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After flying on Jet Star Airlines from Melbourne to Hobart, Tasmania, we rented our second car from Avis and stayed three nights at a B&B located right at Signalman’s Point on Mt. Nelson, high above the city of Hobart.
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Since we had ample time to explore the city after arriving in the morning, we walked around Battery Point and Salamanca Square and wandered through a park where Ron is pictured standing by the statue of Tasmania's namesake, the explorer Abel Tasman. On our first full day in Tasmania we decided to take a tour of the Cadbury Chocolate Factory (free samples!) on the way to Mt. Field National Park. At the park we took a 2-hour circular hike to Russell Falls, the “Tall Trees” (a giant variety of Eucalyptus called “Swamp Gum Trees,” Rainbow Falls (pix),
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and back to the Visitors Center. A 40-minute drive on a gravel road took us up much higher on the mountain to Lake Dobson. On a short hike around the lake instead of encountering a deer, chipmunk or squirrel, we actually saw a wombat!
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On our second full day in Tasmania, April 6th, we decided to drive down the Tasman Peninsula to Port Arthur, famous as the site of a huge high security prison
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where repeat offenders in the U.K. were shipped by sailing vessel in the mid 1800’s to far away Tasmania. We fully expected Port Arthur be a town instead of just a historic prison site; however, no town actually exists, and we were lucky to find a single service station.
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The prison—long abandoned and mostly in ruins—does have a very impressive Visitors Center where one can read the stories of individual prisoners. The entrance fee includes a 45-minute guided tour and a harbor cruise. The Port Arthur Church (required attendance for all prisoners) no longer has a roof but must have been impressive in its day.
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After visiting Port Arthur we stopped at a couple viewpoints in Tasman National Park on the way back to Hobart. We are both pictured standing on “The Tesselated Pavement,”
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a large slab of rock at water’s edge that had been scored by the elements into a unique grid formation. Also on the way back to our B&B we drove through the historic town of Richmond which has Australia’s oldest bridge, completed in 1823 by convict labor. - rw