A grey welcome to our weekend away. What a damp summer we're having. Currambene Creek freshwater empties into the Jervis Marine Park at Huskisson. |
Rant Warning – explains why we went. Skip to the first subtitle for info on the place.
M watched me fade this year – I don’t think I’ve ever come to the end of a teaching year in such an exhausted state. Teaching 1½ terms remotely was hard but so was coming back to class with the aim of trying to achieve academic growth, redesign learning for more group work, as well-being gurus decided this is what the kids needed. All this whilst maintaining the required social distancing and mask wearing without irritation at the fifth reminder of ‘Nose out - Germs in’ to the same students every class. Providing ‘memory making’ events because camps had been missed and being ‘fun’, the push for ‘easier reports’ that required double the time and normal end of year events whose time lines were skewed and colliding - all took their toll. We made it because everyone on staff, parents and kids supported each other – it was a true team effort.
What frayed the thread for many teachers though was the NSW Minister for Education, Sarah Mitchell, accusing teachers of 'hanging students out to dry' by going out on strike on Dec 7. This action was a desperate attempt after all other negotiations had failed as the union tried to make the govt. take notice of the terrible strain teachers are working under because of lack of funding for staff, infrastructure and resources in so many schools. Ms Mitchell is a career politician and has never worked in the field of her current portfolio. The strike was making the point that the care of students is founded on competent teachers who are well resourced in time and materials. The fact is that the demands required for a competent teacher and the salary have been out of balance for a long while, leading to fewer capable students choosing this career where intelligence, flexibility, creativity and tireless commitment are base requirements. Without quality staffing, the ideals of education will not be achieved and Australia's future is being hamstrung. First time I’ve ever yelled at the radio in my car.
Obviously I was unhinged and needed a rescue package. I am very lucky to have a husband who realised this and was able to arrange one! As soon as the compulsory First Aid course was over on the last day for staff in 2021, he whisked me off to the South Coast.
A hybrid lesson is where there are some kids at home and some in class and both need to be taught. |
A Tiny Town in
Jervis Bay
A very clever young man
I once taught was named after this area of the world, I don’t blame his parents
for wanting to have a daily reminder of this beautiful place.
We managed to secure
last minute accommodation at the Huskisson Beach Resort. Sounds 5 star
but a more accurate
title would be Huskisson Huts. Sleeps 6
with a minimalist kitchenette (like a hotel room but with a microwave) and single bathroom. The double
bed was in the living space and the 4 bunks in a separate room. It was clean
and had good air-con and was one park crossing away from the beach. Late or
early check in was a breeze with an excellent system at a motel closer to the township;
code in – pay bond - keys out. Each hut was a different colour so even though
the weather was dull and forecast to remain so, it felt cheerful.
Huskisson Beach Resort - a hut just a park away from the beach. |
The best food in the town was the Huskisson Bakery and Cafe. After a quick walk around the bay to the main street we spotted a queue for coffee – always a good sign! So we lined up, checked in and our eyes almost fell out of our heads at the wealth of pastries and cakes on display. A customer told their friends that they did the best shakes on the coast. Luckily we had to wait a while to order – so hard to choose. The coffee was worth the queue and their impressive ‘give back to the community’ business plan made us decide to support them again the next morning.
Huskisson Bakery and Cafe - best food in town. |
If you didn't find the perfect shell memento on the beaches pop into the Trading Post for a selection.
Closest Beach to the hut we stayed in, the sea reflects the sky, grey day - grey sea. Dogs allowed off leash until 8am at this patch of the bay. My early morning walks had lots of friendly fur people keep me company. I met an interesting woman who was employed at the NSW teacher's union - the only school conversation had for the whole three days though. |
The Jervis Bay Marine Park has a memorial at Huskisson for a terrible naval accident that happened off the coast in 1964 (Nana remembers it!). In a night training exercise an aircraft carrier, HMAS Melbourne sliced the destroyer HMAS Voyager in two. It sank in two minutes! Remarkably 232 sailors were saved, 82 on the ship lost their lives. I was so impressed that although this accident was completely caused by human error, the navy has still acknowledged it and has this big site. The granite memorial has other sailors names who called the bay home, from other battles etched into it as well.
The water was cold – summer hadn’t really arrived yet so we drove to a host of beautiful beaches instead of just splashing about at the beach we listened to through the night. The wind provided a free exfoliate on all exposed skin as we sat and read but it also chased the clouds away and gave us more sun that rain. Can wind burn blister?
Chinamans beach, one up from Hymans - smaller but just as white. The brave who stepped into the surf didn't stay long. Bowen Island top left in the National Park. |
A Cool Cabana set up at Murrays Beach in the National Park. |
Thanks Google for the map. |
There are so many great
walks in the Booderee National Park, you need a pass to enter which can be
bought online or at the manned hut on the border - $13, valid for 3 days. The gates close at sunset.
Interestingly the actual village of Jervis Bay is in this park and is a Navy
base with really nothing at all for a visitor to see except signs barring
entry.
Left: Looking south from the lighthouse. Right: Audi proudly parked along side other adventurers. |
After a couple of nights we had to be away home so Willow could go back home instead of dog sitting and to get ready for the long list of Christmas festivities. We went via Berry and Kangaroo Valley for shopping and feasting. The road between these two places is gorgeous and a real hairpin adventure over Berry Mountain. (I think hill would have done when names were being chosen!) After all the rain the Fitzroy falls were full and overflowing!
The Audi was having too much fun to stop for pics, this is Rodney Campbell's photo. |
Thank you M from the bottom of my heart – a weekend getaway to the coast is a splendid restorative escape.
Places to look for accommodation on other than the big commercial sites.
https://holidayscollection.com.au/
I would try this company first next time.
$$ https://jervisbaybreaks.com
$$$ https://www.jbbeachhouses.com.au/
A spot for camping? https://www.visitnsw.com/destinations/south-coast/jervis-bay-and-shoalhaven/jervis-bay/accommodation
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