Well, what more could happen after last night's excitement? Well
after making and eating breakfast, chatting for a while, sorting
out and packing away the tent and all the rest of our stuff back
into the car, there was this awkward moment while we were sitting
side by side in the front of the car. Eventually I turned to Em
and asked, "So, can I have the keys please.". She looked at me with
a glance that said as clear as the morning sun rising over the fields,
"But, you've got them". There is only one word that adequately sums
up the feeling, "F*ck". In fact the film Four
Wedding and a Funeral's entire first scene pays homege to the
word.
We spent about two hours searching. We looked in all of
the obvious places, the tent, the food boxes, bags, in the car,
under the seats, under the car, on the way to the toilet, around
the campsite, we ended up even roping the kids on the campground
in to help hunt for the things (reward offered). In the end, we
decided that there was nothing for it but for Em to go to Apollo
Bay again, call her parents and ask them to courier the spare
set out to us. I, meanwhile would wait by the car (we couldn't lock
it) and wait.
One final look around (spurred on by one of the guys from the campsite),
eventually turned them up - in my rucksack. The rest of this is
hearsay and wouldn't stand up in a court of law, but based on
- Fact No.1 I had not seen the keys all morning; and
- Fact No.2 Em had taken them to the loo and back, and then started
cooking breaky from around the boot;
I'm guessing that they probably got knocked into my pack, to disappear
to the bottom once I threw my clothes on top. Needles to say of
course that everyone in the campsite just thought that I'd been
hoarding them, making me look like a right pr*t.
Found them!
Eventually we got going and continued our tour along the Great
Ocean Road. We drove back to Apollo bay (at a much more leisurely
pace). It's a lovely little town and a great place to break up the
Great Ocean Road journey. We went swimming - "Oh mi god it
was cold".
The section between Apollo Bay and Lorne is spectacular - much
more so than further west. Although there aren't the stunning outcrops
in the 12 Apostle vein, the road itself is cut right into the side
of the mountain side. So you end up with the forest on one side
of the car and the roaring see on the other.
Portrait
view
We ended up in Queenscliff this evening and stayed in what must
be one of the best YHA's in the world. The Queenscliff
Inn in Sorento was simply luxury for us after all that traipsing
around in the tent. It was definitely about time that we spoiled
ourselves.
Queenscliff - looking West, back towards the Great Ocean Road.
Queenscliff inn
To tomorrow
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