Botanical Garden, Brisbane, Australia
(April, 1999. Excerpt from my Melbourne diary, written during our three month stay in Australia.)Last night we returned from another activity packed trip, this time to Brisbane and Lamington National Park in southern Queensland. In the central business district of Brisbane (or the CBD as they call it) one finds turn of the century churches and other historical buildings as well as high-rise office buildings. The main shopping section, on Queen Street, has been turned into a walking mall with outdoor restaurants, entertainers, etc. Our hotel, which opened in January, was a few blocks from the shopping area and was built in about 1910 as medical offices. A few years ago the building changed hands and was restored to its original splendor (including a creaky lift) and all the doctor’s suites were turned into hotel rooms. One wonders what medical specialty our room once represented!
The Brisbane river winds its way through the city and on the south bank there is a park and arts complex. I walked across the bridge from the city center and visited the Queensland Museum which had a number of interesting exhibits including one on the role of women in pioneer days (how they washed and cooked and stored food with no electricity or refrigeration and how the party line telephone kept people connected even when they lived long distances apart.)

Megalania skeleton (photo by Richard Hewett in my book Dinosaurs Down Under)
At the museum there were also numerous dinosaur skeletons and fossils of other extinct animals such as the giant lizard, Megalania. There was a realistic life-size animated model of Megalania with a warning that small children shouldn’t look if they were easily frightened. (It also had realistic sound-effects.) Megalania was a MUCH larger relative of the modern Komodo dragon and I must say that when I turned the corner to view the exhibit, I jumped. Unlike dinosaurs, this real life monster was roaming Australia at the same time as the early Aborigines and would have been a fearsome animal to encounter. The Megalania exhibit reminded me of a book I wrote called Dinosaurs Down Under: Fossils from Australia (out of print but available online or at your library).In another part of the museum there was an exhibit of a device invented by an early state meteorologist, a man by the name of Clement Lindley Wragge. Although his device, a kind of giant cannon intended to seed rainclouds, never worked, Wragge is famous for being the first person to give names to cyclones (hurricanes.) According to the label on the exhibit, he named them after politicians of the day on the grounds that they were both national disasters!


(To be continued next week with our trip to Lamington National Park.