Skene's Creek Bridge, Apollo Bay, Victoria in 1908.
State Library of Victoria.
SOURCE - https://www.pinterest.com.au/pin/4714774595555972/

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Skene's Creek Bridge, Apollo Bay, Victoria in 1908.
State Library of Victoria.
SOURCE - https://www.pinterest.com.au/pin/4714774595555972/
The Great Ocean Road is filled with amazing things to see. Ranging from dense forests filled with waterfalls to the endless beaches and even to the 12 Apostles. All of this can be found along the Great Ocean Road.
Beach!
Apollo Bay House / Dock4 Architecture
Photos © Adam Gibson
World Windows 2020
16 April 2020
Today’s windows”
Visit Parts of Sussex, England, including a Hobbit House with @weirdburketeer
Visit Whitby Abbey, Yorkshire, England with @weirdburketeer
Visit the first half of the Great Ocean Road, Victoria, Australia with me.
Thank you wonderful peeps for participating. If you have some favourite places you would like to share while we are all stuck at home, simply post some photos and tag #WorldWindows2020 (tagging me also helps so I can add your Window to the list). Remember, your backyard is exotic to people on the other side of the world (like me).
Today I’m jumping over the border to visit the Great Ocean Road in Victoria (our next door neighbours and violent opposition on the AFL football field and tongue-in-cheek nemesis everywhere else :D ).
The Great Ocean Road is a picturesque coastal drive that starts basically in Torquay and ends in Warrnambool. Or in the opposite direction if you are travelling from the Adelaide side. It is 243 kilometres long.
Oooh, a map.
When we travel it, we usually split it into two days, one for each side and how ever many days we’d like to stay in the middle.
I’ve done it both ways, on the way to Melbourne and on the way back. Kinda convenient that it is ‘on the way’ between Melbourne and Adelaide. We usually stay at Apollo Bay near the bottom, though last time we stayed at Marengo which is a little further south.
The Melbourne side (the east side) is not a road for the sufferer of motion sickness.
It is a very wiggly road and it goes for over one hundred kilometres.
The road runs right along the coast, so you basically get to see the ocean almost the entire way.
The hills, as you travel further south, become covered in ferns. At the bottom of the great triangle shape you have the Ottways, a mountain range covered in temperate rainforest protected by a national park.
swims on grey days when you have the whole ocean to yourselves are the best
Grand shot with many fine details from Australia. Could be around 1900s.
apollo bay