Sept 10, 2025 Sunshine Coast

From Deception Bay we moved up through Sunshine Coast and further north to a small village a little inland. Sunshine Coast is an area north of Brisbane, on the coast of course, that has become a tourist mecca. We stopped at a few sites to see the beaches that were very busy considering it was Wednesday and the spring school holidays don’t start until the end of September!

One of the less busy beaches, away from the tourist waterfront of Sunshine Beach and Noosa Heads, in the Noosa National Park.

Up and over the headlands to a more secluded, but still frequented beach!

A short loop trail through the tiny remnant of rainforest left in the area took us past strangler fig trees slowly encircling their host trees, and another ‘bottlebutt tree’ with a thickened trunk base giving it extra support in poor soil.

Sept 9, 2025 Crikey!

We realized we are a short drive away from the Australia Zoo! We can’t pass up the opportunity to see the zoo – “Home of the Crocodile Hunter”! Plus, it’s a chance to see Australian wildlife up close!

Finally we spotted koalas! The Zoo operates a Wildlife Hospital that treats and rehabilitates injured wildlife. The koalas on display are in various stages of rehabilitation and most are eventually returned to the wild.

We realized why we couldn’t spot them in the forests around Port Macquarie, despite our hosts telling us they sometimes traverse their yard! They do blend into the spotted bark of the eucalyptus trees and the clumps of branches and leaves. Even a twig seems to support the one on the left, but what a wedgie!

They have enclosed fields where you can feed and pet the kangaroos. I was skeptical especially since I read that kangaroos are basically “deer that went to prison”!

The cassowary, the lesser known cousin of another large flightless Australian bird, the emu, is considered the most dangerous bird due to its strong legs and a very sharp, long claw on its inner toe!

And running loose all around the zoo are the Australian water dragons, large harmless lizards, similar to the iguanas we are more familiar with in the American tropics.

Sept 8, 2025 Deception Bay

We took a late morning walk along the Bay Esplanade from the mangrove natural area towards town.

Enjoying the view of the open bay from convenient lounge benches.

Later in the day we walked the same area to find the tide had gone out, leaving a huge mudflat! Hence the name “Deception Bay”. An early English explorer entered the bay in 1823, believing it was a river due to the shallow, wide waters. Eventually realizing his mistake he named it Deception Bay. The name stuck and was later applied to the surrounding community after settlement began. The bay itself is now named Moreton Bay.

Sept 7, 2025 Flying North.

We took the train back to Sydney and spent one night near the airport

to catch a morning flight to Brisbane

where we rented a car for our exploration of Queensland.

One last walk through the flying fox colony in Kooloonbung Creek Nature Reserve ,in Port Macquarie, and past the sculpture to catch our bus, then train into Sydney.

In Brisbane we got our rental car and drove an hour and a quarter to our Airbnb in Deception Bay. After grocery shopping we took an evening walk along the waterfront near the Redcliffe Jetty.

Sept 4, 2025 Another Coastal Walk

We caught a public bus to near the Tacking Point Lighthouse to begin our 5 mile coastal walk on a beautiful sunny and slightly breezy morning.

We were greeted at the trailhead by an Australia brushturkey, busy scratching up forest duff for nestbuilding. A colorful and similar looking bird to an American turkey, but not related at all.

We looked back at the Tacking Point Lighthouse as we started down the track, going from beach to beach back into the main area of town.

At every beach we stopped to watch the whales passing by, sometimes breaching, but mostly fin-slapping the water, like this one above the furthest rock, just below the horizon. You can just see the small splash as the fin hits the water surface. We spotted 9 whales at one lookout point!

These pandanus trees growing on the rocky cliffs along the beaches are fascinating! Growing in tropical and subtropical zones in the Pacific mainly, they are used for everything from food to shelter, woven baskets, and clothing. The ‘stilt roots’ grow down from the branches to stabilize the tree.

We completed our hike at the tiki bar in town at the end of the coastal walk. Refreshed with a beer, we walked through the Kooloonbung Creek Reserve and got another good look at the bats!