Sunday, May 31, 2026

Day 5: Sun 31 May - Canberra

7 (3) - 13 (5) deg C, sunny to overcast with no rain, to sunny but chilly

Wendy did a couple of loads of washing and walked on the treadmill in between. Greg went to Church, however, instead of a Service, they held a 'clean-up' day. Greg was aware of this, so wore appropriate clothing to help out. 

We had Chinese takeaways for dinner tonight, and all meals were of excellent quality and we shall definitely be eating their food again before we leave Canberra.

Day 4: Sat 30 May - Canberra

7.6 (feels like 2) - 11 (7) deg C, a fine, but cold morning, a relatively warm afternoon with a few drops of rain, to a cooling evening

Nothing much to tell for the day today. Mum's first day back home so we tried to make it enjoyable and comfortable for her. She had a bit of a restless sleep due to some pain at the insertion site, and not being able to turn over, etc.

Greg went for a walk to Bunnings, then through Belconnen Mall, and back home again.

Friday, May 29, 2026

Day 3: Fri 29 May - Canberra

6 (feels like 4) - 18 deg C, a cool start for a lovely sunny, but windy day

Today was all about getting mum out of hospital. After breakfast, we headed out to Canberra North Hospital (CNH) to collect mum's belongings that were not transported with her to The Canberra Hospital (TCH) for the pacemaker revision, because they thought she would be coming/going back to CNH after the procedure. The nurses were all over it and knew exactly where the case was. Off to TCH to deliver the case, that had the all important phone charger in it!! In the meantime, Mum had texted Wendy to say the doctor had been in and said she could go home. So, Wendy went up without the case, thinking Mum would be ready to leave. Wendy really should have known better, having worked in hospitals, and been a patient in many, that just because the doc says you can go home today does not mean you can leave immediately. Mum didn't quite understand the difference and really did not want to be in the hospital anymore. Long story short, 4.5 hours later, we left the hospital, without a discharge summary and without critical pain meds that we were not made aware were required. Another long story short, the pharmacist at the hospital is a very quick thinker, and decided that it would be best she spoke to one of the ward doctors to have the ward scripts cancelled and normal ones issued. She then emailed them to Mum's local pharmacy for dispensing and collecting. Wendy rang the Hawker pharmacy, who know mum, to let them know the scripts were incoming. We knew the pharmacy closed at 6pm, so were not worried about the scripts not arriving in time. One thing Wendy learned on our last visit to Canberra when Dad was in an out of hospital, is that if you have a Webster pack before you are admitted, it is the hospitals responsibility to advice your local pharmacy that person is in hospital. It is then the hospital's responsibility to notify the local pharmacy the patient has been discharged and if there has been any changes to the medication. Hawker pharmacy were onto it, and had not only dispensed the extra pain meds, but also prepared new Webster packs. 

We since found out the reason for the delay in the proper discharge - an MRI report on Mum's brain was not reported on, and the ward doctors were waiting on that before sending her home, which is good practice, so good on them. However, they could have told us that at 11am instead of saying "soon" too many times. Mum was even served lunch, and we both shared it with her. Wendy had the pumpkin soup, while Greg and Mum shared the tuna mornay with mash, pumpkin and broccoli. 

So, Mum is home and happy to be in her own bed, with Dad by her side. We are so lucky and blessed to live in this amazing country.




Thursday, May 28, 2026

Day 2: Thu 28 May - Coonabarabran to Canberra, 585km

14-17 deg C, fine to start the drive with a few rainy patches, to none at Cbr

We were up and on the road by 0545h, keen to get the drive over, especially with the rain predicted.

We stopped at Dubbo (breakfast), Forbes (mornos and a fuel top-up), Yass (lunch) and Weetangera, Canberra (final destination). The driving today was a lot less stressful in that there was not as much rain, and when it did rain, it was light rain.

Not much else to say about today, except we are really pleased we are here in Canberra. All is well in Cbr, but very busy.

There were a lot of these ........

.... and these today

Misty morning

A brief patch of blue sky


Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Day 1: Wed 27 May - Home to Coonabarabran, 872km

19 (Home) - 14 (Coonabarabran)

We were on the road at 0600h, nice and early. Our aim being to get as many km out of the way today as possible, without rushing. We did that, and have about 600km to complete tomorrow.

We stopped at Goomeri (breakfast), Kingaroy (mornos), Goondiwindi (lunch), roadside rest stop just outside of Moree (driver change), and finally here at Coonas. The predicted rain started as we left Goondiwindi, and by the time we were close to Moree, it was coming down in very large buckets. The wipers were not coping and when a semi came the other way, it was a total white-out. All drivers slowed down except for the semi drivers who are always in a hurry. There is a lot of water beside the road and laying around the countryside, particularly in the fields, so hopefully the farmers are happy. 

We arrived in Coonas at 1745h under light drizzle, cooler temperatures, and darkness! All we wanted to do was get into the room and get settled, but the receptionist was a chatty woman, so 15 minutes later we were finally in our room - #10 at Clock Tower Motor Inn. A nice big room, with two queen beds and a single!

We ate in, did the blog, showered and hit the sack.

Sunset last night at Hippo Farm

The long, straight road

The brewing storm

The storm finally broke



Beauuuuuuutiful!




Day 32: Sat 27 Jun - Canberra

-1(-5) - 3(9), a frosty start to the day, and cold all day with lovely sunshine for a bit After a quick breakfast we headed off to Tuggerano...