Cocos Beach Bungalows
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Travel Blogs from Broome
Heaven here on earth!
... have chatted to them all day. After we had lunch we headed down to the most beautiful swimming beach, that the locals assured us we wouldn't get eaten by crocs. This beach was just breath taking, clear blue water, white sands, magazine worthy, just paradise. We headed back to camp in the arvo, to head down the beach to watch the sun go down and what a beautiful sight, the lower the sun the more intense the red the rocks became. This morning it was time to leave heaven on earth and I'm ...
Day 57 - Wednesday
... 1889, just five years after Broome was founded, the Broome Port was proclaimed as a Warehousing Port, however in the first years the Port did not have a wharf to operate from so vessels would come in on the tide and sit on the bottom once the waters receded. Cargo was lowered over the sides of ships and carried to shore.
In 1896 the State Government awarded a contract to J Wishart & Sons for the construction of a 2,953 feet (about 900 metres) wharf at Mangrove Point ...
Day 36
A quiet day in Broome. We played mini golf just down the road after having a coffee. The temperature soon climbed sharply and we didn't bother to finish the game. We drove out to Gantheaume Point to look at the lighthouse and Anastasia's pool made by a lighthouse keeper for his wife. Later in the ...
Emily Carter - what a wonderful women.
... explain later.
The other issue is that post 1967 referendum, station owners could no longer afford to keep the traditional owners on their land as they had to pay wages. Previously it was tea. sugar, clothes etc - this meant they had to leave their land which again was a huge trauma for the people. Everything was taken away from them.
Two area’s I want to focus on. The instrumental influence of change by Emily and June and secondly FASD ...
Broome, first West Coast stop
... Worth about $250, so not bad for a $100 spend.
We kept getting told about the "Staircase to the Moon", and not really having a clue what it was, decided we better check it out. Between March and October you can see the full moon rise over the exposed mudflats (only on a very low tide) at Roebuck Bay and it creates the illusion of a staircase going up to the moon. It's quite a big deal ...