2020-04-01_Travel___Leisure_Southeast_Asia

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
Clockwise from far left:
The Painted Cliffs; a
spotted pardalote;
starry night at
Bernacchi House;
Howells Point; a
pademelon, a
mini-marsupial.

It’s a challenge to drag ourselves from our chubby friends,
but we soon find it’s worth it to observe elegant Cape Barren
geese casually sauntering through convict ruins. The British
first used Darlington as a convict settlement from 1825 and
then as a probation station from 1842 to 1850, where convicts
worked as laborers. Today, Darlington is recognized by unesco
as the best-preserved example of a probation station in
Australia and maintains a beautiful eeriness that the silver birds
with polka-dot plumes serve to accentuate.
Over the years, other industries such as whaling and
agriculture came and went. The most influential entrepreneur
was an Italian, Diego Bernacchi, who in 1884 pioneered silk,
wine, cement and tourism ventures. Today, Bernacchi’s house
has been lovingly restored as accommodation for The Maria
Island Walk. Walking into the garden, we startle tiny marsupials
called pademelons. A flock of green rosellas dances elaborately,
while a striking scarlet robin regards us suspiciously. His chest
is so brilliantly red that the kids say he looks like he’s bleeding.
After a dinner of fresh hapuku fish, we sit by the open fire
sharing a Tassie Pinot Noir. 

I’m going to experience this island the slow way, on the
Maria Island Walk, a four-day, guided hike. Apart from the
optional Bishop and Clerk trek, the walk is fairly gentle, and the
service personal. Three guides lead our family (kids aged 15, 13
and nine), plus one other guest.
The wildlife action starts on the boat transfer to the island,
where we are entertained by a pod of common dolphins, three
seals and a humpback whale, all at once. On land, the stars of
the show are undoubtedly the wombats, and as I step off the
boat, I see two of the rotund, furry blobs within a minute. I
race over and start snapping photos while my kids plonk down
beside them, gleeful at the cuteness overload.
But their behavior is puzzling. Wombats are normally
nocturnal, and here they graze in full daylight. Guide Kate
Saunders has a biology background and explains that here,
wombats have no predators, and with no cars on the island,
they are not afraid of humans. We respect the wild wombats
and resist the urge to touch them. Enthralled, we all crouch
close enough to hear them munching grass, and they are
CL delightfully oblivious. 

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