We were up
early and made a good start driving across the boring Hay plains. When we left
Goolgowi the temperature was in the low 20’s and rising. Rob was dressed in his
favourite “shorty”shorts and a t-shirt. As we left Hay we saw about 5
road trains all carrying bales of hay to Hay. Boredom set in and we made jokes
about it. “Hey, did you see all the hay going to Hay on that truck?” Anyway
after surviving the Hay Plains we stopped at Balranald for coffee and then
headed to Mildura where we were stopping for lunch. During this part of the journey
the weather started to deteriorate with the temperature dropping and rain
falling. It was 9 degrees in Mildura and Rob got some funny looks when we
stopped for fuel, dressed the way he was. He changed into some warmer clothes
during our lunch stop. We continued on and the rain continued. We had the idea
of stopping at Barmera for the night and on Tuesday, Rob was going to play a
round of golf while I went kayaking on Lake Bonney. We decided that given the
state of the weather, this was highly unlikely and so with Rob feeling fine to
continue on driving, headed for home. We arrived back home around 6.15pm all
safe and well. The weather seemed a bit better by the time we got to Adelaide
but we do have the heater on!
A fairly big
day of driving today as we crossed the Queensland NSW border to stop here at “The
Primitive Bush Camp”, Walgett. The town is fairly small and remote and does not
have a caravan park but the local shire has provided this free camp. It says “primitive”
but honestly, with clean, flushing toilets, a lovely dam with geese and a
fountain, some very interesting information boards and displays plus the
cemetery across the road, it is nearly perfect. Once we’d set up I headed over
the road to explore the cemetery and it was very interesting. It had the grave
of the well-known Aboriginal entertainer, Jimmy Little which I managed to find.
Following this, I came back to read some of the information boards and
discovered some really interesting things about this town and Australia’s more
recent history. This town has a large population of Aboriginal people living in
it and this is obvious from the many services offered in the town. It seems
that racial discrimination towards the Aboriginal people in Walgett was rife.
During 1965 there was a “Freedom Ride”. The group of mainly university
students, including Charlie Perkins came to the town in a bus to tackle things
like Aboriginal women not being allowed to go into the ladies frock shop,
segregation of the Aboriginal people in the picture theatre and no Aboriginal
people who had fought in the wars, being allowed to join the RSL. The tour bus
was run off the road by an angry local. You can probably find out more about
this Freedom Tour if you “google it”. This link tells you a little and the
short video of the Aboriginal woman speaking is interesting.
We were up
early this morning as we had our morning helicopter flight booked in for 9am.
We packed up the van and headed out to the helipad which took us a lot less
time than we thought so we were there before the pilots. Anyway they arrived
soon after and explained that they had to do a 20 minute safety check before we
took off. Rob said seeing it was Friday the 13th, could they make it
a 25 minute check! Anyway all went extremely well and we loved the 20 minutes
we spent in the chopper. Our NZ born pilot was fantastic and very informative.
Carnarvon Gorge is actually a “no fly” zone so our flight took us over farm-land,
past spectacular sandstone ridges to Moolayember Gorge. This gorge is only accessible
from the air so we felt very privileged being able to view this spectacular
place. After this wonderful experience we drove onto Roma, arriving around
lunchtime. We set up the caravan and then headed into town. Roma is famous for
so many things but one of them is such a gem and that is Ace’s Haberdashery. We
had visited this amazing shop last time we were here and even Rob didn’t mind
returning to it again. There was a slight problem in that we couldn’t quite
remember where it was so we checked it out on Google. Google gave the address
and said it was open but when we walked to the place google suggested it didn’t
look right. For one thing it was closed, with the windows all covered in
curtains or paper and to us it seemed like it was on the wrong side of the road
and too close to the centre of town. Anyway after much confusion we asked a
local and she directed us to THE SHOP about 400 metres down the road on the
opposite side. We were pretty happy to know we weren’t going mad. Anyway we had
fun poking around and purchased a few things. When we went to leave, we were
served by the owner and we told him the story. He was not that techno savvy
(you could tell by the 20 year old computer he was using) and explained that
the family owned the other shop and it was once used many years ago but is no
longer used. He had tried to edit the google entry but was not successful. Rob
was happy to help him out and altered it so the address was correct and also
the business hours were correct as these too were wrong. I think because Rob
regularly does google updates and reviews that it happened almost straight
away. The owner was very appreciative of Rob’s efforts and sent him a lovely
email of thanks. We then went off to shop and get fuel ready for our home-ward
journey.
Although it wasn't our flight, this video took very similar flight path to others
Today we did
a long but magnificent walk in Carnarvon Gorge. We decided to walk to the farthest
point we intended to visit first and do the other small walks that left the main
track on our return journey. First we visited the Art Gallery, a spectacular
display of Aboriginal art on a sheltered ledge, next the stunningly beautiful
Wards Canyon, the amazing and earie Amphitheatre (a secret oasis hidden inside
a gorge) and finally the Moss Garden, a beautiful place full of ferns with a
waterfall. My fit-bit went into meltdown and by the time we returned back to
the van we have walked over 20 kms and done over 108 flights of stairs. (You
can imagine how Rob loved this!) My biggest issue was that we had to cross
creeks at least 8 times on the way in using stepping stones. Not my favourite
activity but I managed to do all 16 crossings without falling in the water much
to Rob’s disappointment. The walk took most of the day and we’d taken our lunch
with us. We left around 9am and returned to the van at 3pm. Our dinner was a
treat. We had booked in to the Takarkka resort’s roast night and so were
treated to roast lamb and pork, veggies and the trimmings and apple crumble and
custard for dessert.