The Top End of Down Under

I love Australia and have travelled there, for various reasons, on three occasions. I’ve seen just about all of it except the Top End. As we often think of the US by regions—Dixie, Downeast, the PNW—and the perimeters of those regions may enclose parts of several states, so does the land Down Under have its regions. The Top End is Broome east past Darwin to the Gulf of Carpenteria and down a little way. It includes parts of Western Australia, Queensland, and Northern Territory [a side note here: in this country, that would be Tare-a-tory. In Australia, it’s terror-tree. Ofttimes the written language has little in common with the spoken tongue].

When I visited Iceland, the youngest…

Curaçao

Curaçao is cool. In fact, it’s about 10° cooler than it was an hour ago, thanks to a brief cloudburst. It’s the first real rain we’ve seen. These tropical downpours don’t last long, but they’re intense. And because I was under an open roof, they’re great fun to watch. There are a lot of open roofs in Willemstad; most taverns are open air. They have the bar stuck up against the back and then a ramada, or roof without walls, for all the tables and chairs. Everybody drinks their beer and wine al fresco.

Fuerte Amador/Panama City

Okay, so here’s this tourist boat—a simple barge with 20 or 30 seats in it, pushed by an outboard motor—and we’re cruising a quiet backwater of the Chagres River. I am sitting about in the very middle with a lady to my left and two people to my right. The name of our tour is Monkey Watch and there are the monkeys, a troop of white-faced marmosets on the shore.