkey Mia for more than 40 years. In the 1960s, fishermen returning to Monkey Mia began sharing their catch with some local dolphins. Over the years, the dolphins’ trust grew and several more were fed at the jetty and later the beach. An increasing numbers of visitors came to see the dolphins. Now the feeding of the dolphins is managed by the Department of Parks and Wildlife. When the dolphins came in to the shallow water, we watched as volunteers fed them from buckets of fish.
Catamaran tour at Monkey Mia, Shark Bay
Later that morning we took a catamaran trip on the bay, where we saw more dolphins and stopped at a floating pearling enterprise. That evening we had dinner in a restaurant in Denham called the Old Pearler built of bricks made from leftover shells.
Demonstration of seeding oysters with pearls
The following day we started on the long drive back to Perth and stopped for the night at the Wildflower Caravan Park at Eneabba.
An example of Australian humor
Because of the long-running drought, there were not as many wildflowers as in wet years, but we had an interesting tour to see the few plants that were in bloom and a slide show of some others. In the morning, we met a number of VERY friendly kangaroos. Like many Australians, the owners of the caravan park foster orphaned joeys, who, when they are old enough, have free run of the campground. Not surprisingly, some of them allowed us to get quite close!
Caroline with young Western Gray Kangaroo

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