Tag Archive for 'Bendigo'

On Walkabout At: The 2008 Bendigo Easter Parade – Part 2

Prior Posting: 2008 Bendigo Easter Parade – Part 1

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With about half of the 2008 Bendigo Easter Parade completed my wife and I continued to sit back and enjoy the remainder of the parade. Sun Loong the highlight of the parade may have passed but there was still plenty more things to see such as the Scouts of Australia:

For those that don’t know, in Australia there is no Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts because they are both combined into one organization called Scouts.   Following the scouts was the Lions Club which just like last year’s parade, this would be the only time the Stars & Stripes would make an appearance during the parade:

Next up was a Bendigo skate board club:

Shortly after the skaters the next marchers were from the Falun Dafa:

As well as the Falun Gong:

The Falun Gong marchers included some incredibly beautifully dressed women in Chinese attire:

They also had a group fan dancers that were quite skilled and put on a good show:

These people meditating though was just boring to watch:

I would be more impressed if they were meditating while doing a handstand or something.  Of course the Falun Gong had Chinese drummers as well:

When the Falun Gong procession passed it reminded me of another group that is persecuted by the Chinese government that did not march in this year’s parade, the Tibetan Monks.   Last year the Tibetan Buddhist monks marched in the parade and I’m curious if the current crackdown of Tibetans in China had anything to do with it?

Anyway the Falun Gong marchers were quite good and were followed by a few more marchers such as this local Bendigo floor hockey team:

The Central Deborah Gold Mine also put a float together for the parade:

A word of advice for anyone visiting Bendigo, I highly recommend taking a trip to check out this interesting gold mine in Bendigo.  Toward the end of the parade we got to see another person dressed up as an animal:

At least I knew why this person was dressed up as an animal because it was part of a group of Humane Society  marchers.  Finally the end of the parade featured an Australian Defence Force vehicle called a Bushmaster:

The Bushmaster is manufactured by the THALES corporation in Bendigo which is a major employer in the city.  Then right behind the Bushmaster and the very last marchers in the parade were soldiers from the Australian Defence Force:

Overall the parade was still fun to go and see this year, but last year’s parade my wife and I felt was better.  Last year we believe had better floats and more of them.  Heck the gay and transsexual groups didn’t even have a float this year like they did last year.   What’s a parade in Australia without gays and transsexuals?  Anyway if anyone is in Victoria during the Easter holiday it is a great day out to see the parade and tour around one of my favorite cities in all of Australia, Bendigo.

On Walkabout At: The 2008 Bendigo Easter Parade – Part 1

Today my wife and I took a trip over to Bendigo to watch the annual Bendigo Easter Parade. Long time readers probably know that I am a big fan of Bendigo and enjoy visiting this great city every chance I can get. My wife and I went to last year’s parade and had a great time and we were sure this year’s parade would be great as well.

However, before we could enjoy the parade we had to find a place to park. Parking is very tight on the day of the parade so it is best to get there a little early. My wife and I found a place to park over at the city train station and then walked downtown from there. It took about 10 minutes to walk to the downtown area that was all sealed off for the parade. Something people don’t realize is that Bendigo during the Easter holiday does more then just hold the parade. It also has a number of cultural events along with turning the entire downtown area into one large carnival complete with rides.

Once my wife and I successfully waded through the crowds we made our way to the heart of downtown and found a spot in front of the Soldier Memorial to watch the parade from:

Soon enough the parade began and the first of many marching bands to come walked on by:

Then the first of the few bagpipe groups in the parade marched on by us:

These bagpipe players were from the Clan MacLeod and they looked every bit Scottish. Shortly after the bagpipe players the most famous part of the parade began to come by which is the Bendigo Chinese Association:

The Bendigo Easter Parade began in 1871 to raise money for a local hospital and has been ran annually ever since making the parade the oldest parade in Australia. The large Chinese community that moved to Bendigo during the gold rush years began participating in the parade in 1893 and ever since then has been the most prominent contributors to the parade which includes the world’s longest imperial dragon, Sun Loong which is without a doubt the star of the parade.

Before Sun Loong was going to make an appearance the Chinese marchers from not only Bendigo, but from Melbourne as well put on a variety of shows with their dragons, drums, gongs, and firecrackers:

You can probably see from the pictures that the Bendigo Chinese Association is not all full blooded Chinese. Most of the members we saw were white Australians that I am assuming have Chinese ancestry of some kind. Other marchers were of obvious Chinese ancestry:

Since the Chinese came to Bendigo during the gold rush in the 1860’s they have been fully integrated into Australian society including through marriage. I had a guy at work tell me that the Bendigo Chinese are actually more Australian than most Australians since they have lived in the country for so long

The kids were also getting into the act and they looked like they were having fun as well:

These dragon performers from Melbourne I really liked:

There was also guys lighting off Chinese fireworks on the road as they walked by:

Then eventually Sun Loong made its long awaited appearance at the parade:

Sun Loong is a really long dragon and I am estimating that it must of had about 100 people to move the dragon as it went by:

For those of you that couldn’t attend the parade to see Sun Loong you can actually see the dragon at anytime during a visit to Bendigo by stopping by the Golden Dragon Museum located in downtown that is home to the dragon. Additionally for anyone wondering, the beautiful building you see in the background of the above photograph is the historic Shamrock Hotel, one of my favorite buildings in Bendigo.

After Sun Loong went by we were greeted with yet more bagpipe players:

Then later on these two guys on stilts came by:

These two guys were actually quite impressive because they could walk on stilts and juggle at the same time. I would think that is no easy feat. Then they were followed by a procession of historic fire trucks:

The fire trucks were actually pretty cool, but I definitely wouldn’t want to be depended on them to save my house if it was burning down back in the days they were in service. Then following them was another Chinese inspired group, the Fu Wa Dancing Girls:

They were definitely girls, but we didn’t see any dancing though. They were followed by the weirdest thing in the parade, this person dressed as a giraffe:

I have no idea why this person was marching in the parade dressed as a giraffe, but it was an impressive outfit nonetheless. Another thing in the parade I couldn’t figure out why they were there, was this guy dressed as a dinosaur:

The guy in the dinosaur outfit was definitely having fun though because he was attacking little kids on the sidewalk watching the parade much to their amusement. Anyway there was yet much more to come in this fantastic parade.

Next Posting: The 2008 Bendigo Easter Parade – Part 2

On Walkabout At: Lake Eppalock, Victoria

If you ever look at a map of Victoria you will see a large body of water just outside the city named Lake Eppalock. My wife and I decided to take a drive out there and see what the lake was like. As we drove towards the lake we saw lots of signs indicating fishing sites as well as even a sign for the Bendigo Yacht Club. However, once we got to the lake it wasn’t yachts that we saw but this instead:

Picture from Lake Eppalock, Victoria

The drought here combined with increase water usage due to the population explosion in Victoria has led to this lake being nearly sucked dry. Scanning north we actually could make out a little bit of water left in the lake:

Picture from Lake Eppalock, Victoria

Only along the dam is there any water left and I don’t even know if a canoe would get very far without getting beached or stuck on something:

Picture from Lake Eppalock, Victoria

I would have to say Lake Eppalock is definitely the most visible sign of the drought here in Australia that we have seen. So far this fall and winter Victoria has been receiving plenty of rain, however with catchment areas this low it is going to take a lot more rain to ever fill them again. I doubt the Bendigo Yacht Club is going to ever go to be doing any yachting on this lake any time soon.

On Walkabout At: Bendigo’s Golden Dragon Museum

Chinese immigrants have long played a major role in Bendigo’s history. The Chinese immigrants flocked to Bendigo when news of the gold strike there reached China. As the competition for the gold heated up the Chinese often faced harsh discrimination. However, Bendigo’s Chinese community preserved and prospered over the decades to where now a days Bendigo’s Chinese community is actually considered more Australian than most Australians themselves because they have lived in the country for so long.

The Chinatown section of Bendigo is quite evident by the Chinese gate that welcomes visitors to the area:

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

The Chinatown section of Bendigo is not what you would think of as a modern day Chinatown. This section of Bendigo is more or less a historical and cultural area for the city with the new Golden Dragon Museum being the main attraction there.

The museum is most famously known as the home to Sun Loong which is the world’s longest imperial dragon. You can see the head of the dragon pictured below in the museum:

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

The dragon leaves the museum only once a year to take part in the yearly Bendigo Easter Parade which my wife and I attended this year. You can read about our experiences at the parade here and here. The Chinese have taken part in the Bendigo Easter Parade since 1871 and is Australia’s oldest festival:

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

The museum also is filled with many historical exhibits and artifacts that describe the Chinese heritage of the city:

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

It is $8 to get in to the museum which isn’t to bad but I did find the museum a bit small. The museum also has a cafe where you try out different Chinese tea if you are so inclined. Located across the street from the museum are some Chinese gardens. The gardens have some nice pavilions, ponds, and viewing platforms that are nice to walk through and check out:

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

They are well maintained and is quite amazing to find such architecture in the middle of Australia:

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

Picture from Bendigo's Golden Dragon Museum

If you look closely in the background of the above picture you can see Bendigo’s old Post Office building. On the northern outskirts of Bendigo and at the very end of the city’s tram system is the Chinese Joss House. The Joss House was built in the 1860’s and is still used by the city’s Chinese to this day:

Chinese Joss House In Bendigo

It is open daily except for Sundays from 11AM-4PM. Check it out if you have the time. Any visit to Bendigo should at least include a visit to the Golden Dragon Museum to really appreciate the level of historical and cultural influence Bendigo’s Chinese community has had on the city. The Chinese have really added a lot of cultural charm to the already charming city of Bendigo.

On Walkabout At: Bendigo’s Rosalind Park

Rosalind Park in Bendigo sits directly across from downtown and adjacent to Charing Cross. The park is filled with many trees and walking paths and a nice place to find some shade during the summer. It also is home to Bendigo’s Soldier Memorial as well as host to a number of statues. One of the most famous statues in the area is one of lady luck blessing a gold prospector that you can see pictured below:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

The park also has a statue of Queen Victoria, which is fitting since Bendigo is located in the Australian state of Victoria:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

From the statue there is a nice view looking back to the Charing Cross area of downtown Bendigo:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

In the park you can also see what used to be the old creek that runs through Bendigo that started the gold rush in the 1850’s when prospectors found gold there:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

The creek decades ago was covered over with stones and concrete in order to stop prospectors from digging up the creek. A walk you definitely need to do while visiting Bendigo is to walk up the hill behind the park. As you walk up the hill you will see an old school to your right that is still in use today:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

To your left on the top of the hill you will see the tower of a former gold mine:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

Stairs have been built up this tower that gives visitors a sweeping view over Rosalind Park and Bendigo:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

The above picture is the view towards the east of downtown looking across the Rosalind Park. You can see the clock tower from the old Post Office building rising in the center of the picture. Here is the view looking towards the south:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

In the distance over the various buildings you can see the Sacred Heart Cathedral. Finally here is the view looking down onto a footy field on top of the hill:

Picture from Bendigo's Rosalind Park

A walk up to the mine tower is a great way to get oriented as well as to get a different view of the city.  So definitely check it out as part of any visit to the wonderful city of Bendigo.

On Walkabout At: Bendigo’s Sacred Heart Cathedral

The Sacred Heart Cathedral is one of the most prominent buildings in all of Bendigo due to its large size as well as its commanding presence on a hill overlooking the city.

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

The idea to build the cathedral began in 1895 and completed with the opening of the cathedral in 1901. The cathedral would have more construction and expansions over the decades with the latest expansion being in 1977. Overall the cathedral is the second largest cathedral in all of Australia, second only to St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Melbourne.

The building was built in the English gothic architecture which was popular in those days:

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

The outside walls are built with rocks of granite mined from the local area that is decorated with many fine sculptures and statues:

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

The inside of the cathedral is really quite beautiful:

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

The lighting combined with the high ceilings and atmosphere was really incredible. Here are some random facts about the cathedral from its website:

Total length:
Width of nave and aisles:
Width across the transepts:
Height of ceiling of the nave:
Height of main spire:
Height of front lantern towers:
Total area within walls:
75.68 metres
21.34 metres
43.47 metres
24.08 metres
86.64 metres (from floor level to top of cross)
40.53 metres
2191.58 square metres

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

Picture from Sacred Heart Cathredal

If you don’t have a car the cathedral can be a bit of walk and the tram doesn’t stop there. So if you don’t have a car it is up to you if you have the time available to walk up the hill to the cathedral. If you are driving it is definitely worth stopping by and spending a few minutes walking in and around the cathedral. Even if you aren’t religious you can still appreciate the beautiful architecture of the building.

On Walkabout On: Bendigo’s Talking Trams

There are a variety of ways to check out one of my favorite cities in all of Australia: Bendigo, but seeing the city by car or by foot is no where near as fun as seeing the city by talking tram:

Picture of A Bendigo Talking Tram

Bendigo at one time had an extensive and widely used tram network that covered most of the city. The trams first began operations in 1890 and served as a means of mass transportation in Bendigo until 1972 when it was no longer economically feasible to keep the trams running due to the rise of the automobile. A new economic model needed to be created and 1972 the trams were transformed from being a system of mass transportation to one being used for tourism.

The trams operators kept one line of track open that runs from the Central Deborah Gold Mine, through downtown, and ends on the outskirts of town at the Chinese Joss House:

Chinese Joss House In Bendigo

This route proved popular with tourists and is still a key tourist attraction of Bendigo today. Times and fares for the tram can be found here, but overall the round trip takes about an hour and forty minutes and you can get off and on the tram to see different sites if you like and then just jump on the next tram:

Picture of A Bendigo Talking Tram

A nice addition to the tram system is that the tram stop for about 30 minutes at the tram station where you can get out and see the different trams they have in operation in the city:

Picture of A Bendigo Talking Tram

Picture of A Bendigo Talking Tram

At the station you can also see the different restoration works the workers there have been doing. The workers there actually restore trams from across the world and sell them after restoring them. For example many of the trams in Melbourne were done by the workers here in Bendigo.

The results of the restoration work is really incredible:

Picture of A Bendigo Talking Tram

The inside of the trams looks just as good as the outside:

Picture of A Bendigo Talking Tram

The tram’s driver gives commentary throughout the journey and it a good way to see the city while learning a bit about Bendigo’s history and many buildings. A ride on the tram should really be included as part of any visit to Bendigo.

On Walkabout At: The Central Deborah Gold Mine

A must see attraction for anyone visiting Bendigo has to be the Central Deborah Gold Mine:

Picture from Central Deborah Gold Mine

A little known fact about Bendigo is that there are many gold mines still operating within and around the city. The land below the city is literally honeycombed with mine shafts that keep penetrating deeper and deeper within the earth to continue to mine the famous gold reef running beneath Bendigo. One of these mines the Central Deborah gold mine is no longer mining for gold, but for tourists instead. The mine is located just south of downtown Bendigo surrounded by commercial and residential buildings. Yet in the midst of all these buildings is a fully functional gold mine.

The gold mine offers a couple of tour options. The offer one hour guided tour through a mine shaft 60 meters down or a two and half hour tour where they take you 85 meters down to go and mine gold yourself using real mining equipment. You can read details and prices here.

My wife and I decided to take the one hour tour and it ended up being well worth it. Before we took the elevator down the shaft our guide made sure everyone in our group had a hard hat and battery pack to power our head lamps. Once this was complete we headed down the elevator. As you can imagine the mine shaft was quite dark and damp:

Picture from Central Deborah Gold Mine

To make a point of how dark these mines were back in the early days here our guide had us turn off our lights and then he lit a candle. It is amazing how little light the candle created in the blackness down there and that was all the early miners had to use to mine the shafts with. The took us around and showed us some of the rooms down there. They actually have a common area down there that was used for miners to rest in that is now being used to rent out for functions including even holding weddings.

From there the guide took us to see and operate some of the equipment used in the mine:

Picture from Central Deborah Gold Mine

The equipment is really loud and early miners had little appreciation for hearing protection. What we found to be really cool was when we got to see what the actual gold reef looks like. You could actually see the quartz rock in the wall of the shaft. The mine left an actual nugget of gold in the reef for everyone to see. This reef has different spurs that extend in different directions and it is these spurs that the different shafts try to find to mine.

Overall, the tour was quite good and the guide very knowledgeable. If you have the time definitely take the tour, it is only an hour long and provides some good memories. There is more to the mine above ground as well. They have a mining museum that has interesting displays about the history and process of gold mining. If you like you can even take a pan and go panning for gold yourself in the creek running through the mine:

Picture from Central Deborah Gold Mine

I was told the mine actually will sprinkle some gold flakes into the creek for people to find. We didn’t try it, because the creek was filled with Scouts the day we went who were having a blast it looked like panning for gold.

A nice thing about the mine tour is that you can buy a ticket that combines it with the Talking Tram Tour around the city of Bendigo.  Spending a day exploring the Central Deborah Gold Mine and taking the Talking Tram tour is a great way to experience the wonderful city of Bendigo.

On Walkabout At: The Historic Buildings of Bendigo

One of my favorite cities in all of Australia has to be the central Victorian city of Bendigo. The unusual name for this city of 105,000 people comes from the name of a famous Irish boxer. However, it was not boxing that would make this city famous, but gold and lots of it. Gold was first found in Bendigo in the 1850’s by miners panning the creek running through the area. Prospectors soon flooded the area and set up tents around the creek to pan for gold. Before long buildings and then an entire town was built to support the gold rush. Eventually the surface gold ran out and actual mines were dug which garnered more riches from what had become known as the Victorian Gold Fields.

The wealth from these mines is what built the Victorian capitol city of Melbourne into the great city that it is today. Additionally much of the wealth from the gold rush period can still be seen in Bendigo today as well. Bendigo is absolutely filled with some amazing architecture that was built during this period with most of the buildings clustered along the main street area running through downtown.

The most striking building would be the old Post Office:

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

From most areas in Bendigo the Post Office’s clock tower can easily be seen and is quite a sight. The old Post Office is now used as a visitor center and a city museum. The visitor center is quite good and the people working there are very helpful. I highly recommend a visit there along with dropping in and checking out the museum to learn more about the city’s long and important history to Australia.

Sitting adjacent to the old Post Office you can see in the background, is the Soldier Memorial:

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

Just about every Australian town, big and small has some kind of war memorial and Bendigo is no different. It is always amazing to see how many names from the various towns in Australia have died overseas fighting for the country and Bendigo has given plenty of those names.

Just across the street from the Soldier Memorial you can see from left to right, the original Bendigo Bank and the Beehive building which originally housed gold buyers, a stock exchange, and merchants:

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

Today both buildings are used for stores and restaurants. Just down the road from the Post Office you can find the old Bendigo Mechanics Institute:

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

The institute also served as the city’s public library. The building today is no longer a library but still an institute, but one now called the Bendigo Regional Institute of Technology.

The most famous hotel architecture in town is without a doubt the Shamrock Hotel:

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

The Shamrock was at one time the most elegant hotel in all of Australia. The hotel had its own in-house orchestra and theatre that was a must visit locale for all the famous European celebrities of the gold rush period. The Shamrock today is owned by the Comfort Inn hotel chain and is a nice place to drink some coffee and have a bite to eat while sitting on the deck with a sweeping view of downtown.

That sweeping view includes Charing Cross section of town that served as the city’s main commercial district:

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

Sprinkled throughout downtown are also a variety of pubs and hotels that are well over a hundred years old:

Picture from Downtown Bendigo, Australia

The town is absolutely filled with historical architecture everywhere you go, but this just serves as a taste of the many fabulous buildings you can see.

On Walkabout At: The 2007 Bendigo Easter Parade – Part 4

The Grand Finale

The last segment of the parade was put on by the Bendigo Chinese Association:

This was in my opinion the best part of the parade. The association had more dragons and music than the rest of the parade combined:

The people running with these dragons had to be very tired by the end of the parade:

As you can see many of the Bendigo Chinese Association’s members do not look Chinese. Since the Chinese came to Bendigo during the gold rush in the 1860’s they have been fully integrated into Australian society including through marriage. I had a guy at work tell me that the Bendigo Chinese are actually more Australian than most Australians since they have lived in the country for so long:

They also had a number of these people wearing Chinese masks marching in the parade as well:

They also had people like these guys pictured in white below that set off firecrackers as the dragons marched by:

Then finally the world’s longest imperial Chinese dragon, Sun Loong, made it’s appearance as the last event in the parade:

I can’t really convey in pictures how long this dragon is, but roughly 150 people are needed to move this dragon:

Here is Sun Loong coming right for me:

And there it goes by me:

Then finally, and it did take a while, the tail of the dragon passes by thus ending the parade:

All in all an outstanding parade and a great day spent in Bendigo. The Easter Parade is actually part of the larger Bendigo Easter Festival that went on for the past four days. It is all very well done and good fun, plus Bendigo is just a good place to visit at anytime of the year because like I said before it is one of my favorite cities in all of Australia due to the cultural and historical aspects of the town. If you are in Victoria during this time next year I highly recommend attending the festival, I know the wife and I will be back.

Prior Posting: The Parade Continues