Monthly Archive for May, 2009

Indian Protesters Cause Traffic Jam In Melbourne

If I was to hold a protest to get Australians to support my cause I don’t think causing a massive traffic jam in the middle of Melbourne is the way I would go about it:

INDIAN protesters occupying a busy central Melbourne
intersection say they will continue their sit-in through peak hour in protest
against what they say is a rising tide of racial violence against them.

At 2am (AEST) this morning, more than 300 protesters remained at the corner
of Swanston and Flinders streets, under the famous Flinders
Street
railway station clocks, where south Asian cab drivers held a similar
protest last year.

The protest, which is bound to create traffic chaos in the city, is peaceful
for now. (……)

“We have become a part of your country. We respect your culture. We want the
same respect of cultural values from your side. If people feel like they are
going to be hurt, that can’t be tolerated.”   [AFP]

The Age has a gallery of pictures of the protest here.

Sorry to break it to this guy, but if he respects Australian culture he wouldn’t be causing Melbourne drivers to be stuck in a traffic jam.  If anything this group has probably caused more ill will with the people they are trying to get to change their opinions of the Indian community.  Doing this is especially not going to win over Australians:

They then moved to the intersection outside the station where, witnesses
said, the protesters threw shoes, water bottles and other objects at the
station’s clocks, breaking stained glass windows above the entrance, when police
tried to break up the sit-in.

A 22-year-old man from St Albans was arrested and charged with criminal
damage and riotous behaviour.

Not good to be vandalizing an Australian architectural icon like the Flinders Street Station.  I am not even Australian and that pisses me off.  This group may want to rethink their protest strategy because this one is definitely flawed.

Nine News has video of the protest here.

On Walkabout On: Mt. Macedon, Victoria

I have mentioned before what a great day trip that a visit to Victoria’s Hanging Rock is.  However, for those looking for another great day trip in the area then a visit to Mt. Macedon shouldn’t be missed:

Mt. Macedon is located adjacent to Hanging Rock and is only about 65 kilometers from Melbourne.  There is an improved pave road that takes visitors all the way to the top of the mountain:

The most visited landmark on the mountain is without a doubt the Mt. Macedon Memorial Cross:

The cross is huge and can easily be seen from the Calder Freeway leading to the Macedon Ranges.  It was constructed in the 1930′s by Mr William Cameron to commemorate the soldiers who died in World War I.  The cross is considered Victoria’s second most important war memorial behind the Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne.  Today the cross honors more then just the World War I veterans as smaller plaques have been constructed in the area in honor of veterans of other wars as well. 

Up close, the cross towers over visitors at a maximum height of 21 meters.  Here is the inscription on the original inscription at the base of the cross in honor of Australia’s World War II veterans:

I continue to be impressed with how well Australia remembers its veterans with some really very well done memorials across the country along with the nation wide effort to remember the nation’s past veterans during ANZAC Day

Right next to the Memorial Cross is something else I have seen quite often on the summit of mountains in Australia which are these plaques that display the distance to various locations in the area from where you are standing:

As you can see on this plaque the cross is located on a peak of Mt. Macedon that rises to an altitude of 989 meters.  Being so high up of course means some great views and great views is what you can find on Mt. Macedon when the clouds haven’t rolled in:

The above picture is actually looking towards Melbourne which can easily be seen from Mt. Macedon when Melbourne’s famous poor weather doesn’t roll in.  Looking towards the west from the cross I had a fantastic view of the thickly forested bushland that covers Victoria’s once world famous Goldfields:

It was from here that Major Thomas Mitchell in 1836 during his exploration of Victoria, had become the first reported European to ascend the mountain and take in views of the surrounding area. Mitchell wrote this in his journal after climbing up the mountain:

“from the top of the mountain, Port Phillip Bay and a few of
the buildings of Melbourne can be seen”. Major Mitchell also noted the
“high quality and size of the timber on the side of the mountain.”

Mitchell decided to name the mountain Mt. Macedon because he could see Port Philip Bay from the summit. Thus the mountain was named after Philip of Macedon. This naming also kept in line with the number of other landmarks Mitchell named after Greek characters as well.

After checking out the cross and imagining what the thoughts of Major Mitchell must have been looking at this same view back in 1836 , I then decided to hike the trail is known as the Macedon Ranges Walking Trail.  It is roughly 29 kilometers long and takes hikers completely around the mountain.  I planned to hike about half of the trail from the Memorial Cross to Sanatorium Lake where my wife would meet me at and pick me up:

The trail was easy to follow the whole way and in good condition.  The surrounding bush land was quite thick with gum trees both living and fallen over:

The mountain is currently so thickly forested that it is hard to believe that not long ago nearly every tree on this mountain was cut down due to logging and then what remained was burned down during the devastating Ash Wednesday Fires of 1983.  However, the lack of gigantic gum trees like you see in areas east of Melbourne or along the Great Ocean Road is the first clue to visitors that there is no old growth forests left on Mt. Macedon. 

Besides the many gum trees there is an occasional fern tree that makes an appearance, but once again the size of these fern trees fail to compare with those that grow in Victoria’s old growth forests:

As the trail neared the Camel’s Hump which is the highest point in the Macedon Ranges, rock formations covered in green moss began to become visible along the trail:

Here is the last portion of the trail as it ascends towards 1,011 meter summit of the Camel’s Hump:

From the top of the Camel’s Hump it is easy to see why this rock formation has become popular with climbers based in Melbourne.  The large rocks that compose the Camel’s Hump is the same type of volcanic rock that formed Hanging Rock known as a mamelon

Here is how this rocky volcanic outcropping looks when viewed from Hanging Rock:

With this view it is easy to see the volcanic origins of the Camel’s Hump. 

Just like over at the Memorial Cross the Camel’s Hump also has a plaque that displays the distance to other landmarks
and cities in the area.  What I found interesting about this plaque was that unlike the previous plaque this one listed all the distances in miles:

Since this plaque was constructed in 1911 I am assuming that Australia must have been using miles back then and not the metric system.  The plaque at the Memorial Cross was erected in 1978 and is in kilometers.  It just makes me wonder when Australia changed over to the metric system? 

Something else unusual about the Camel’s Hump is that there is a snow gum growing there:

These snow gums are rare to see in Australia and can only be found at high altitudes in the Victorian Alps and the Snowy Mountains.  The Camel’s Hump is apparently just high enough for a few of these very hearty trees to grow. 

And finally of course the view from the Camel’s Hump looking towards the north is spectacular.  You can see Hanging Rock hanging out in the middle of the below picture:

From the Camel’s Hump I continued my walk through the lush forests of the Macedon Ranges:

Along the way it was good to see the large number of hollows in the trees known as stags:

These stags are created by natural forces such as wind and fire and these hollows are perfects nests and shelter for the native wildlife that lives in the Macedon Ranges:

As I hiked closer to the end of my hike at Sanatorium Lake I walked right through a very pleasant camp site:

The trees in this area were the largest I had seen on Mt. Macedon to include to these decent sized mountain ash trees:

I finally concluded my walk at the lovely Sanatorium Lake:

The lake was constructed in 1899 to provide water for a sanatorium that was constructed nearby.  The sanatorium closed in 1910 after being badly damaged by bushfires.  However, the short history of the sanatorium has left one lasting legacy which is this beautiful lake:

There is a pleasant camp ground near the lake and that is where my wife was waiting to pick me up.  All in all a nice day that began with remembering Australia’s military past and concluding with a pleasant walk through the beautiful Australian bush of today. 

Friday Eco-Fact: How Aggressive are Tasmanian Devils?

Slate’s Christopher Beam answers a readers question on if Tasmanian Devils are as aggressive as the Looney Tunes character:

A rapidly spreading, deadly facial tumor virus has killed off 70 percent of the wild population of Tasmanian devils, leading the Australian government
to designate the creature “endangered” on Friday. The world’s most
famous Tasmanian devil, the character Taz from Looney Tunes, is
aggressive and excitable. Are the real ones like that, too?

Yes, especially when feeding. Although devils do hunt other
animals—wallabies, possums, and wombats are especially
attractive—they’re primarily scavengers. They scavenge in groups of
five to 12, possibly because it’s easier to pull apart a carcass
together than alone. The competition for limited resources makes each
devil highly protective of its share of the food. While eating, they
emit a blood-curdling screech and nip at one another’s faces, often drawing blood.

Mating
is also a violent process. Males fight over females, and whoever wins
grabs the female by the scruff of her neck and drags her back to a den,
where they mate. (Watch two male devils fight over a female here.)
The male must then defend the female during her 21-day gestation
period, lest other males come and try to mate with her, too. The babies
also have to fight one another—female devils give birth to 40 or 50
young every season, all of whom must compete for their mother’s four
teats. [Slate]

Make sure to read the rest.  

The Tasmanian Devil like most of the wildlife in Australia is a marsupial meaning that it reproduces and nurtures its young inside of a pocket.  It is also the largest carnivorous marsupial in the world.  It used to be the second largest until the Thylacine otherwise known as a Tasmanian Tiger went extinct in 1936.  Another interesting fact about the devils is that they have the strongest bite of any mammal because of its need to break bones when feeding.  

The devils are currently only found on the island of Tasmania though they once populated mainland Australia up to 400 years ago.  It is expected that the devils went extinct on the mainland due to competition for food from the Australian dingo that was introduced to the mainland by Indonesian traders 3,500 years ago.  The fact that the devils are only found on the small island of Tasmania means is what makes the facial tumor disease so dangerous to the species. 

The devil facial tumor spreads from one devil to another when they bite at each other faces while feeding in packs.  The disease then spreads to the neck of the devil where it then suffocates to death.  It is really quite a cruel way to die.  There is so far no cure for the disease that has killed roughly 50% of the devil population on Tasmania.  About 65% of the island has been infected with the disease with only the remote western area of the island free from the disease.  No one knows for sure what caused the virus, but it is suspected that the disease was started from devils foraging in trash cans. The devils immune system were not able to respond to the virus because of the lack of genetic diversity in the devils due to their isolation on Tasmania.

This disease hasn’t stopped the usual global warming alarmists from claiming that climate change is killing the Tasmanian Devils:

Through our growing numbers, our thirst for natural resources and, most
of all, climate change — which, by one reckoning, could help carry off
20% to 30% of all species before the end of the century — we’re shaping
an Earth that will be biologically impoverished. A 2008 assessment by
the International Union for Conservation of Nature found that nearly 1
in 4 mammals worldwide was at risk for extinction, including endangered
species like the famous Tasmanian devil.  [TIME]

It is incredible to me that a major news magazine like TIME could print such blatant propaganda as this.  This is just another perfect example of how the global warming alarmists are obscuring legitimate environmental issues such as the one facing the devils with their misinformation. 

While the alarmist continue their activities the real environmentalists are working hard to save the devils.  To prevent extinction of the species populations of the devils that are free of disease have been moved to the Australian mainland to be kept in zoos and animal sanctuaries such as the Healsville Animal Sanctuary in Victoria. 

The devils are on the verge of extinction, but lets hope that the work of both conservationists and scientists will be able to save this incredibly unique part of Australia’s biodiversity

Calling Your Wife Ugly May Soon Be A Crime In Malaysia

Could you imagine how many Australians would be fined if this ever became a law Down Under:

Calling your wife ugly to humiliate her may soon be considered an
offence under proposed amendments to the Domestic Violence Act 1994.

The
amendments will include a clause on emotional violence against women
who are currently only protected against physical abuse.

Women’s
Development Depart- ment director-general Datuk Dr Noorul Ainur Mohd
Nur said the aim of proposing the amendment was to safeguard women both
physically and emotionally.

She said emotional violence was a
form of abuse that would scar women deeply and lower their self-esteem,
dignity and self-confidence.

“It could be a case when a husband
tells his wife she is ugly or humiliates her until she feels
emotionally pressured,” she told reporters at the end of a seminar on
how to curb violence against women at Wisma Wanita here yesterday.

She added that they were in the process of bringing the proposed amendments to Parliament.  [The Star Online]

R.M. Williams to Expand into Food Products

Australia’s most respected bush outfitter is now expanding into the food industry:


THE famous RM Williams name will be linked to
a range of premium beef, lamb, chicken and grain products — as well as
carbon reduction and biofuel schemes — under a major new alliance
unveiled by the bush outfitter.

Ken Cowley,
whose family owns RM Williams, yesterday announced the creation of RM
Williams Agricultural Holdings — a joint venture with rural investment
company Primary Holdings International.

Primary brings several properties to the new venture, which will
develop a diversified portfolio of properties and companies to supply
“a full range of premium-branded organic and protein-based commodities,
for both local and international markets”.

Mr Cowley, who bought out his partners in RW Williams in 2003 to
take the company private, will be chairman of RMWAH. He is a former
chairman and chief executive of News Limited (owner of The Australian).
RMWAH executive director Hamish Turner, the chief executive of RM
Williams, said the new company was the culmination of “a number of
years of work from both Primary Holdings and from RM Williams”, which
owns 40 stores in Australia and sells its boots and clothing in at
least 15 countries.  [The Australian]

So the next time I buy a pair of boots from a R.M. Williams store instead of a free hat maybe they will give me a free steak instead?

On Walkabout At: Hanging Rock, Victoria

There are many nice day trips you can take from the Melbourne area such as taking a ride on the Puffing Billy train, exploring historic Bendigo, or hiking the scenic Werribee Gorge.  However, there isn’t a day trip as spooky as a visit to Hanging Rock can be:

Hanging Rock is only about 70 kilometers North of Melbourne and can be reached in under an hour by taking the Calder Highway (A79):

From the Woodend exit on A79 you can drive to Hanging Rock in under five minutes.  The 718 meter (2,356 feet) high Hanging Rock is a rock formation known as a volcanic plug or a mamelon that was created about 6.25 million years ago.

Formation of a mamelon

The rock that Hanging Rock is composed of, solvsbergite can only be found in Norway and Sweden besides this volcanic region of Victoria. 

What makes Hanging Rock so spooky to Australians is because this rock is the location of one of the strangest disappearances in Australian history that became one of the most famous novels to ever come out of Australia, Picnic at Hanging Rock.  The book was written by Joan Lindsay and published in 1967.  The book tells the story of a group of school girls who travel to the rock in 1900 for a school trip.  Four girls and a teacher decided to hike up the rock and one girl returned later in a hysterical condition.  She had no memory of what happened to her, but the other three girls and their teacher were missing. 


A scene from Peter Weir’s Picnic at Hanging Rock.

A search was launched for the missing women, but they were never found.  It is still unclear if Joan Lindsay made the whole story up or if it is based on any facts.  She has never been forthcoming on this and no one has been able to prove for sure that this disappearance really happened.  One thing that is agreed upon is that the local Aborigines used the rock as meeting point due to its easy identification because of its unique features.  However, it is also believed that the Aborigines did not like to climb the rock because it was believed at may be haunted.  This belief may have in turn been what helped inspire Lindsay’s novel.  Sadly the Aborigines that once inhabited this area were rounded up in 1863 and sent to the Coranderk Aboriginal Reserve in Healesville due to conflict with pastoralists that were quickly clearing the land to graze sheep.

Anyway the mystery of the rock was enough to even fund a movie directed by the renowned Peter Weir and the allure of the place continues to draw tens of thousands of visitors every year.  The first place visitors will see is the nice visitor center and cafe pictured below that sits right at the base of Hanging Rock:

The visitor center is actually pretty well done and informative and I recommend checking out the cafe.  My wife and I had an excellent lunch there.  Also near the visitor center there is a large picnic area for those interested in having making their own lunch after hiking up and then back down the rock:

However, for those looking to see native Australian wildlife while they hike, this is not the place to go because the only native wildlife my wife and I say was this magpie at the picnic area:

There is actually supposed to be four koalas that live in the trees around the rock, but my wife and I never saw them.  If you want to see native wildlife, combine a visit to Hanging Rock with a trip to nearby Mt. Macedon is a great option because Mt. Macedon is a much larger wilderness area where native wildlife can be seen:


Mt. Macedon as seen from Hanging Rock

The trail up Hanging Rock begins just a short distance from the visitor center.  Click this link for a great aerial view of the hiking trail.  It is an improved trail that just about anyone should be able to hike up:

The trail starts by ascending through the surrounding forest before running parallel to a variety of strange rock formations next to the trail:

Looking at these rocks it is easy to see why the Aborigines thought this place was haunted:

Here is the point on the trail that Hanging Rock gets its name from because of this large boulder that sits suspended over the trail:

Finally on the top of Hanging Rock the trail levels out and it is actually not scary at all, but instead quite a pleasant place to hang out:

Even on the top of Hanging Rock there are a number of unusual rock formations:

I thought this rock formation was interesting because of the cross that it makes:

Some of the rocks make for a picturesque picture frame of the surrounding farm land:

The top of the rock also provides some spectacular views of the surrounding farmland:

It is these views that caused Hanging Rock to become the hide out for notorious
bushranger Mad Dan Morgan.  With views like this who could blame him?:

Hanging Rock was first spotted by a Europeans when Major Thomas Mitchell during an expedition to explore Victoria in 1836 spotted this rock and named it Mt. Diogenes which kept with his theme of giving Greek names to terrain features in this area, such as nearby Mt. Macedon. Fifty years later Hanging Rock was purchased by the state government and became controlled by the local shire council.  The council has since made Hanging Rock a popular location for horse races due to its adjacent horse track.  The first race at this horse track dates back to 1909.   

So if you are in the Melbourne area and have transportation definitely check out Hanging Rock and maybe even catch a horse race if your timing is good.  You probably won’t find the lost girls here or have some mysterious experience, but I can assure you that you will have a great time. 

You can learn more about Hanging Rock at its official website here.

Ivan Milat Cuts Off Finger to Mail to Judge

One of Australia’s most notorious killers, Ivan Milat is once again in the headlines, this time for cutting off one of his fingers:

SEVERING his finger in a bid for attention was a “ridiculous” act, serial killer Ivan Milat admits in letters to his family.

However,
the backpacker murderer doesn’t regret the self-mutilation and thinks
it was worth it, the letters published by a magazine show.

Milat,
serving a life sentence at NSW’s Goulburn supermax jail, in January
used a prison-issued plastic knife to cut off his little finger below
the knuckle on his left hand, The Daily Telegraph reports.

He placed the digit in a envelope addressed to NSW Supreme Court Justice
Peter McClellan, the man who twice denied Milat’s application for an
inquiry into his conviction of brutally killing seven hitchhikers
between 1989 and 1993.  [The Daily Telegraph]

If you haven’t heard of Ivan Milat before he is famous for the killing of seven backpackers between 1989-1994.  Not only did he murder these people but he brutally tortured them as well.  He is suspected of killing more people and many people believe he had help carrying out these killings. 

TruTV has a really good profile on Milat who could quite possibly be Australia’s most brutal serial killer.

Picture of the Day: Australia’s Salt Water Crocodiles


The Australian saltwater crocodiles are strong swimmers and have
reached Papua New Guinea and the Solomon islands. They communicate by
barks and are thought to display four different calls.

Via the Daily Mail.

Australian Soldiers More Likely to Be Killed By Stupidity at Home Than By the Taliban

This is sad but true:

OUR finest soldiers are deployed to the heat of battle in warzones worldwide.

But it is in the heat of a drinking session that they are more likely to become a casualty.

Top
brass are so alarmed by figures showing how many troops are injured and
killed in accidents well away from the front line that they have warned
soldiers against “irresponsible stupidity”, The Daily Telegraph reports.

“The
concept of work hard, play hard must not be confused with irresponsible
stupidity which can creep into non-operational and off-duty
activities,” Chief of the Army, Lieutenant General Ken Gillespie, told Army News.

Since 2006 more than eight times the number of Australian soldiers have died accidentally or from natural causes than in war.

The
injury rate for troops, on and off duty, is more than 40 times greater
at home than it is at the front. A total of 2612 have been badly hurt
by accidents or illness compared with about 70 wounded in Afghanistan
since April 1, 2006.  [The Daily Telegraph]

Man Kills Partner for Not Allowing Use of the Toilet

No matter the rationale for the killing this guy should have just moved out if this woman is as crazy as depicted:

A MAN accused of murdering his de facto wife told a court she
verbally abused him, controlled their finances and would not let him
use their home toilet.

Anthony Sherna told a Supreme Court jury his de facto partner Susanne Wild cut him off from contact with friends and family, was “unpredictable” and would constantly put him down.

“She just used to call me a weak little bastard,” he said.

The
jury has heard Mr Sherna strangled Ms Wild with a dressing gown cord in
February last year after she woke his dog and then buried her body in
their back yard in Melbourne’s southwest.

He has pleaded not guilty to her murder.  [AAP]