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Aren't Holidays the Greatest?!

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Hi everyone! Well, here it is, almost a month since my last post.... and I've been on holidays! So grab yourself a pot of tea and settle in for a whole lot of photos of a really fun trip. Firstly, we had to delay the trip because the roads were closed... closed because it RAINED! Before we all get too excited, not the earth shattering drought breaking kind of rain, but a significant amount which was widespread and has greened the place up nicely. We had over a few weeks around about the 100mm mark, (which is more than we had in the entire year for 2018 I'm told) so it was significant. Alongside this, there was the flow of the Paroo into the floodplain, so there is still a lot of water hanging around in the channels and drains on the sides of the road. There is water in the river again, though it has subsided from the height of the flow to a stable and slow moving 1m -1.5meters. It did get up to about 2.9 which was very nice to see. So, we went to the North Coast of NSW. We t

Homeschool roundup, crochet progress and lots of water :)

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Howdy! Well the big news here is it has rained..... we've had over 100mm since Easter, which I am pretty sure is more than all of 2018! We have water in the Paroo, and more coming from the northern floods and the campground, usually sporting views of the dry river bed is actually 90% under water! The SES is continuing to monitor the situation with the river, and we are getting very regular updates about the peak flood being expected to come in just under the 3m mark middle of this week or so. The roads are all still closed, and so I hope they are opened soon (so as not tin interfere again with travel plans!). If not just good for the soul to see the rain, it has been a very timely, valuable and genuine learning lesson about the water cycle, rain, where rivers flow from and to and how even though there is so much water at the moment, it still is a drought. Morgan even linked his knowledge of early Australian Exploration into the conversation, which tells me one thing - we are

The Burke and Wills Expedition and the Paroo River Flowing

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Hello again! What a busy month or so we have had! It started with our last trip to Cobar. At homeschool group the children acted out the story of Burke and Wills. If your memory of primary school history lessons is good, you'll remember that in 1860 there was a race, with a grand prize for the south to north crossing of Australia. Well, the Burke and Wills Expedition was one of the teams that started (and the only one that actually completed the crossing) but all but 1 member of that Northward Party perished somewhere around present Innaminka on the Cooper Creek. There is a famous tree - The Dig Tree, where the waiting party buried supplies then left on the same morning that the northward party returned. They had carved the tree with instructions to find the supplies, and they did dig them up, but then stumbled around a bit more before dying a few days/weeks later, or in the case of Mr King, being rescued and cared for by local Aboriginal people until the search party located him