25 June - check the sights of Derby – mostly art galleries,
plus some good historical photos at the hospital, a D shaped jetty on very high
stilts & expansive mud flats – Anne bought a carved Boab seed. Car fixed so
move everything back into our car.
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| Derby sunset at Marita's |
26 June – goodbye to Marita & Derby for now. An
interesting drive with some flat grassy land & scrubby bushes, a few dry
creek crossings, some interesting hills, mountains & cliffs, followed by
sections of bigger shrubs & trees -
to Mary Pool - Mary River camp ground. This is a free camp with toilets
only but heaps of travellers staying in the wonderful tree filled park on the
banks of the river.
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| Mary Pool camp site |
27 June – woke early to the raucous calls of crows &
cockatoos & other assorted birds. Had a short walk along the river watching
the many birds enjoy the waterholes. A longish drive to Purnululu (Bungle
Bungle National Park) but all bitumen so easy going. Advised not to drive right
into the park as the road is in bad knick so will take a heli tour tomorrow
& bus/walking tour after that.
28 June – wow what a great ride – my first helicopter ride
& what a beauty. Only 40 mins but travelled the length of the Bungles &
along part of the Ord River. Fantastic & spectacular scenery, red &
yellow cliffs above green gorges & valleys beside wide open plains as far
as the eye can see plus the amazing beehive formations – truly stunning.
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| Bungles |
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| Ord River |
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| Bungles |
29 June – after 1.5 hours of bone rattling corrugations,
rocks, creek crossings, floodways & sand our bus reached the Bungles (very
glad we didn’t take our Suby on this – there is a bit of a bust up between the
owner of the Station through which the road runs & the Gov’t Dep’t running
the Park & neither are maintaining the road). Anyway the journey was well
worth it. We had 3 walks at the southern end of the Park then another 2 in the
north – about 7 kms all up.
The well-known beehive formations were even more impressive
from ground level & the termites built mounds in impossible places with mud
covered tunnels running down to the base of the cliffs to access their food
source – spinifex. Cathedral Gorge in the south was well named – a huge
amphitheatre shaped rock face at the end of the gorge with a large waterhole –
stunning. Echidna Chasm in the north was also stunning but was a very narrow
gorge between two high cliffs – one-way traffic only in some sections – and
came to an abrupt end at a vertical cliff. Livistona palms were also a feature
of Echidna.
A jarring return trip to base followed by vegie soup &
curry washed down with a beer or two as we sat around a huge camp fire with our
fellow travellers.
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| Bungles |
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| Cathedral Gorge - aren't we cute? |
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| Echidna Chasm |
30 June – returned to Halls Creek & had a stroll around
town before heading out the Old Halls Creek road to find a camp site. Stopped
at China Wall – a strange formation of rocks that runs up the side of a hill
& looks man-made but is natural (ask a geologist for an explanation). Looked
at Caroline Pool, Palm Springs & Sawpit Gorge – all lovely but settled on
Palm Springs for the night. We had the picturesque camp site & fire to
ourselves & not one car passed between 5.30pm & 6.30am – we felt very
remote. We even had a cow munching grass outside our tent during the night.
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| China Wall |
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| Near Palm Springs |
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| Palm Springs |
1 July – headed back to Fitzroy Crossing – we are no longer
alone – this is a huge camp site but nice & grassy.
You, the birds, waterholes, peace &
ReplyDeleteserenity & a beer - perfect.