Small dam built about 100 years ago at the edge of Blue Lake
I saw my first wild platypus!
Chilly but really happy to be out of the city.
After that it was into the Guest House for a couple of drinks by the fire. There was a group of elderly people up there on some kind of retreat and they realllllly wanted to chat us up. They were really nice, but I gently excused myself after a while to take one of their bored-looking grandsons outside to look at the possums that had been sneaking around the windows. They were really tame so we ended up feeding them potato chips out of our hands while they dangled by their tails from the roof! (Rabies doesn't exist in Australia, by the way.) Unfortunately I didn't have my camera on me at that point.
The guest house. It was nice but... a little too Shining-esque if you know what I mean?
The caves themselves were fascinating. There are numerous tours you can do, but I picked Temple of Baal, named by early explorers after a figure from the Old Testament. You can see Baal (the rock formation) looking down on you from different angles wherever you move inside the cave. There is only one main chamber, but the tour takes you around to different platforms and vantage points so that there is always something different to look at. I would love to go back and see some of the other chambers!
The Angel's Wing, a shawl formation that is one of the largest in the world.
View from one of the upper platforms.
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