The packing up process was an exercise in patience and perseverance (maybe preparing us for the trip!). We had planned to leave 2 weeks after Michael started his long service leave. The first week of Michael’s leave, we found a rat had eaten a hole in the inlet to our Landcruiser’s fuel tank (we’ve since heard there is a rodent plague in much of Australia this year) – this meant it had to be in at the Toyota service centre for over a week – we were blessed that it was only a week as they were able to find a replacement fuel tank in Australia and not have to order one from overseas. However this meant that many of the jobs Michael was planning for that week (like getting the cars serviced, getting a roof rack fitted and rigging up a bike rack) had to be delayed. He used the time to get some building jobs around home finished off (which he’d been wanting to do). But we knew we would have to adjust our proposed departure date because of the delays. We figured 2 or 3 days wouldn’t make a big difference. The only thing we had booked for our trip (and that only happened in Michael’s first week of leave) was booking the dates to do a bare-boat yacht charter at the Whitsunday Islands. We decided we shouldn’t need to change this – we would just have reduced time in central southern Queensland and have to see those places a bit quicker.
I wasn’t sure how the kids would respond to having to leave later, but they were great – the older 2 seemed to understand why and pitched in to help more where they could, and the younger 2 (who are much more short-term focussed about everything still) saw it as school holidays come early – so play more at home! Well it wasn’t all play. I saw it as an opportunity to adjust them to the schoolwork they were going to do with me. (Lauren has been homeschooling since the beginning of this year and Sam finished up at school a week earlier than Hannah and Bethany – so I already had sorted their homeschool materials – which they kept working on in between doing jobs to help us). So I was able to start using the curriculum the teachers had given us for maths and spelling with H & B. this proved very useful, as I ended up photocopying some things and remembering to take some things that I otherwise would have forgotten. The extra 2&half days that Michael needed to do all his bits, gave me a bit of extra time to finalise curriculum and resources and also to organise some areas of the house that would have otherwise been – well, less organised:). It also gave me time to type out a more detailed information sheet for our house-sitters (which I knew I would have appreciated had I been in their shoes). Having said all this, I was still up until midnight the last couple of nights, and it still felt like a rush right at the end. It had got to about 2.30pm on the Wed afternoon (the day we thought we should definitely be able to leave) and Michael had attached the bikes and was fairly happy with how the things were secured on the roof rack. I had almost everything in the caravan, after what seemed like a hundred trips in and out in the last couple of days – but there was still a couple of piles I had been hoping to sort better before taking them out to the van. It was either “we leave now and be able to put in 4-5 hrs driving, or we might as well stay at home again tonight” – so those couple of piles (mainly books and notes for family time stuff) got whisked into the van (“I’ll sort them in the next couple of days and post things back if we don’t need them”).
And then we were “away at last”
Andrea