It is an unexpected afternoon off so:
Here it is the long promised account of my trip from Darwin to Uluru. First Installment anyway
I only got back in July ........

Flying to Darwin is an adventure in itself, thats not counting the atrocious train service and early morning start. Darwin is a long way away, 4 hours flight. Perth is the only other city in Australia that is further away.
Landing in Darwin is also an adventure (for plane nerds anyway) Since Darwin airport is co operated with the RAAF it is surrounded by fighter aircraft shelters and flying in they announced Pitch Black 2012 was starting soon. Pitch Black is one of Australias biggest Defense exercise. So lots of planes soon from all over Singapore USA, Indonesia to name a few. Soon ,sadly after days of seraching the sky it started after i left. Seriously this is the view driving out of the Airport. When you turn the corner you come out on a small city you are surprised not to be attacked by crocodiles.
Darwin has always had a bit of a frontier mentality. Its not the most remote city in Australia but it is unique (lots of tattoos, and flip flops(thongs to the civilized) attached to large bearded men).
The other thing in Darwin is that everything is almost new. Although settled for a while, it was bombed flat in WW2 (the only Australian city to be repeatedly bombed) and subsequently re-flattened on Christmas Day in 1974 by Cyclone Tracy.
Also it is currently going through a boom brought on by the Mining Boom, lots of constuction and Rental inflation.
For such a small city, what you do get is a lot of museums (The city I live in is probably 3 times the size of Darwin and has none) Darwin has three top quality museums.
The first one I visited was..... During WW2 Darwin and surrounding areas was a major staging base for for the US and Australia, up to half a million troops were stationed around it. That must have been fun in a tent, Darwin only has too seasons: The Dry and The Wet. The dry season runs from late May too September, and The Wet the rest. I was there in the dry, it averaged around 27 - 30c. During the wet 35c +, 100% humidity and huge monsoonal storms about 2 oclock every afternoon. most houses do not have guttering becuase so much rain falls that they are useless.
Anyway back to the museum,it was awesome,. The interactive presentation about the bombing was great and outside a military enthusiasts wet dream... and for the MREInfo crowd It was a bit ratty, could do with a new version all the cans were rusted and the bags swelled up

All in all it was a really great museum, It is built on the site of some coastal defense guns that were emplaced to help repel a Japanese invasion. The problem is the site was only completed in 1946. One of the two 9.2 inch guns was fired thee time to test them and then both were scrapped and made into something more usefull (Australia a has a bit of a history with coastal defense platforms that are completely useless, but that is another story) This is a view from the beach out the front of the next museum. The Darwin and Northern Territory Natural History Museum, was even better than the Military Museum. The displays included a Pickled Box jelly fish, the most poisonous creature in the world. lots of stuffed local animals birds and reptiles, as well a a cyclone Tracy exhibition, that was topped off with a sound room that is blacked out. You get to listen too an original recording taken during the height of the storm. lets just say it is pretty freaky.
So this ends installment one. Next time more Darwin culture, the aviation museum and Crocasuarus Crocodile Park
Yowie