On Friday (10 April) the four of us travelled to Margaret River for the long Easter weekend. Margaret River is about 100 miles south of Perth and is the city at the center of the wine area of South west Australia. It was very busy since it was the beginning of the spring holiday for the local school children. Margaret River boasts more than 100 wineries where most of the popular wines get exported from, particularly white wines that are exceptional in the region. We visited 6 wineries and 2 breweries over the extended weekend. 


We stayed in a wonderful little two bedroom apartment that had full kitchen and two baths.
More often than not we ended up having a large lunch somewhere then staying in for the evening, content with fine wines, cheeses, meats and conversation. Besides the wineries, we explored the coastlines of the Indian Ocean which had spectacular views. We stopped along the coast for a picture or two. Our favorite part was watching serious surfers riding serious waves. 
Our final stop was to the Leeuwin Point lighthouse.
On the way back to Freemantle, we passed through some wildfire areas 40 km south of Freemantle. They were mostly under control, but you could still see some hotspots and we could smell the fire in the mornings from our bedroom. Hundreds of acres burned, but luckily they were able to keep it from jumping the highway to nearby houses. It is so sad - it was arson and it was devastating.
Tuesday was a stay-in day so we could catch up on laundry and replenishing supplies for the rest of the week and for our onward travels. That evening we enjoyed dinner at Ruocco’s, a nearby Italian restaurant. After hearing about them and seeing them for nearly two weeks, Tom indulged in a grilled crayfish. This was not the little freshwater creatures found in Michigan streams. Crayfish means Australian Rock Lobster, pretty much like the lobsters available in Maine, but without the large claws.
On Wednesday morning we headed with Max to the downtown Perth area. Our first stop was the Swan River estuary and a delightful tour of it provided by Vicci’s father, in a wooden speed boat he had built himself, named Rascal, and the second of the three in his homemade fleet. 
Patti had the special privilege of steering the boat while Mr. Niven kept control of the throttle, primarily to assure that the boat didn’t go too slow. Our next stop was King’s Park
which overlooks the Swan River estuary and the Perth City center. 
We walked the trails, enjoying the trees and flowers. Part of one trail is elevated, so that we walked between the trees at the canopy level, the better to see the leaves. At that point we parted company with Max and headed for the Museum of Western Australia.
Tom discovered a new obsession when we were in Denham at the Shark Bay Discovery Center: the Dirk Hartog plate. Hartog was a Dutch merchant sea captain who made landfall on the west coast of Australia in 1616. To record the event, he had a pewter plate hammered flat, inscribed on it the date and a few names, and nailed it to a post on the near shore island now named for him. Nine years later another Dutch merchant captain, Vlemingh, found the plate. He hammered out a new pewter plate from ship's stores, copied Hartog's inscription on it, then added his own. Vlemingh took the original Hartog plate with him, and it ended up in Amsterdam. Almost 200 years later a French expedition picked up Vlemingh's plate and took it back to Paris. The Discovery Center in Shark Bay said that the original Vlemingh plate had been returned to Australia in 1947, and that it resided in the Western Australia Museum. We didn't find it there. The museum staff said it was in the maritime museum.
We didn't find it there, but we did find the next clue: the shipwreck museum down the street.
We finally tracked down Vlemingh's original plate,
and now Tom is aiming for Hartog's in Amsterdam.
Anyway, after visiting the museums, we walked along the harbor back towards Max and Vicci's house and stopped in at a delightful brewpub called Little Creatures.
We had "chips" (fries)with garlic mayo sauce and Portugese sausage, and of course their house brews. Thus fortified, we returned to the house to finish packing. Following a simple pizza dinner, we said our goodbyes, not eager to leave because we had such fun with Vicci and Max in Western Australia.
Tuesday was a stay-in day so we could catch up on laundry and replenishing supplies for the rest of the week and for our onward travels. That evening we enjoyed dinner at Ruocco’s, a nearby Italian restaurant. After hearing about them and seeing them for nearly two weeks, Tom indulged in a grilled crayfish. This was not the little freshwater creatures found in Michigan streams. Crayfish means Australian Rock Lobster, pretty much like the lobsters available in Maine, but without the large claws.
Tom discovered a new obsession when we were in Denham at the Shark Bay Discovery Center: the Dirk Hartog plate. Hartog was a Dutch merchant sea captain who made landfall on the west coast of Australia in 1616. To record the event, he had a pewter plate hammered flat, inscribed on it the date and a few names, and nailed it to a post on the near shore island now named for him. Nine years later another Dutch merchant captain, Vlemingh, found the plate. He hammered out a new pewter plate from ship's stores, copied Hartog's inscription on it, then added his own. Vlemingh took the original Hartog plate with him, and it ended up in Amsterdam. Almost 200 years later a French expedition picked up Vlemingh's plate and took it back to Paris. The Discovery Center in Shark Bay said that the original Vlemingh plate had been returned to Australia in 1947, and that it resided in the Western Australia Museum. We didn't find it there. The museum staff said it was in the maritime museum.
Anyway, after visiting the museums, we walked along the harbor back towards Max and Vicci's house and stopped in at a delightful brewpub called Little Creatures.