Day 1 Tocumwal on the Murray preparing for roast dinner with the Alan and Kath
13/6/13 Tocumwal great time for a couple of days on the
banks of the Murray with Alan and Kath, nice roast dinner cooked by Alan and
Kath, Ger and I were very supportive in the spirit of the night.
15/6/13 Goolgowi nice spot to camp for the night and great
meal at the local pub, very small town.
16/6/13 Cobar. A
really interesting mining town and the Heritage centre well worth a visit. Nice free camp under the Cobar sign, an
iconic spot.
17/6/13 Cobar to Bourke.
Nice drive arriving at Lunch time.
Afternoon cruise on the Darling on a paddle steamer. After that visited the most interesting
cemetery where Fred Hollows is buried and many of the pioneers of this area.
Later afternoon 4wd trip out to the spot where Major Mitchell established a
stockade that was a beautiful spot to view another beautiful sunset.
18/6/13 Toured Bourke visiting many of the sights and in
particular visited the Back of Bourke Exhibition centre. This was excellent and very informative. It is hard to imagine the hardship that the
pioneers suffered and in particular the women.
Many of them had 10 children and so many of them died either at birth or
in their youth. Dinner at the Port of
Bourke pub gave us the chance to meet a local policeman and to learn of his
work in Bourke.
19/6/13 Bourke-Cuunamulla and then a free camp some were out
of Wyandra behind a road works base.
Nice camp fire and we were joined by another couple free camping with
whom we shared our fire to cook their dinner.
20/6/13 Charleville. Stay at the Cobb and Co Caravan park,
not bad. A very interesting, sleepy and
quite town. Again we cannot get over the
hardships that the pioneers experienced in developing these areas.
21/6/13 A game of golf at the local course where 9 holes are grass greens and the other
9 are sand greens!!. The visit to the
cosmos centre to view planets, stars and the moon through the telescopes was
really something. A great place to see
the stars out here, very little light pollution.
22/6/13 Charleville-Augathella-Tambo. A short stop for a few hours in Augathella
was very interesting. A great
photographic exhibition of the work of the earlier settlers was great and a documentary
video on the history of the area was both informative and hilarious. Many years
ago there was movie called Smiley based
on a little boy in an outback town. Well
Augathella is the town where he lived and we met his relatives at the pub. It was warm enough for Ger to have a beer at
the bar.
Public toilets at Augatherlla
There is reportly 20,000 head of cattle on the road being driven from North to South down the road to find feed as the feed dries up. The contract drover gets about $3.00 to $3.50 per head per week. This mob of Angus that blocked our path were about 2000 head. With a team of about 3 plus a cook they are getting $6000-$7000 per week. Not bad but hard work.
Then drove
to Tambo that is the oldest country town in Q’land. They are celebrating 150
years this week so the town was gearing up for a big week. For a tiny town, only 2 pubs, they were
having a big time. 500 booked for the
black tie dinner and a race meeting at an amazing race course when you consider
how remote this town is. We found a
great spot to camp for the night by the Barcoo river. A beautiful spot most serene spot, beautiful sunset and wonderful roast chicken
cooked on the camp oven.
I have always wanted to see the Barcoo as one
of my favourite poems and the only one I can recite completely is set in this
area.
And men of religion are scanty
On a road seldom crossed
‘Cept by fokes that are lost
One Michael McGee had a shanty.
If you want
the rest of it I am happy to recite it after a minimum of two pints of
Guinness.
Also went to
Mass here at Tambo, not many at mass so we did increase the congregation by a
significant percentage. Devonshire tea with the CWA of after mass was
delicious. Country Women’s Association,
definitely not the Chicks With Attitude.
23/6/13 Tambo to Blackall.
This town
has some very good claim to fame. The
home of Jackie Howe, reputably Australia’s greatest ever shearer, the town
where the ALP was founded. Now there is
some confusion on this as the next town Barcaldine also claim to be the
founding place of the ALP. It seems that
they both have claims as one was where the ALP was founded and one is where
they had the first meeting. Won’t bother
with the complicated explanation but it is interesting to know that the two
oldest political parties in Australia,
The ALP and the National Party both started here in this area.
The moument to the foundation of the ALP
Jackie Howe
Me and Jackie, I the one in the hat on the rightWoolscoure plant driven entirely by steam.
The breeding program here seems a bit confused or is this the sheep they shear for the wool to make the Collingwood jumpers?
We are considering an up grade to one of these vans.
Camped on the edge of town, had a beer at the Union hotel, home of the Blackall Magpies, and at the Barcoo hotel. The swim in the artesian spa was fun, the water come out of the bore at 58C. Visited the black stump,.
I am one side of the black stump but Ger is beyond the black stump.
Well they do have a good Team here in Blackall.
Yes it is windy up here.
However, what they are most proud of in Blackall is their home town Limerick.
A popular
girl of Blackall
Wore a
newspaper dress to a ballHer rig-out caught fire
And burned her entire, front page,
Sporting section and all.
Camped on
the edge of town, had a beer at the Union hotel, home of the Blackall Magpies,
and at the Barcoo hotel. The swim in the
artesian spa was fun, the water come out of the bore at 58C. Visited the black
stump,.
24/6/13
Blackall to Barcaldine to Infracombe.
Barcaldine
pronounced Bar Call Din. They say easy to remember as they have 5
pubs.
“5 bars to call in to” Just beautiful.
Ger checking two of the five pubs.
Visited the
tree of knowledge, supposedly where the ALP was formed, wondered if they could
do with that tree in Canberra. Huge
wind mill that symbolized the importance of the artesian water.
Stayed at
the Infracombe caravan park. Great Happy
hour and great entertainment from the owner of the park, very funny stuff.
This is the
place where our Quentin Bryce spent a lot of time. Her father was the manager
of the Blackall woolscour. Nearly everything
in this town has been opened by Quentin Bryce including the renovated pub.
You have to take your hat off to these pioneers.
Note the opening hours
You have to take your hat off to these pioneers.
25/6/13
Infracombe-Longreach. The home of the
Qantas museum and the Stockman’s Hall of Fame.
I
particularly wanted to visit the stockman’s hall and was the main reason for
coming this way. It was all that I had
hoped for and more. It is so well done
and we spent several hours learning more about the hardship and hard work that
the pioneers suffered to survive so many years ago.
It is
amazing to think of the hardship for the women in those times. Many of them had so many children, many of
them 10 or more, and they spend long periods of months without their husbands.
They worked so hard and suffered so much.
It is
amazing to think that in 1937 that Nancy Bird Walton was flying commercially
and in the early days of the aero industry.
There were a number of young female pilots in those times.
You may ask why this photo. This is the old ambulance station and this is not stone and brick it is press metal. it looks so real.
27/6/13 Longreach-Winton. Free camp behind the North Gregory Hotel, the
hotel where, allegedly the first rendition of Waltzing Matilda was
performed. Also it was here on the 16
Nov 1920 that Qantas was formed. Learnt
all about the history of Waltzing Matilda and that there are three versions and
the one we all know was a version modified as an advert for a brand of tea.
13Kms before
Winton there is a turn off to the Age of Dinosaurs museum it was a dirt
road for 12 kms on a bit of corrugation
but the van stayed together.
The museum
was amazing, they focus on the discovery, conservation and research of the
Australian Dinosaurs. We were astounded
to learn that among their large number of fossils two have been recognised as
two new species. Banjo was the first one
a carnivore about the size of an emu and Matilda a very large herbivore. As they were found close to each other it is
suspected that Banjo tried to kill Matilda but she was so large she most likely
did him in. They have an even bigger
Dinosaur, Wade, who will be announced soon to the world and he is a new species
of the largest Dinosaurs known.
This is a bit of Wade's leg
Before you ask the Dinosaur is on the left.
28/6/13-
Winton. Early start to visit Lake Quarry Conservation Park to view the Dinosaur
stampede (220Km round trip on corrugations)- the site of the world’s only
recorded evidence of a Dinosaur stampede
that occurred 95 million years ago.
There were about 200 small Dinosaurs drinking at a water hole when a
monster of Dinosaur trapped them and attacked.
There were two species at the water hole, a small hen size herbivore and
an emu size carnivore that live together reasonably well but this huge
Carnivore was looking for a meal and there was a great stampede when he
attacked. This area was only discovered in the late 1970s and is well worth a
visit as there are over 3,300 prints housed in an ecological sustainable
complex. Really interesting and
informative.
Afternoon
spent at the Waltzing Matilda Centre which celebrates history of the song first
sun here on the 6/5/1895. Also 16 Nov 1920 Qantas was registered as a company
at The Winton club. This is also famous
for Opals.
29/6/13.
Winton-Cloncurry.
1st
stop- Kynuna to have a beer at the pub where Banjo Paterson drank and the
legend of Waltzing Matilda was born during the shearer’s strike, the swagman in
the song- Samuel Hoffmeister had a last drink.
2nd
Stop-McKinlay another beer at the Walkabout Creek Hotel, the pub featured in
the movie Crocodile Dundee.
3rd
Stop Free camp on the side of the road 50kms before Cloncurry. Nice fire and lovely roast in the camp
oven. Great day and night watch the
wallabies beat the British lions on Satellite TV great win .
30/6/13
Cloncurry to Mt Isa. Arrived lunch time at the Mt Isa caravan park. There were a few guys here with 75 year old
vintage cars. One had driven from Melb
to Mt Isa in 2 ½ days. Considering it is
about 2500Km this is some effort.
1st
Stop at the Mt Isa Experience centre, an extraordinary look into the people and
culture, events and moments that have made Mt Isa the city it is today.
2nd
Stop Riversleigh Fossil centre, no it is not a retirement village.
Palaeontologists and scientists have studied and discovered fossils of mammals
and marsupials which roamed the Riversleigh river area over 25 million years
ago. Dinner at the Irish Club was
interesting but good Guinness.
1/7/13 Mt Isa.
A normal
morning catching up on chores and shopping. PM spent at the Hard Times Mine tour.
Excellent
experience of life underground in a mine in the 1960’s The miners worked hard and according to our
guide who spent 30 years as an underground worker it was good money and he
loved the life, can’t imagine how it could be fun.
Up to the
look out over the town to view the sunset over the town and the mine. A
wonderful view of the sprawling Mt Isa mine with the 270m smoke stack. The mine
is the nation’s deepest underground mine and the largest producer of Copper, Silver,
Lead and Zinc in the world.
2/7/13 Mt
Isa towards Normanton.
Stop 1 at
Cloncurry, a town with a history, 1861 Burke and Wills came to the area trying
to get to the Gulf. Having driven from
Melb to here I cannot imagine how they did this in those times. In 1867 Ernest
Henry established the Great Australian Mine which still exists.
Visited the
wonderful John Flynn Museum to learn more about the establishment and
development of the Royal Flying Doctor Service.
This was amazing. Once again we
marvelled at the hard work and dedication and ingenuity of these pioneers. Once again the work of the women as nurses,
doctors and pilots was extraordinary. The design and development of the
equipment for the RFDS was amazing. From
the Pedal radio to the Morse code type writer and Morse code decipher designed
my Alfred Traeger, of course and Engineer.
After lunch
we left Cloncurry and drove for an hour to another great camping spot on the
side of the road. Stopped off at the
Quamby Pub ( closed today) built in 1860.
The camp spot at Terry Smith lookout had a great sunset while cooking a
lovely dinner on our portable camp fire.
3/7/13
Towards Normanton. Stopped for lunch at
Burke and Wills Roadhouse, they passed through this area in 1861, Free camp at
Bang Bang site roadside. Nice place for
a sunset.
4/7/13
Normanton: arrived around lunch
time. In the 1890’s Normanton became a
penal settlement for the entire Gulf region.
Some wonderful architecture in the town.
Amazing that some of these old buildings have survived the floods and
the climate over so many years. The historical railway station was once the
focal point of the town and is the only train line not connected to anywhere
other than Croydon and Normanton.
Originally the Gulflander was to run from Normanton to Cloncurry where
it would connect with the rest of the Queensland railway system, but at the
last moment some dopey politicians made the change to Croydon that was a major
gold area at the time. Nothing any
different then to now. The Burns Philip old trading store, now the information
centre is a in great order and interesting to visit as is the oldest and only
surviving bank where they have on display the old scales they used for
weighting the gold.
5/7/13
Normanton.: Spent the morning on a
leisurely walk around town viewing the various old buildings. All the streets in these towns are so
wide. Every street including the side
streets are bigger enough for 6 lanes of traffic if you wanted them. So walking here is a lot longer as every
block has a road that is another quarter of a block.
Drove out to
Burke and Wills camp 119, the northerly most camp of their trip and where they
turned around to return. They were her
9-13th Feb 1861. How anyone
could ride and walk to here from Melbourne is hard to comprehend.
After lunch
a swim, well Ger had 10 laps of the largest pool in the gulf, and both of us
had a spa in the artesian pool.
Good start
for the evening. First drink at the
Purple Pub, then the Central and finally Barra and Chips at the Albion. No one can say we did not spread our business
around.
My Indian mates and there first day opening their bakery
shop in Normanton. They are the most unusual guys to be running a bakery shop
in this very remote town and they must be the only Indians for hundreds if not thousands
of kilometres. Up here there are only local aussies, indigenous or grey nomads
and most of them are very white types and overweight.
Granite Gorge walk.
6/7/13 Karumba. A
very small fishing village right at the bottom of the Gulf of Carpentaria,
great prawn area. Enjoyed a kilo of prawns for a delicious dinner. Also managed
a drink at lunch at Sunset Point and a pre dinner drink at the Karumba hotel in
the Animal bar, the Suave bar was indoors and you had to wear a shirt so a bit
up market for us. Very hot so spent some
time in the pool.
7/7/13 Karumba. A
quite day. Visited the Sunset point craft market in the morning. Afternoon some maintenance on the van and
cool down in the pool. Enjoyed a lovely
sunset at Sunset point tavern followed by a delicious mixed seafood
dinner. This is one of the few places in
Queensland where you can see a sunset over the ocean. Wallaroos around camp
site on return.
8/7/13 To Croydon and beyond. Spent several hours looking
around Croydon and old gold mining town established in 1885. How did people come out here in those years
looking for gold and what made them think there would be gold here. The heritage of the area has been wonderfully
displayed in the town and the information centre. Once again a brilliant audio
visual on the history of Croydon. I don’t
know how the pioneers could endure the hardships. Drove on halfway to Georgetown and camped
beside a very dry Gilbert river. Nice place for the night and cooked our first
damper for the trip in the camp oven.
We argued over this sign. Ger thought it was "beware of cow eating cars"
My first thought was "Beware lots of bull dust"
Then we both got it. "All cars need good STEERing"
9/7/13 Georgetown and Forsayth. Georgetown another old gold mining town
established in 1870. Now a small town
with an abundance of historic vestiges from pioneer times. A wonderful and amazing Terr Estrial centre
which houses a sensational collection by Ted Elliot of gem stones and fossils from all over Australia and the rest
of the world, a huge collection. Then
drove 42 kms of which 12kms were dirt/corrugated to Forsayth a seriously small
town but nice little camp site.
Note the sign that has always been our opinion.
10/7/13 Cobbold
Gorge. Left van at Forsayth a drove on fairly ordinary road for 42kms to
Cobbold Gorge. Managed to get second
punch in a week on the same tyre, the rocks are very sharp, must let down the
tyre pressure to reduce this problem. This was a very special place, would have
liked to have camped at this spot. Did a
3 hour guide tour which involves a drive to the gorge in an OKA vehicle, a very
interesting and informative walk around the gorge rim and finally a wonderful
boat trip up the gorge. It was so narrow
that you could touch the wall on either side, saw a fresh water crog sunning
himself on a rock. This was a very special trip and in is amazing it was only
discovered in 1992. Drove back to pick
up the van and then onto George town to have the tyre fixed again. Free camped
by a water hole 30km east of Georgetown.
Would you believe but if you were to eat this one little red seed you would be dead in three days.
Just a little fresh water Crog.
11/7/13 Undara. After morning tea in Mt Surprise which
played a significant part in World War II. Arrived in Undara Volcanic National Park. After lunch we drove to Kalkani Crater and
did a 2.5km walk around the rim of this very old extinct volcano. After dinner joined the communal campfire for
a sing-a-long.
12/7/13 Undara National Park. The longest lava flow in the
world resulting in the longest Lava tubes in the world. They were formed
190,000 years ago when a huge volcano erupted spewing millions of tonnes of
molten lava into surrounding countryside. A morning tour of the lava tubes, afternoon spent exploring the Pioneer track following
the telegraph line built in 1870’s and then the bluff track climbing over
granite rocks, great view and lots of wallabies very up close.
Just relaxing after a hard day in Undara, someone has to do it.
13/7/13 Undara to Atherton. Lunch and shop at Atherton then
drove to Rocky Creek War Memorial Park where we camped-great free camp spot at
the sight of the largest World War II repat. Hospital in the southern hemisphere. 60,000 casualties when through this 2000 bed
hospital. A very interesting and
informative place to camp. Met a very
nice Aussie/Canadian couple with their 2 young children travelling for 4
months.
14/7/13 To Mareeba. A
short drive to Mareeba, a bit of shopping and then drove out to Granite Gorge
where we camped for the night. Great area to explore and walked, climbing over
the giant boulders, getting up close to rock wallabies, great fun.
Granite Gorge walk.






































































