Northern Australia here we come! No job, no plans, just a general sense of direction.
Tuesday, 26 June 2012
Random big thing - Krys the Croc (Normanton)
A model replica (1:1) of the world’s biggest croc shot in the 1950’s in the area - at 8.6 metres dwarfs most tinnies.
Monday, 25 June 2012
Random big thing – 4 real life brolgas
Having taken a wrong turn for lunch we drove alongside the
Savannah Rail line and encountered 4 Brolgas for the first time – bizarre
looking birds, they looked like ‘big bird’ at the mardi gras.
And flew like a paper aeroplane made from a tattered beer carton with some half drunk stubbies inside it.
Sunday, 24 June 2012
Aye Karumba!
Where the outback meets the sea. The Savannah land is
endless as you drive towards the coast.
But when you arrive the views of the sun setting over the
long sandbanks at low tide are amazing.
And the fishing…. Day 1 I caught a 45cm (1.6 kg) bream off
the mouth of the Norman River and then made an acquaintance (let’s call him
John) with someone who owns a tinnie. In all, I caught Grunter, Blue Salmon and
a million catfish.
Worth noting – Not having seen a croc at this stage I didn’t
hesitate in leaning over the side of John's boat to clean the anchor. Minutes
later I was reminded of how real they are seeing a 12ft sunbaking only a few
hundred metres downstream. Aye Karumba!!
Friday, 22 June 2012
Croydon – trapped by a little town
We had no expectation of staying in Croydon however the rodeo was in town and they needed another clown so we stayed for 4 nights! The event was called
the Poddy Dodgers Festival.
Also squeezed in a few hours fishing in the dam and the closest I came to catching anything was a kite that swooped down and grabbed my lure. Thank fully it let go as I wouldn't know where to begin filleting it!
After the small parade the night before, Saturday morning saw
us check out the restored legal precinct historical buildings. There were voice
recordings running of prisoners in the jail and a court case which spooked the
kids.
Oldest continuously operating general store in Queensland.
Off to the poddy dodgers to watch the mutton busting, slippery pig,
wild cow milking, poddy dodging and other 'everyday' events. Crazy stuff.
Whilst there I bumped into an Officer I’d recently worked
with and the kids were quickly caught up in a pursuit. (no this officer was not
the slippery pig – another officer drew the short straw and ran a decoy in the
arena- it was hilarious).
We also found not 1 but 2 bower bird nests.
Also squeezed in a few hours fishing in the dam and the closest I came to catching anything was a kite that swooped down and grabbed my lure. Thank fully it let go as I wouldn't know where to begin filleting it!
Thursday, 21 June 2012
Random big thing – chimney
Between Georgetown and Croydon. Not huge in the general
chimney category but given it is brick and in the middle of nowhere thought it
worth a mention.
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
What's under Undara?
A visit to see the unique Undara lava tubes was worthwhile.
The tubes bigger than metro railway tunnels and a train timetable to match.
A temperate rainforest has taken hold where each end of the
lava tube has collapsed. There were red, orange, yellow and brown colours in
the basketball sized dimples in the walls of this particular section of tube.
And the trains – no wonder they were late in the tube, they
have all been put up on blocks and arranged fantastically for the restaurant,
bar and upmarket accommodation.
Whilst at Undara we climbed a volcano, walked the rim and
took a photo of another volcano from the top. Is that a 4wd Volvo-cano in the
car park?
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
Mareeba - take 2
We had to double back via Mareeba as some of the gulf development roads are still cut from what was an unusually long wet season, but this gave us a chance to catch up with old friends.
There are a lot of abandoned gold mines in the Atherton tablelands but I found this thriving gem – a drive through bakery selling vanilla slice with passion fruit icing ‘eureka’.
Mareeba Rodeo Grounds for some cheap camping – neighbours ate grass around our tent all night.
Our random lunch spot between Chillagoe and Mt Surprise on
roads less travelled.
Illegal prospecting 2012 style – “Now if I slip you ‘make
like a float’ and catch dad”.
Monday, 18 June 2012
Just for laughs
Z’s worked out the old suck the cup to your face gag.
B standing in ‘no standing zone'!
Prehistoric telephone towers - people have spray painted
‘3G’ and ‘Telstra’ on 10ft high termite mounds as they have managed to get
phone reception in these various spots – not our phone though (see previous
posts).
Dodgy directions from the locals....
The ever common ‘DIP’ warning signs (I reckon there’d be 100
or so of them) have been enhanced by vandals to emphasise it – E.G. “DIP Sh!t”,
“double DIP” and one of my favourites the “iDIP 3.0”.
Evolution of the fisherman.
Sunday, 17 June 2012
Nowhere the go but South
We called into Twin Bat Falls - a popular swimming hole (no crocs).
We stopped here for a couple of hours and had the place to
ourselves. Whilst we ate sandwiches, these little carnivorous plants ate flies
and other insects (we’ll Z probably ate flies too but whose counting).
Also quite interesting is the brown trees – it's actually
termites having built up tunnels on the outside of the trees.
Did we mention the infinite number of 10ft plus termite
hills.?They changed colour throughout the gulf depending on the soil (white,
red, brown and grey)
Every hundred or so kilometres the Government has put in a
couple of kilometres of bitumen for some of the steeper hills and also for
overtaking the cows, wild pigs and roos.
The last creek crossing before returning to sealed roads and
civilisation (almost). Glad we were leaving as the North bound traffic was
dramatically increasing.
Friday, 15 June 2012
The Tip (or as K affectionately calls it The Dump)
One last creek crossing in a pocket of rainforest .
The view SE.
J also wanted me to make note that we had phone reception – thanks Telstra, couldn’t get squat for about 98% of our journey but you came through when it counted!
And one last souvenir shop – the Croc Tent looked after by
an entrepreneurial young family.
Darn – someone has moved it and there is a 500m walk over a
headland. K scouted ahead whilst Z lumbered along walking it all the way.
Just in case we needed to reassess our coordinates someone
made it clear. 2170km as the crow flies back to Bris-vegas.
Tada!! – the Northern most point of mainland Australia.
The view SE.
The view SW.
J also wanted me to make note that we had phone reception – thanks Telstra, couldn’t get squat for about 98% of our journey but you came through when it counted!
Thursday, 14 June 2012
Cape York is getting closer
We left Weipa (they let us out through the traffic lights)
with the last town shy of the ‘tip’ our destination.
Across the Jardine - a $99 return ticket to cross the
Jardine River of which Z could pee further!
Good luck driving through it though with all those car eating crocs (apparently?).
J and B reckon it was $10 for the ferry and $89 for the 20
minute conversation that Munurra (Monaro to his footy mates) provides you
whether you want it or not - as
friendly and as funny as he was, if approached.... prepare for a long chat.
Our destination, Seisia (just near Bamaga) – the last town
about 40 km short of the goal.
There were Bitumen roads with wild horses on the kerbs sides.
The housing ranged from tin sheds through to small project homes and
everything in between. A photo of our neighbour’s
backyard with 2 ellusive palm cockatoos (there were 4 in total).
Sunday, 10 June 2012
Good bye civilisation
About 30 kms north of Cooktown’s the sealed road finished
and was replaced by dirt. We took Old Battle Camp Rd and splashed through some
streams including Isabella Falls
The corrugations were relentless and the dry bushland straights infinite.
We forgot to mention that the cars cigarette lighter is now
lying someone on the side of a road after B snapped having listened to it rattle
for an hour or so before throwing it out the window.
We did come across some friendly locals (Emu, Peacock and
Guinea Fowl) at Hann Roadhouse further increasing our wildlife bingo points.
We also camped behind another pub, the sExchange Hotel.
Unsure where the name comes from but I’d propose that it is as a result of men
having lost their tackle on the 100’s of kms of corrugations in order the get
here.
It’s so bloody hot up here that even trucks burst into flame.
And in the middle of nowhere (actually just coming into
Weipa) traffic lights. To give the mines hall trucks right of way.
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