Friday 27 June BARKLY
HOMESTEAD
At 2:15 we found
ourselves entering the NT, facing 130 kmh speed signs, 2 lane good road. Flat, almost treeless for much of the drive,
Mitchell grass and/or spinifex, termite mounds, burnt areas. Pleasant 27 degrees. David made me drive at
3pm and it was fairly easy on an excellent stretch with no traffic. I drove for 100km.Playford River |
Stopped to look at Abner Range, containing Lost City, 8km in area |
We were not expecting
much after rejecting Burke & Wills and Gregory Downs, but BH was a nice
surprise. Had a pre-cooked beef curry
outside, no awning, then went to the bar for a drink and watched the 6pm Ch 9
news. Realised we weren't missing TV at
all.
Saturday 28 June CAPE
CRAWFORD
A drive of 375km to
Cape Crawford aka Heartbreak Hotel (amenities are Priscilla and
Elvis). Most of the journey was through
flat featureless, waterless plains of spinifex, Mitchell grass or bare stony
earth. Single lane bitumen but only 8
opposing vehicles all day and no-one overtook us. Areas identified on map as Aboriginal trusts
were quite different - no clearing, woodland vegetation.
Just before CC came
to McArthur River - good flow of water.
Two Aboriginal women fishing in desultory fashion and supervising 5
lovely small children.
Heartbreak Hotel was
a surprise - green, shady, some magnificent unidentifiable trees, full of
birds; sprinklers going all day and night.
Grassy, powered sites. A friendly
group on adjoining campsites were cooking roast pork in an improvised Cob. Took ages but they were all enjoying it by
6pm. They were going to explore
Borroloola tomorrow but return to CC for the night.
We dined at the hotel
for David's birthday and had a fullsome meal of good lemon pepper
barramundi with generous glasses of Chardonnay.
The chef and receptionist kindly organised an individual cake and
sparkler (no dessert on menu) and said no charge but I gave them $10. We chatted to a couple from Ulladulla at the
next table & generally had a very pleasant night.
Sunday 29 June
BORROLOOLA
Breakfast at Heartbreak Hotel |
Travelled to
Borroloola on an unexpectedly good road, 2 lane, good bitumen, all due to the
need for Xstrata to get zinc to Bing Bong and send it overseas.
Turned off to look at
Caranbirini Conservation Reserve and very glad we did. Gated entry for cars leads to a very
comfortable bird hide with a fantastic view of a lily-clad lagoon. At first the silence was off-putting but the
birds gradually revealed themselves - small flocks of green pigmy-geese and
hardheads, later joined by a larger group of black duck. 2 blue-winged kookaburras low down in a tree.
A bar-shouldered dove doing a peculiar stomp on a log. Restless flycatchers perching on lily
stems. Rainbow eater. Crimson finches on the opposite bank and a
little shrike-thrush on the way back to the car.
David saw a small
'croc' on a log - reptile book identifies it as Mertens' Water Monitor Varanus
mertensi.
2 walks available -
we decided to do those on a return visit.
Booked into van park
at Borroloola and had lunch. Sign said
find a spot - be back at 2pm. Drove a
short distance to a boat launching ramp and was delighted to see little pied cormorant,
white ibis, mangrove golden whistler, grey heron and a radjah shelduck in full
close flight skimming along water.
Fat
guy there reckoned a large barramundi or salt croc was responsible for bubbles
just near the edge - we couldn't see anything, though sign suggests he could be right.
McArthur River at Borroloola- 521km long; flows into Gulf |
Aboriginal land next to river |
Back to park where
owner suggested we visit the local museum nearby and gave us the
key. It was next door to the car repair
place. Proved to be very interesting,
full of so much detail, especially copies of newspapers over the years. In 1880s they had a library of 1200 books,
government providing money for annual replenishment. However, climate caused major problems
despite adding calico covers to the leatherbound copies of Dickens,
dictionaries, ... and it was closed within 20 years. Display case had modern books relevant to
museum material and I will try to find them in Brisbane libraries.
N. Jose: Black Sheep
R.Baker: Land is Life
H Jarman Muir: Very Big Journey
J. Leather & E.
Webber; Borroloola .. (National Trust)
There is a gecko
peculiar to this region named Gehyra borroloola found in rocky
escarpments and gorges - we haven't seen it.
Monday 30 June
BORROLOOLA
I did washing early
and was able to bring in sheets, etc before we left. David took car to get slow leak in front tyre
fixed. No problem - cost $25. Packed lunch and set off for Bing Bong
61 km north on the gulf. I was somewhat
cranky to find that our fuel was low; if we'd left at 10am (when the Aboriginal
discount petrol place has its computers going to serve petrol - premium @ 187,
so cheap) instead of 9:30, I would not have to worry.
Beautiful flowering
trees en route - orange, red and white grevilleas, yellow acacias and pink tall
calytrix.
Calytrix exstipulata |
Bing Bong is private
Xstrata port - DANGER and DO NOT ENTER signs everywhere. We took the right turn to Mule Creek boat
launching ramp. Dirt road in OK condition. Nothing there but good view of white-bellied
sea eagle.
Samphire flats at Mule Creek |
Back to port and
observation tower, then down forbidden path to water where David found a
mistletoe on a small tree and I spotted a reef egret on a beacon.
Mangrove - Ceriops tagal |
Ipomoea pes-caprae subsp. brasiliensis |
Grevillea parallela |
Grevillea pteridifolia |
Evolvulus alsinoides |
Petrol shortage brought us back to Borroloola for fuel. Visited the Aboriginal art gallery opposite and found it abuzz with several art experts (?) quizzing an old lady. Articles on wall referred to exhibitions in Darwin. Canvases lay piled on tables and hanging from a long rack; painted wooden items (I liked a lizard with lizard decorations) including echidna-like punctured shapes (natural base??) and actual turtle shells - prices ranging from $150. Nearly all the canvases were naive realistic style and used very bright colours; just a few were dot paintings, including a big one which I really liked and I think would have cost over $2000.
Drove to King Ash
Bay and Batten Point, both devoted to fishing activities. King Ash Lodge is a big complex with sections
labelled "Alice Springs Fishing Club" or Townsville Anglers
or... Varied from a paddock to lock-up
sheds to holiday homes. Offered a pub,
garage, holiday units, boat ramps. At
Batten Point 7km away and lining the road there were caravans or shanties
beside the water. Very few birds, just
pairs of Caspian terns and whistling kites.
McArthur River again, at Batten Pt |
Refilled at
Aboriginal Bulk Discount store again and explored the supermarket there. Big fridges and freezers of beer, meat,
frozen foods and some with a scanty range of fresh fruit and veges - small
quarter of cauliflower for $2.50, 1 avocado for $3.50, 1 priceless kiwifruit
and sacks of onions. No potatoes. I've since wondered if all the potatoes went
next door to the Refreshment section which was doing great business selling
large cups of fried chips and Coca-cola.
Two young men sharing a cup of chips outside had most of their teeth
missing but were well-built and otherwise looked healthy.
Sadly, the item being
carried by all and sundry was beer in cartons or large plastic bags. Young women with toddler in one hand and
carton under other arm going home.
No-one seemed drunk at this time, 5pm.
Many young people and children.
Community school opposite looks very new and grounds are still under
construction. Nice green oval next door. Not a depressed looking community at all.
Tuesday 1 July DALY WATERS
Left Borroloola at
8:40, early start for once! Back to Caranbirini. A quick look at lagoon, then off on the B
walk. However, David spied the sandstone
formations and a path, so ignoring the arrows, he set off that way with
faithful wife in tow. All seemed and was
great for the first hour (walk supposed to take 1-2 hours). Easy walking (me in rubber sandals);
interesting country, quite stunning once we reached the sandstone columns. We later found that we had saved a helicopter
ride to the Lost City by walking there.
Can't ID this lovely flower |
Eucalypt & grevillea woodland |
Kapok bush - Cochlospermum fraseri |
Ctenophorus caudicinctus - no ID for skink above |
and then D chose the wrong path! |
Choice of 2 paths,
both marked with blue arrows. We had
been walking backwards to this point because of David's first decision. Not much water left. I gave in again (groan!) and chose his
path. After 20 minutes we met 3 young
men going the other way. They said they
had been "motoring along" for 90 minutes. I was worried as we were by then walking
through fire-blackened areas with spinifex groundcover, not good with
sandals. No birds to distract me. We realised that we were on the hard walk, at
least 3 hours and it was getting hotter all the time (32 degrees when we
reached the car). I took the lead and
walked very very fast on the flat areas, but slowed down on the uphills. After an hour I was feeling very sick,
determined not to pee or blow my nose to avoid fluid loss. David made me drink our last 100mL and we
continued on as fast as we could. On
reaching the car park, having walked the distance the young men had in the same
time, they were there, worried about us and amazed that we had done so well. Lunch back at the bird hide.
Set off through boring country (trees, no flowers, no fauna, straight road). David wanted to stay at a rest area where others, quite welcoming, were camped, but I demurred, so we continued on to -
Daly Waters Historic
Pub
- we had read a lot about it, including Anne's account of a good night there,
but you have to do it to believe it.
Could not get a powered site but all sites were on dusty sandy dirt
anyhow. We were just 100m further from
the swampy amenities (corrugated iron bathrooms with rusty shower base, plastic
curtain not stopping water all over floor, towel rail but no hooks). However, there is a camaraderie in difficult
conditions and everyone was cheerful.
David booked us a
meal (salads instead of the almost obligatory beef and barra meal @ $25) at 4pm
and was given a standard number 23 sign for our 'table'.. Meals start at 6:30 but he was told to expect
ours around 7pm. They actually
interrupted the entertainment to announce at half hour intervals the people who
should get their beef/barra meal. The
place was packed. Long tables with bench
seating, so nobody could eat alone. Very
friendly. Around 6:00 a guy placed 2
fancy chooks - small hen, large rooster - on a rail beside the stage. The entertainment started 6:30 - a man about
60 named Frank Turton announced his wedgetailed eagle show. He was very funny and an excellent
entertainer. We have avoided every
C& W show so far, but glad we spent 3 hours watching this. There was a wall of his newspaper clippings,
proving that he did indeed float down the Murray with a chook on 2 large wooden
guitars. Audience participation was
centred on 20 Kiwis and some children (the latter would not agree that their
parents had a fight about anything - very nice kids!).
WW11 display outside |
I have yet to mention
the decorations. Sections of seating
have pillars or screens covered with signed thongs. The bar area has walls with paper money from
all countries; screens of T-shirts with insignia; rafter hung with felt or
other hats and much more. The place was
central to our Northern defence in WW 2 and has never recovered from that.
Very glad we went
there - may never return!
Wednesday 2 July KATHERINE
Left Daly Waters at
7:30 (sic!!) without breakfast - too dusty.
Drove a few kms back to Hiway Inn and had raisin toast and coffee. Could have showered there for $2. Drove on to Mataranka through boring country
- many trees, yellow grass, no flowers, dead straight road mostly. Brief stop at Bitter Springs - may return
there before going to WA. Useful stop at
NT Parks office - good info and sheets about local parks and walks.
Continued on to
Katherine. Wrong turn put us on Gorge
Road so decided to look at Top Tourist park - freaked by PARK FULL sign at
12:30. Back and change direction to
riverside parks - stopped first at RIverview; looked alright, had Nomad wireless internet
($5 hour) so booked for 4 days in case Low Level booked out.
Pleased with site
next to fence and gate to path for Hot Springs.
However, found later that they squeezed another van next to us as an
unpowered site and that orientation for all vans in park ensures sun in am and
pm. Shopped at WW complex - just like
I'pilly with a few less items and prices not bad. Had attached liquor store - limit of 1x2L
cask pp pday and need photo ID (just started today).
Before dinner (pork
stir-fry) we walked down to Hot Springs and had a swim. Not refreshing as 32 degrees but felt good
when you stood up or got out and colder air hit your body. Constant traffic next to us as folks went out
the gate to swim.
Thursday 3 July KATHERINE
Up early for a walk
before breakfast along Katherine River.
Mist rising. Wallaby seen
twice. Walked to Low Level crossing,
touted as popular swimming hole. People
were camped there for free next to a toilet block which was being cleaned with
a high-pressure noisy hose. Note: many toilets in NT have shower also, free or
$2 charge at garages.
Leisurely breakfast,
then into town to tourist information centre and to buy me shorts. Lady at
Tourist Centre could not help with info re Nitmiluk or Darwin accommodation,
though she managed to frighten me with tales of people finding no sites at
caravan parks there just now. Eventually
got some cheap shorts. Home for lunch then
off to the Gorge. But I gave David the
wrong directions and we ended up at the turnoff for Edith Falls, about 42km
north instead of 29km east.
On way back we walked
through 2 alternative parks. Springvale
Homestead looked great at first but powered sites were mostly on dirt. Big 4 Low Level also looked good and sites were
oriented correctly for shade, unlike here.
However, it's not good enough to force us to move. We rang the Nitmiluk folk re powered site at
the Gorge - don't take bookings but should get in if there before midday.
Friday 4 July KATHERINE
7am start to day. Ready for walk at Katherine Gorge. Checked out campground to see if we'd stay
there on way west. It has 40 powered
sites, not bookable in advance and no assigned spot. Nearly all the powered sites were on
dirt. Fairly shady. Internet access.
Next looked at canoe
hire and boat cruises - all booked out today.
Went on Baruwei Walk via Lookout
- 3.7km, 2 hours, quite steep at beginning and end; classified Medium. I wouldn't want to do a Hard walk - they're
longer and it's too hot on top of the escarpment. Some interesting plants - palms,
brachychiton, eucalyptus at Lookout with stunning orange flowers and rough pale
brown-yellowish bark. Good view of first
gorge. Steep sides indicate that nearly
all walking would be on escarpment.
Canoeing not as attractive as Lawn Hill - little vegetation at water
level; no shade.
Way back via
staircase full of people doing the short walk just up and down from the boat
jetty. Glad we didn't go up staircase -
even the youngsters looked pooped. On
way back David took the high road through dry woodland; I went the water route
beside the gorge and saw several birds, including a great bowerbird at bower,
adding twigs which brought a female in to inspect. Bower floor had white shiny flat objects -
bits of plastic?
Back to Nitmiluk
Centre where I noticed that the name reflects the noise made by cicadas - nit,
nit, nit. Booked a 9am 3 Gorge cruise
for Sunday, so we can continue on with trailer and spend night at Edith Falls,
42km north of Katherine. On impulse, we
then took a 12 minute helicopter flight at 12:30pm and had to walk very fast to
get there in time. Cost $115 each for
this look at 8 of the 13 gorges. Glad we
didn't pay for the 13 gorge trip as the gorges get successively smaller and you
could see the last 5 in the distance.
One of those things you feel you ought to do but not very exciting. Too high to see any wildlife. Made area look very forbidding for walking
and canoeing past first 2 gorges not worth while as too much portage for too
short a paddle.
On way home we
stopped at Knott's Crossing where a man was washing his little white dog. David thought we could kayak upstream - I
thought we might be swept down over the little weir into a shallow section of
river. Also inspected Shady Lane Caravan
Park - nice grassy sites. Saw a Pacific
baza - first for this trip. Wish we could have
stayed there and will book in advance if stopping at Katherine again. Can plug in own laptop to internet but $2.50
for 15 minutes.
Saturday 5 July KATHERINE
Early shower, then
laze on bed with breakfast to take advantage of cool (7) weather. Walked upstream towards town and dropped down
to narrow path closer to river. Saw many
birds in one and a half hours - willie wagtail, restless flycatcher,
bar-shouldered and peaceful doves, rainbow bee-eater (very common around here),
little and black-faced woodswallows, white-bellied cuckoo-shrike,
blue-faced, dusky and white-gaped honeyeaters, blue-winged kookaburra,
black kite, rufous whistler, northern fantail, double-barred finch (16 italics = 1st sighting here).
Had trailer as packed
up as we could before going to bed.
Sunday 6 July EDITH
FALLS
Extra early start as
alarm clock woke us on Qld time, 30 mins earlier than the 6:45 am we
wanted. Didn't matter - we got out to
the Gorge by 8am and had plenty of time to chat to our neighbours from
Riverview (on same cruise) before the boat left at 9:10am. The gorge had looked somewhat boring from the
air but was very interesting and quite magnificent from water angle. Good value for $69 - nearly 4 hours of
scenery, chance of swim (we didn't), Aboriginal guide filled us in on quite a
few things
·
Nitmiluk Gorge area leased to NP for 100 years
·
gorge
1 7m deep; gorge 2 35m deep
·
36
varieties of fish; now too cold for fishing, April-May best time
·
when
kapok bush has yellow flowers, know it's nesting time for crocs and turtles
·
significance
of rock art (8000-10000 yrs old - much better than anything we'd seen
elsewhere) - bush tucker including livistona (top eaten)' brolga, turtle,
kangaroo, frog and lily pad
·
theory
that aborigines burned spinifex to get resin which was put on rock art to
preserve it
·
red
ochre penetrates 6 mm, yellow 4mm and white 2mm
·
chalky
apple tree has golf ball sized fruit - need to soak it in water so it doesn't
dry mouth
·
make
men's carry bag from Livistona nervis? palm - use it to carry ochre, sticks,
water if lined with Melaleuca argenta bark
·
bark
and leaves from freshwater mangrove crush, put in carry bag, swish around,
leave in water for an hour, come back to get stunned fish - they recover when
water reoxygenated by children swimming
·
female
carry bag made from Pandanus
·
white
buoys in waterholes - salties bite them - know if saltie there
Had an easy walk
between gorges to reach next boat.
Returning at 12:00, the walkway to Gorge 1 beside the rock art was
crowded, an unending procession of pilgrims, quite colourful in itself.
We now regret not
using the kayak along the first gorge and plan to do so before going on to WA.
Easy drive to Edith
Falls (Leliyn section of Nitmiluk) but didn't get there until 4pm. Has a kiosk selling usual seaside fare -
icecreams, burgers, fish and chips, breakfast.
Hot showers and washing machine, but no powered sites. You can however book a particular site- all
numbered. Campsites looked good - each
one has its own lawn but only tent campers can pitch on lawn. Others park vehicles on dirt alongside. Our site looks very pleasant, is very
private, but not shady in afternoon. Cost $17.60 per night.
I soon wanted to stay
2 nights - D not convinced. Set up camp
quickly without awning and went to swim at Edith Falls. What a lovely place! Crowded with campers and day trippers, being
a Sunday. Water was deep, just the right
temperature and access to water not difficult.
Enjoyed it thoroughly. Then went
for short walk around the pool to dry off and we saw a man drowning, going down
for the third time before 2 people pulled him in. Quite shocking as he was only 10 metres from
the edge. He was Chinese, plump, and had
swum across to the other side and was on his way back. When we left, he was speaking and obviously
not in permanent distress.
David agreed to stay
another night and put up the awning.
Only scary thing at
night was finding our way to and from Amenities, as we had not used them in
daylight and weren't oriented.
Monday 7 July EDITH
FALLS
Cloudy and windy
morning, not at all cold, very pleasant walking weather. We did the 2 hour Leliyn walk after
breakfast. Easy though a lot of up and
down. After an hour you get to Upper
Pool where David swam. He said it was
warmer than the big pool. Very pretty
area with waterfall, rocks, trees and not too crowded.
Home for lunch -
still overcast and breezy, though humid.
We thought it a great day but met some English walkers just finishing a
7 day walk from Katherine and they found it far too humid.
Lazed around in
afternoon. David discovered our
power-pack battery was dead and set it to recharge at the laundry. I couldn't resist using the washing machine
because tomorrow we will be in Kakadu and possibly at bush camping only sites
for a few days. Washing dry one hour
after hanging.
Tuesday 8 July GUNLOM KAKADU NATIONAL PARK
40km gravel road,
mostly corrugated despite grader working.
Shady campsite; good amenities block nearby.
Swim in plunge pool very nice.
Swim in plunge pool very nice.
Walked to nearby billabong at 5pm
- few birds, just flock of red-tailed cockatoos, 1 little egret, 1 little black
cormorant, 1 willie wagtail and 2 magpie-larks.
Evening slideshow by Aboriginal
camp manager re bush tucker - very interesting.
Most protein is dealt with thus:
"cut his neck, pull out insides, throw 'im on hot coals" - though turtles are often cooked as
casserole with herbs pushed into shell.
Wednesday 9 July COOINDA
Walk to South
Alligator River at Gunlom only 2.5 km return - easy.
Walk up to Top Pools
- 1km steep. Beautiful.
Red-backed kingfisher |
Back to Kakadu H'way,
then headed for Cooinda. Road accident,
fatal, held us up. Got last powered
site, beside toilets but shady. Swim in
resort pool, shower, dinner at Bistro.
7:30pm slide show by ranger re wildlife.
Female jabiru has yellow eyes; male has black eyes.
Thursday 10 July COOINDA
8 am walk at Yellow
Waters
with 2 female rangers. Saw a fantastic
variety of wildlife - huge flocks of magpie geese, 2 saltwater crocs (close-up
of 3m female), 2cm stripy frog on water pandanus leaf, many egrets,good views
of night herons, 1 juvenile (stripy grey with green legs), brolgas, 2 jabiru,
radjah shelducks, big flock of mixed plumed and wandering whistling ducks,
black-faced and white-bellied cuckoo-shrikes, darters, bar-shouldered doves,
forest kingfisher, lemon-bellied and shining (f) flycatchers, white-bellied sea
eagle...
Drove to Mardugal
camp ground and walked to billabong - saw leaden flycatcher. Any water birds were long departed as
speedboat !! went up and down small area in very noisy fashion.
I was determined to
get a good seat on the 2 hour cruise at 4:30pm, so we drove to Yellow
Waters an hour early and baked in hot sun until the 4 boats left. But we did sit in the front row with great
unimpeded views of the 18 crocs and many birds.
New birds seen for Kakadu were azure and little kingfishers, glossy
ibis, great egret, drongo. South
Alligator River is 200km long and all of it is protected for fauna and flora
(except fish).
Friday 11 July JABIRU
Short drive and
plenty of sites to choose from at Kakadu Lodge, as we arrived before
9:30am. Choose one with a hedge on one
side, trees on the other and opposite the rather nice-looking pool. Set up camp more fully than usual, shopped at
Jabiru, made a cake and bread, had a swim, and went to Bowali Visitor Centre
after lunch. Good idea as interesting
place and great air-conditioned video of the Big Wet from 3:30 - 4:30. Back to put on lamb roast and go next door
for another swim while it cooked. What a
life!
Saturday 12 July JABIRU - Nourlangie
To Nourlangie Rock in
time for ranger talk at 9am. Supposed to
be on landscapes but only 4 listeners and he (Joel) answered our questions,
especially re Aborig. skin concept and legends.
Listened to 2 more talks at different places - re art sites and Aborig.
history revealed in one archaelogical dig.
Could see use of rocks over 1000s of years for grinding seeds or
ochres. Main art site was repainted in
1964.
Joel also identified
the strychnine tree and ironwood (very important for Aboriginal spear heads,
though splinter can kill you if medicine not ready).
Went to Angbangbang
billabong for walk and lunch. Walk
supposed to take 1-2 hours but took us over 2 hours. Good birding but very hot.
Sunday 13 July JABIRU - Ubirr
NB grey termite
mounds.
Rushing to get there
in time for ranger talk at 9am at Main Gallery.
Very learned girl picked out features, eg
·
circles
on turtles = fat deposits
·
white
man with hands in pockets and boots, probably painted 1880s
·
paintings
can tell their age by depicting fauna/flora when area was/wasn't
estuarine/dry...
·
thylacine
Saw small short-eared
rock wallaby with black fluffy tail - very cute.
Another rush to book
boat cruise, then back to Ubirr for 2nd ranger talk re rainbow serpent and how
stories about it vary from one place to another. Here, the serpent hates noise and destroyed
whole group because they didn't take responsibility for stopping child from
crying. Went on to explain skin concept
and did so with help of simple diagram - stops incestuous relationships. Blood brother and sister cannot even talk to
each other.
11am We went on Guluyambi
Aboriginal Cultural Cruise, $45 each for nearly 2 hours. Excellent.
Cindy, a relative of Kakadu Man, Bill N ..., piloted boat and gave great
commentary. Saw many crocs, mostly under
4 m except for Stumpy, who had lost much of his tail in a fight. Few birds.
5cm mud skippers. 2 stingrays.
Learned from Cindy:
- croc colour darkens
with age;
- croc can stay
underwater for 1 and half hours
- beach hibiscus
grows here because it's tidal, though 110km from sea. Beach hibiscus flowers are edible if orange
or red, not when yellow. If eat yellow,
then need to eat orange or red to stop tummy upset. Put branches on fire to straighten them - use
as fish spears cos float. Make string
from fibres inside bark - tie on spears to stop splitting. Jelly stuff good as antiseptic
- water tower was too
short in last cyclone - needed to be 1 and half towers higher (solar powered
radio info device on top)
- pony tail canegrass
lining bank, about 1m high, used for spears when hunting geese or ducks. Can also use as straw to drink water without
climbing down bank, or as snorkels
- pandanus aquaticus
- crush end of roots to make paintbrush; get 10-15 trunks, tie together, add
paperbark platform to make raft
- put leaf of
freshwater mangrove on finger tip, rub on child's lip as punishment; swells to
lemon size for about 7 days;
fruit of cluster figs
used as medicine
- use paperbark as
shelter- waterproof; look for bump size of basketball on trunk - cut to get
water - seal up with paperbark
-Catfish Creek good
fishing spot but nobody goes there because now home of 6m croc.
Went ashore on
sandbank to Arnhem Land where Shane (partner in business, piloting other boat)
had set of spears and a boondock (? spelling).
Latter = spear-thrower and club.
Demonstrated spear-throwing and made similar remarks to Joel at
Nourlangie about hunting birds with spears - much better than guns - throw up
vertically, come down silently
Had lunch on bank of
East Alligator R, high above where croc unlikely to climb steep bank. Then back to Ubirr to see other
artworks. I was tired and very hot (33
degrees); our water was hot also. David
went to top of Lookout and I reluctantly went high enough to see panoramic view
of flood plains and woodlands - quite stunning.
To Border Store for
cold drink, then to Cahill's Crossing, hoping for tide rise - no luck.
Back to Jabiru - so
hot had 2 short swims, sitting back at camp dripping wet. Dinner at pool - nice cold bottle of
Chardonnay for $24 and shared a good Pizza Margarita, also $24. Allowed to take rest of bottle back to
trailer for tomorrow night.
Monday 14 July JABIRU - Malabanjbanjdju and Muirella walks
Did the Iligadjarr
Wetlands Walk at Malabanjbanjdju, 4km, hot, half through grasslands; took 90
minutes. Within sight of, or beside
water most of the way. All the
waterbirds, in relatively small numbers, we had seen already (except for a
juvenile jacana which took some detective work until crest on parent seen), but
on the way back I spied a blue-winged kookaburra, rufous-throated honeyeater
and 1m black snake in shady swamp near footbridge. Very pretty area and campground looked good -
large private sites, usual new-looking amenities.
On to Muirella Park
for the Bubba walk, 5km, sounding more shady than 1st walk. By then, it was 11:30 and 33 degrees, so we
weren't enthusiastic. Huge campgrounds
with Nourlangie Creek beside them and billabongs on another side. Again large private sites, usual new-looking
amenities, plus large areas permanently reserved by tourist companies. An evening boat cruise to spotlight animals
goes from here. Not much use having so
much water when you can't swim and the mozzies keep biting.
David noticed a paper
under a rock at start of walk, saying that half walk closed because of large
pig. We wondered where the point of
closure was, as the walk is circular.
However, we headed for the area with the largest billabong which we
reached in 1 km and where the path was blocked with Area Closed sign. Few birds to be seen at that time of day but
I was pleased to see one not yet sighted in Kakadu - Pacific heron.
Back to the start and
walked about 1 km in other direction - same sign at another billabong.
To Jabiru for ATM and
shopping (no hot chooks left! so bought 2 frozen pies instead). Home where washing and packing up had to be
done. Used Internet kiosk to check
emails and financial news.
Tuesday 15 July MARY RIVER NATIONAL PARK
Bought a hot chook at
Jabiru early. Signs announcing market
stalls for fish, fruit and veges near lake.
Already provisioned unfortunately.
En route to Mary
River we stopped at Mamukala Wetlands for 1km walk. Great bird hide there though no birds we hadn't
already seen. Walk was more than 1km but
rewarded by sightings of flock of black duck, my first for Kakadu, red-backed
wrens not in colour and first ever sight of masked finches.
Booked into Mary
River Park for 1 day only because unsure of what to do here and park was oddly
arranged. Unshaded pool up a hill well
away from camping ground and next to dining hall and units. Heaps of room if you didn't want a powered
site. Got a shady spot and went on a
half hour walk along Wallaby Track at 2pm which resulted in 11 bird
sightings. David put bread on and then
into car to find wine at nearby Bark Hut Inn - looked a better campground but
may be noisy later on.
Bad mosquito attack
at 6:30pm drove me and table with dinner (chicken salad) inside. Also decided to move on tomorrow because of
mozzies. Hope they don't follow me to
Darwin.
Wednesday 16
July DARWIN
Howard Springs
Caravan Park - site not shady enough and crowded; pool too far away. Gd amenities.
To Palmerston Shopping Centre for supermarket and B swim togs. Late afternoon to Howard Springs Nature
Park - shady, interesting. Saw fish
- long tom, catfish, mullet, barramundi- long-nosed turtle and male Shining
flycatcher.
Thursday 17 July DARWIN
Shopping
To city PO for
documents re BBI and Elderslie. Went to
library to check internet access. B
tried on swim togs -none suitable.
Looked at a few Aborig. art galleries.
Very hot. To Casuarina Shopping
Centre, biggest in NT; had all the usual shops - Country Road, KMart, Best
& Less, BigW, Colorado, Noni B ... - but no Myer or DJs in Darwin. Had to wait there until 2:45 for B haircut
and colour, not finished until 4:30.
Back to Howard Springs to pack up.
Friday 18 July DARWIN
Fogg Dam
Back to Howard
Springs Nature Park at 7:30am - glad
we did as cool and nice walk, made better by excellent view of Rainbow
pitta. Did washing to fill in time so we
didn't get to Boomerang before site 37 had left. Very pleased with site, especially
shade. Extended stay here to get 9 days
once we agreed that Darwin had enough to offer for that period.
In afternoon drove
east for 49 km to see Window on Wetlands display and Fogg Dam. Windows was well set out, educational, fun
for children, but not much to see re nature, except for buffalo with cattle
egret jockeys. Good explanatory panels
relating to history - coffee plantations in 1880s, prison, Humpty Doo workers
...
Then to nearby Fogg
Dam, touted as great birding place. Did
Monsoon Forest Walk for 1 hour before coming to sign - boardwalk will reopen in
2007 ... Good signs on trees, etc. Few birds.
Then did Waterlily Walk - no waterlilies, many mozzies, mostly boardwalk
through paperbark swamp. Very
disappointed. Ignored injunction re
driving across dam wall as now 5:30pm and thoroughly annoyed. Should have gone there first as saw over 30
birds, a turtle and a saltie in 45 minutes.
First sighting this trip of a Black-winged stilt. Dazzling display of birdlife, the equal of Yellow
Waters and more accessible at no cost.
Saturday 19 July DARWIN
Parliament House guided tour 11am -
excellent guide made political history very interesting. For first 30 years dominated by Country
Liberal Party 18-7 seats; now Labour 19-6.
Poignant panels about those killed in WW2 on this site, manning the Post
Office as Darwin was bombed.
Drove out to Stokes
Wharf, a rather seedy collection of cafes/takeaway joints. We had grilled barramundi/salmon with chips
and salad and plastic fork for $10.90 each - fish was very soft and probably
imported.
On to Bunnings and
shops at Palmerston (where I finally got a cheap satisfactory pair of togs).
Sunday 20 July DARWIN
Botanic Gardens walk for 2 hours -
shady, pleasant. Room for browsing info
about plants, birds, history. Many
tropical trees from around the world, especially South and Central
America. Extensive collection of palms.
Museum and Art
Gallery
sophisticated layout. Wonderful
Aboriginal paintings and sculptures, mostly from 1970s to now. Cyclone Tracey gallery including sound room,
samples of housing historical, pre- and post- Tracey; newsreel,news headlines,
sound bites from survivors - evocative.
Maritime gallery, not air-conditioned, including many native craft from
islands, fishing boats and one 'boat people' vessel impounded.
Exhibition titled
'inspire/expire" for some obscure reason was collection of paintings owned
by NT gallery and arranged on themes hard to grasp in some cases. Ranged from voluptuous Lindsay nudes to
Charles Blackman Alice to modern abstracts.
I liked a small William Dobell "Meatworker", the man akin to
the meat on shoulder.
Outside is a gallery
which featured an exhibition of bird paintings by Jasmin Tan - well done,
realistic, but rather large and florid.
On the lawns was a craft market like any other - we liked the sausage
sizzle.
Palmerston Library is
open 1-4pm Sundays and we could use our laptop on wireless for $4 hour. Great.
Back to park and 6pm
Sausage Sizzle for charity - well attended by people. We left too early, thinking all was over at
7pm. Still going at 8pm.
Monday 21 July DARWIN
Went to Territory
Wildlife Park, expecting to spend the morning there but not leaving until
4pm. Cost was $16 for seniors (govt.
run). At 9am they feed creatures at the
Billabong - we missed the barramundi but saw the pelicans fed and a failed
attempt to bring the big freshwater whipray to the side.
Boarded the train for
Main Station and enjoyed guide Trisha's commentary on flora and fauna (on third
train trip around 3pm she was less informative and tired). She stopped to show us how Ernie Dingo will
come and sit for her and again in an attempt to seduce Henry the killer brolga
to dance.
Nocturnal House was
so dark that less than half the creatures could be seen. Asked to be quiet there but group of
pre-schoolers may have disturbed animals.
Birds of Prey display
at Flight Deck was excellent - lovely Barn Owl looking so innocent, juvenile
Sea Eagle too big to be harassed by Black Kites. Latter tried to compete with Brahminy Kite
for food and Osprey was very put out by kites.
When osprey finally came down to retrieve fish head from pool, it
perched just above me on roof and sat obligingly for photos.
Animal Encounter at
big shady picnic ground comprised talks about a rufous owl (captive bred in
Sydney) and a snake - gave kids the opportunity to touch feathers or hang a
snake around the neck.
Walk-through Aviary
was a surprise. You go on a walkway from
one small aviary to another, each featuring a different habitat and easy
viewing of the birds. We thought this
was OK but hardly what we expected. But
you end up high in a big walk-through aviary which was so pretty and plenty
large enough for the big flock of Pied Imperial Pigeons and many other
birds. Eye to eye with a rose-crowned
pigeon was my special moment. You start
out on a ramp at canopy level and end up ground level watching the pigeons pick
up sticks for nesting and turtles jostling for position or mating.
Met Peter and Maureen
from Toowoomba there and stayed together for the next hour or so. Hope we meet them again somewhere in WA.
The nearby Aquarium
included many tanks of colourful fish, plus a saltwater croc (who got freaked
by something and jumped up vertically with toothy mouth agape), plus a
freshwater walk-under way. Two sawfish
draped themselves over the roof, looking like crazy carnival faces. We had a closeup view of the freshwater
stingray, so large that you wonder that it has not been properly described by
scientists. The ranger at the Billabong
said that the only bones in a stingray are the barbs and that the Billabong one
was down to 1 or 2 barbs. Barbs are used
to scare predators, but do regrow.
Back to Main Station
for food and coffee. I wanted to go with
Peter and Maureen for the 3pm Flight Deck display with wedgie and jabiru, but
David wanted to go to Goose Lagoon. So
we did and saw nothing of any interest for the rest of the visit.
Tuesday 22 July DARWIN
David took car for
wheel alignment and I happily sat back to compose emails and catch up on this
journal. To Palmerston Library for
internet access.
Wednesday 23
July DARWIN
Got my days wrong and
went to Holmes Jungle Park for guided ranger walk, then realised it wasn't
Thursday.
Charles Darwin NP
Casuarina Coastal
Reserve
Pearling Lugger
Cruise
Thursday 24 July DARWIN
Guided ranger walk at
Holmes Jungle Park took 2 hours as the ranger was willing to keep walking and
answering questions. He spoke about fire
management and problems due to introduced pasture grasses which end up in NPs,
are not kept down by stock and seed later than native grasses, at a time later
in the dry adding to fuel loads when weather is particularly windy. Pennisetum and gamba are the culprits.
Dominant grass should be sorghum which is flattened when fires usually start,
so low oxygen content.
Northern eucalypts
close in fire, not releasing volatile oils as in south. This park close to the city started out in
1870s as allotments taken up in England for 3 shillings (an acre?), though many
were never developed in any way and returned to govt control from 1900 through
to 1930s. The curator of the Botanic
Gardens at the turn of the century, Holtz, had acreage here and tried growing
many exotic plants. The area has permanent water fed by water from Knuckeys
Lagoon and leading to a heavily canopied monsoon forest, where we saw a dark
grey 1m snake and a dingo. The ranger is
trying to revegetate a large clearing in the middle where someone built a house
in the 1930s. Grasses have taken over
and hinder growth of rainforest trees.
USA dumped ordnance
here in WW2.
Milkwood a balsa-type
tree. ironwood makes animals sick. Aborigines use Pandanus spiralis to make
headbands for headache relief.
Friday 25 July DARWIN
To Darwin Show on
Show Day - officially opened at 2pm with 5 parachutists landing just before in
a haze of orange smoke. Small show,
small grounds, but officials were driven into arena, doors opened, etc. Speeches which we couldn't hear. Then the Grand Parade - some World Harmony
runners, then Kia cars with accompanying spiel, high school students leading
high school cattle, polocrosse riders as seen at 12pm in a boring display of
the sport, and not much else. At least
we went by free bus at 11 from Palmerston.
Nothing worth buying or seeing.
Saturday 26 July DARWIN
Sunday 27 July LITCHFIELD
Monday 28 July KATHERINE
Walked about 3km to
do the Wangi loop walk of 1.6km, which was closed at monsoon forest end, near
red flying fox colony. Interesting walk
and a pity that the most biologically diverse and shady section was closed. Not enough in Litchfield to keep us another
night, so packed up and drove back, stopping at Florence Falls. Did the Shady Creek walk to the Falls and
wished we had our togs on. Did not
realise that we could swim at the end.
Lovely rainforesty walk. Wished
we had stayed here. Stopped again on way
out at Magnetic Termite Mounds - termites don't have underground tunnels but
rely on fairly precise positioning of narrow, smooth mounds for climate
control. Live beside other termites
building the familiar Cathedral Mounds.
Had no problem
getting a nice shady site at Shady Lane on the Gorge road. Much better than Riverview.
Tuesday 29 July KATHERINE
Spent the morning
kayaking through first gorge at Nitmiluk.
Cost $11 for 2 people plus refundable $50 deposit (rescue money). Hot day and wind against us going up so David
had to work hard. Enjoyed the 6.4km
round trip - so peaceful and able to stop anywhere (except croc sand nest
spots). Saw no wildlife.
Home for lunch, then
to town for fuel and small WW shop.
David looked at buying an extra paddle so I could help out, but baulked
at spending $50.
Wednesday 30 July
MATARANKA
Packed inflated kayak
on top of trailer for 100km trip and drove under 100 km/ph. Stopped at Cutta Cutta Caves and were
pleasantly surprised by the very informative botanic signs on a short walk and
also by the caves themselves. The guide was very knowledgeable and articulate,
the caves were more impressive than expected and well worth the $14.50 entry.
At Elsey we found a
fairly shady campsite and after a late lunch walked a km to Mulurark where we
saw a 2m freshwater croc on a rock on the opposite bank and still had a swim.
Friendly neighbour,
Vince, invited us to campfire after tea.
Met 5 other people there. Very
chatty. Some pensioners who spend much
time on the road and look for cheap sites, using a book called Camps 4.
Thursday 31 July
MATARANKA
Kayak from 12 Mile
toward Mataranka Falls. Saw many agile
wallabies on left bank. Rapids after
about 2km, so grounded kayak and walked next 2.5 km. Falls of 1 metre, pretty but not
spectacular! David got fishing bug when
he saw 3 big bream arrive at point where I washed my sticky hands.
Home for lunch, then
off to Mataranka for fishing line, hooks and sinkers. Also able to hook up computer at Rural office
for $2.20 if less than 15 minutes.
Drive to Mataranka
Homestead where we saw replica of Elsey Homestead built for movie. Walked past thermal pool nearby - small, full
of retirees, mostly inactive.
Young NP officer,
Danielle, gave fireside talk at 7pm about Elsey NP and answered questions. Some interesting facts - donkeys abundant
here and hard to control as get in swampy areas where no trees suitable for
pulling vehicle from bog. Control by
shooting in wet season when park closed.
Feral pigs too hard to deal with.
Agile wallabies, plus wallaroos and nail-tailed wallabies. No salties seen here.
Friday 1 August MATARANKA
Pleasantly surprised
by beauty and signs on 1.5km Botanic Walk.
Very shady. Small spring fed
creek trickles through, into billabong and finally into Roper River at Stevie's
Hole.
Kayaked upstream from
Four Mile. Easy access to river. David went downstream towards Mulurark but
was soon stopped by rapids and snags in side branches. So we went upstream towards Stevie's
Hole. Very peaceful but David was tired
on 3rd day of paddling. I took the
paddle for a short distance. It was fun
but I didn't get far. After about 2km we
turned back and went home for lunch.
David suggested an
afternoon walk of 4.4km return to Stevie's Hole via Botanic Walk. There he planned to fish while I swam and
bird-watched. Big signs there - NO
FISHING. After a quick swim in the
shallow fast-running water (with bonus sandy bottom) we wandered back. David stopped at every likely spot en route
and cast his line with tasty corned silverside bait, but hooked nothing. Fish only around 3-5cm.
Saturday 2
August FLORA RIVER NATURE PARK
Desultory start to
the day, but eventually drove to Katherine for fuel and shopping. Reached Flora River via 46km good dirt road
by 2:15 - noone else here although later another couple camped far away. Ideal camping site, close as possible to
amenities and so shaded all day that no need for awning, just shadecloth to avoid
usual red dirt. Walked to river and
waterfall - beautiful beside river; several small falls, rushing water;
saltwater croc warnings everywhere, unfortunately. No place to launch a kayak but nice small
pools beside torrent.
Home to bird-watch
and relax but D wanted to explore so we drove 4km to nearest boat ramp. There we found 2 young couples and an odd man
out around 60, camped with tinnies and one man setting a dangerously high
campfire. River wide and fast flowing,
very pretty aqua water. David keen to
kayak but I vetoed it, wanting a live man who hated me rather than a dead croc
meal.
Back to camp,
pleasant dinner but once dark, beset by all kinds of small insects and had to
retreat to trailer to avoid inhaling insects.
Sunday 3 August TIMBER CREEK
Walked to Djarung
Falls 650m return. 2 creeks poured into
the Flora over 1m falls - quite a torrent and the river wide and a pretty
turquoise colour. Nowhere else to walk,
so packed up and set off for Timber Creek.
Passed through the
eastern section of Gregory NP and stopped at Sullivans Campground which had
toilets, red dirt, few trees and nothing else.
However, there was a somewhat hidden billabong with noisy invisible
birds and some beautiful big trees.
Entry for swimming was not enticing - high banks or very stony beach,
plus usual estuarine croc warnings.
Road was bordered by
woodland for some time until we were startled by the sudden appearance of
flat-topped escarpments, some grassed and more distant ones deep red. The scenery became even more dramatic as we
neared Victoria River Roadhouse where we
stopped for an icecream. Several Gregory NP walks started from this
point. Drove to the parking lot for the
boat ramp, walked down through 2m high grass bordering a good concrete
drive. Walk was longer and hotter than
we expected, ending at a really broad stretch of the Victoria River. Passed a big construction camp for bridge and
road works. Skipped the 1.5 hour walk
along the escarpment, no shade there and now 2pm.
Near Timber Creek the
grassy hills had 'tonsures' of rock, very evenly arranged. The caravan park has 2 names, Gunamu being
the feature on billboards, but Circle F on the swimming pool fence. Big park, plenty of very shady big sites,
mostly occupied. We moved a sprinkler to
join one caravan on a grassy stony site out front. Lovely shady tree showered us with small
cream flowers.
At 5pm people
gathered on or near the suspension bridge over a small creek for the scheduled
feeding of crocs.
Monday 4 August TIMBER CREEK
David washes car as I
write and 3x3 road trains of cattle organise cows outside. We think one or more of the poor beasts had
fallen down and had to be pushed aside to make more room. No smell in our direction.
Drove 500m to NP
office and read signs about Gregory NP.
Decided to pack swim gear and lunch and go to Limestone Gorge. 10km of bitumen and 36km of rough dirt road
later, we arrived. Looked at tufa dams -
similar to concrete structures - no water.
On to billabong inhabited by 4 adults with large 4WD van. Thence to campground with 4 camp groups
including one very unhappy bassinet age baby.
35 degrees, 12:00pm, dry, dusty, red.
Walked to nearby East Baines R - looked good but no obvious place to
swim and again the saltwater croc signs.
Did part of escarpment walk, which would have been great in cool weather
as the signs were excellent, aiming to inform walkers of the botanical features
at different levels - valley, climb up and top.
We noted that the valley featured Terminalia arostrata Nutwood, Eucalyptus
? Plains bloodwood and Hakea
arborescens. A bit higher, they
chose to comment on the Kapok bush, Cochlospermum fraseri.
Back to billabong now
uninhabited and with sign saying salties were trapped and removed. Looked inviting with white limestone rocks,
waving aquarium weed and small stripy fish.
Quick swim followed by lunch at picnic table, nicely wet and cool, then
a final swim before returning on that horrible road. Surprised to pass at least 6 vehicles around
2pm on way in, including one with caravan.
Don't think that one will get into Limestone Gorge - perhaps going to
Bullita.
Tuesday 5 August KEEP RIVER NP
Stopped at 2 lookouts
near Timber Creek, both well worthwhile.
Policemans Lookout gave a closeup view of Victoria River, so broad that
I couldn't see birds on opposite bank.
The next lookout, so titled, was really a series of lookouts out from
the top of the escarpment. Saw that
Timber Creek was much bigger than the highway view suggests. Interesting memorial to the Nackeroos, a
volunteer force based here in 1942, on horseback patrolling to check on any
Japanese invaders.
On to Keep
River. First stop at Ranger headquarters
and adjoining Cockatoo Lagoon. Good
birding spot (about 10 Royal Spoonbills) and interesting display, being
expanded as we watched with a rather testy supervisor giving installation
instructions.
Gurrandalng
Campground is 18km from highway. Pushed
trailer to a shady spot when 2 picnicking ladies vacated it just after we had
unhitched. After late lunch (=WA time)
we drove 20 minutes to other campground, Jarnem, where we set out on an 8km
walk at 2:30 in 35 degrees in the shade.
The walk proved to be shorter by 1.5km and we did the harder section
first, up to a lookout. Saw around 100
red-tailed black cockatoos with some corellas for contrast, festooning trees
and rising from a plain of seeding grass.
Very spectacular. As was the
lookout view, over distant hills and across from Bungle-like domed pillar
formations. Back on the loop walk where
we passed the Ngila artsite, rainbow serpent and 3 emus, and were delighted by
white-quilled rock pigeons - big fat brown birds showing white in wings as they
flew up from the path and alighted on high ledges or sometimes first on
seemingly vertical surfaces.
The 3 hour walk took
us just over 2 hours, the last 'easy' bit being a tiring trudge through
sand. We donned togs to take a bucket
bath and I was eager to get dinner done for a Ranger talk at 7:30pm. However, our friendly neighbours told us that
the talk was cancelled because all the rangers were out fighting a nearby
bushfire.
Wednesday 6
August KUNUNURRA
Second visit to
Cockatoo Lagoon - very few birds and nothing new.
Through quarantine
into WA where we surrendered 1 tablespoon honey, 2 sticks celery and an old
lemon.
straight to Ivanhoe
CP and a grassed ensuite site with views of distant mountains and nearby green
paddocks. Shopping and internet in
afternoon. Neighbour visit after tea re
roads into Lawn Hill. Phil gave us much
advice in return about WA.
Thursday 7
August KUNUNURRA
Wyndham
Emma Gorge
Friday 8 August KUNUNURRA
Saturday 9 August
BUNGLES
Locked the trailer up
at Leycester Rest Area, some 7km from the turnoff to Bungles. Road in was better than expected, but we
still had 6 creek crossings and our temperature gauge went down to 15 for some
time. David drove the 53km in 75 mins
instead of the 2-3 hours publicised.
Spent $1 at the Visitor Centre on some excellent Park Notes re geology,
flora and fauna. Walked to Lookout near the Visitor Centre but not worth the
time. Had another 7km to Kurrajong
Campground and hurriedly put up the tent minus fly. Just as well because it was dark when we
returned and finding a suitable site would have been difficult. The campground was quite roomy with many
private sites to choose from, but we choose to be near a toilet and tap,
between 2 leafy trees and without noticeable rocks on the ground.
Had to drive some
20km of dirt road to get to Echidna Chasm and Mini Palms. We walked into Echidna as fast as we could,
hampered by the stony creekbed access.
We wanted to get there before the light became too dim for photos. I guess we didn't fully appreciate the drama
and beauty of the place until we emerged to see sunset on the cliffs. Rushed from there to Mini Palms, supposedly a
2 hour walk and it was now 4pm. Another
race against light. However, we got
there and back comfortably in 80 minutes.
Dark when reached campground.
Still had to put up fly and organise eating and sleeping
arrangements. We were warm enough
overnight but without a mattress the ground was very hard. David kept complaining of a stone under him -
he left the car keys in his tracksuit pocket!
Packed up early to
drive 34 km to Cathedral Gorge, a good road most of the way with an alarming
stone gully at one point. Busloads of
tourists as this is the nearest attraction to the airstrip and tourist company
tents. It is also an easier walk than
Mini Palms or Echidna as the path is mostly on compacted sand and there are no
ladders to climb. Still some elderly
ladies were having difficulty and one didn't even go - just sat in elegant
white outfit with large suitcase in a small shelter shed, repairing any damage
to her make-up. She seemed perfectly
happy with her situation.
Most of the walk
there was punctuated by parent-child interactions, rather amusing and made me
wish my grandchildren were there. One
father carefully read every sign to his bored-looking 9-10 year old boys and
then quizzed them to check understanding.
They were from Perth on a 6 week trip and anxious about the boys'
education. We later saw the boys in a
stone-throwing competition on deserted, dry Piccaninny Creek and found the
parents 'hiding' around the corner.
Another
father was forever asking his somewhat hyperactive 6 and 8 year olds to be
quiet. I hoped they would be noisier as
it would test the acoustics of the Cathedral.
As we came into Echidna Chasm, a trio of children emerged, singing
'Advance Australia Fair' very sweetly.
It added much to the atmosphere
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