Welcome to David and Janet Ribbans blog

We live in Adelaide, South Australia and enjoy travel in the Australian outback in our Oka 4WD motorhome, hence the blog title.



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Tuesday, 21 September 2010

The Tip to Cooktown

The Tip Southwards (there's no other way)

After a few days at the Tip, driven by hunger and thirst, just like the first explorers had been a hundred years earlier, we headed south to the bottle shop and supermarket in Bamaga. These were adequate establishments considering their location and reasonably well stocked.

We bought a 2 litre wine cask (which is all you can buy up there, for inflated prices),  refilled with the most expensive gas refills in the country, and fueled up  at $1.90 for the drive back south.

We were still sad to be leaving the tip, it was a nice area despite the roads, the scenery was good and the people were very friendly and we'd put is a heck of a lot of effort just to get there. But we'd seen all there was to see and done everything practical and it was hot.

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Our final sunset at Seisia Beach.

Jackey Jackey Creek

South of Bamaga is a pretty creek a few km off the main track. Called Jackey Jackey Creek, it's not the muddy crocodile infested river just east of Bamaga Airport, it's on the same creek but much further upstream in a rain forest.

When we drove down a very narrow winding overgrown track to Jackey Jackey Creek, there was no one at the campsite. But just after dark, while we were having dinner in the warm still of the evening, a left hand drive Land Rover roared into view with all it's lights blazing and turned right into the campsite. We both jumped up and shouted and pointed the other way since "right" went straight over the edge of a dry creek bed about 3 meter's deep, which of course you can't see at night.

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"Right" into the campsite led over the edge of this creek bank.

Impossible to see at night from the opposite entry point.

The passengers, a girl and 2 guys, were Polish, on a 3 year round the world trip filming as they went. They immediately took all their clothes off and leapt into the creek. They had no air conditioning in their car (it's not needed in Poland) and they were very hot and sticky.

Sadly I didn't photo that incident but we had a more leisurely wander in the creek earlier.

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Taking the waters at Jackey Jackey Creek.

The Poles had very over-the-top personalities but were good fun, and they thought the Oka was wonderful after the cramped conditions in their Land Rover.

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LHD Polish Land Rover Discovery at Jackey Jackey Creek

The next day, we checked out the track to Viryla Point but there is a log bridge that looked suspiciously tricky. Lighter, nimbler 4WD's were negotiating it, but very carefully, but we considered there was too much risk in the OKA slipping between the logs and getting the tyres irrecoverable wedged. Comparing it with photos from previous years, the logs had deteriorated further so we decided not to risk it. Anyway we were told the beach and camping areas were very crowded and our trip still had a long way to go.

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Dodgy log bridge on Crystal Creek on the road to Vrilya Point.

We chose not to risk it.

After about 2 weeks north of the Jardine, we dragged ourselves back over those awful roads to visit Weipa and some other coastal places we missed on the way up before heading west across to Normanton and Burketown and places west.

Weipa is a large and well stocked town on the west coast of the Cape. We had to stay in the very average campground there as camping is not permitted anywhere else since the whole town area is all an active mine site. Next day we moved up to a beachside camp area in Mapoon, a small sleepy aboriginal township about 100 km north of Weipa on the west coast of the Cape.

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Mapoon beach 100 km north of Weipa.

Mapoon has a somewhat shady past. In the 1950's the government of the day declared the whole are a mine site and gave it all over to Comalco. The people who were living there were forcibly removed to New Mapoon, which is near the tip of Cape York. To prevent them returning, the police were empowered to burn down their houses. It's hard to think of that sort of action happening today and many people are now returning to the area and the original Mapoon is starting to revive itself. Mapoon is a very pretty beachside community where fishing is their main occupation. The campground was reasonable and free and just by the beach.

While there we found a recently fallen coconut which I cut in half with a saw (they are very hard). Janet sampled the juice which apparently was fine and then sat on the beach for an hour eating all the white fleshy part.

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Janet working her way through a coconut on Mapoon Beach

On the way down from Mapoon we spent 4 good days out of touch but on a beautiful beach 60km north of Weipa.

It's on the banks of the Pennefather River on the west coast of the Cape, and no, we had never heard of it either.

The track in started OK but quickly became a deep sandy track along beach sand dunes. We didn't get bogged but other people had. Obviously we had missed the plastic bag hanging in a tree which marked the correct track.

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The difficult beach track to the Pennefather River.

When we finally got there, after having to reverse 1/2 km up a sandy track since I couldn't turn around, (the sand was too deep and the front wheels stubbornly refused to move out of their tracks), the (free) campsite was superb under the shade of whistling sheoak trees with clear blue seas and sandbars to wander over. There was a tempting lagoon just in front of us teeming with fish, plus a resident crocodile so we couldn't swim. The sunsets however were spectacular.

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Sunset on the Pennefather River

But we couldn't stand more than 4 days of lazing around with good company, even if they were Kiwis, (and we'd run out of grog) so we returned to Weipa for supplies (it's a well stocked town, the base for Comalco's Bauxite mine, the largest in the world) . We took the correct track out from Pennefather this time, a pretty sandy track through a paperbark swamp.

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Sandy track out of the Pennefather River campsite

From there we spent the night on Merluna Station, run by the rellies of a lady we had met in Georgetown (their Aunty Janet, who ran the vegie shop). From a green and grassy campsite, we saw a beautiful misty morning as the sun rose the next day.

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Misty morning at Merluna Station

Back on the main peninsular road we headed up the Portlands Roads road and camped alongside the Wenlock River before heading across the Cape to Chilli Beach.

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A loving embrace alongside the Wenlock River

It's a totally different environment on the east coast. Windy, cloudy but with swaying palm trees all along the beach. We only stayed one night on Chilli Beach, it was just too windy, a persistent, howling wind which buffeted even our heavy Oka. Unfortunately the east coast is also ruined by plastic rubbish everywhere, mostly bottles, thongs, fish nets and rope. Presumably it's brought in by the tides and SE Trade Winds which blow continually at this time of year. It completely spoils this side of the Cape. Fortunately the local residents had organised a clean up day, but for the week after we had left.

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Janet on a very windy Chilli Beach.

There is a superb area of rain forest here in the Iron Range National Park which comes right down to the beach, so thick you couldn't walk though it. We'll go visit that while we are here, also Portland Roads community which was a WW11 US Navy supply base just up the coast.

Well Portland Roads was a very pleasant surprise. Unlike other east coast areas, this is nestled in a sheltered cove and was calm and peaceful. It's an idilic spot with a small beach surrounded by palm trees and flowering bushes.

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Portland Roads bay

Although there are no camping facilities, and no shops either, there is a marvellous cafe set part way up a hillside which serves the most delicious and inexpensive meals in lush surroundings. We had been told they served the best fish and chips in the country and we were a bit sceptical. However, they were right and we enjoyed beautifully pan fried spangled emperor, served with lightly fried chips and fresh green salad for only $20 each, with freshly squeezed orange juice. Delicious.

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Janet enjoying Spangled Emperor, salad and chips.

And as an added treat we spotted a large crocodile swimming lazily across the bay with it's jaws open. It too was very laid back, in keeping with the rest of the small community.

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Huge croc swimming lazily across Portland Roads bay.

South of Chilli Beach is the Aboriginal community of Lockhart River. This is an open community which welcomes visitors and has a very nice beach nearby, Quintel Beach.

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Quintel Beach at Lockhart River.

We had lunch there and Janet posed in front of Lloyd Island since her maiden name was Lloyd.

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Janet (neƩ Lloyd) in front of Lloyd Island.

When last we spoke we were in Coen, just about to visit Lakefield National Park. While having lunch we spotted a "dog poo" tree. It was actually a bean tree with bean pods which looked just like, well, the aforementioned doggy doo. Nearby is an interestingly renamed hotel.

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The SEXCHANGE HOTEL at Coen.

We did the Lakefield National Park and enjoyed the lilly covered lagoons, birdlife and the corrugated roads, there being no other kind. There are some very nice spots there and we had some great campfires.

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Corrugated road through Lakefield National Park.

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Campsite alongside a lilly lagoon in Lakefield National Park

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Red Lilly Lagoon...

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...and the White Lilly Lagoon.

Some lagoons were still inaccessible due to the late wet season rains.

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This was a deep soggy sandy crossing that we chose not to risk.

One morning at the Hann River Crossing I found a frog which had taken up residence in the frame of the Oka passenger door. I called Janet out to have a look but she was just out of the shower. "No matter" I said, "it's quite warm", so she took a couple of steps outside, but at that exact same moment the only people we had seen in 2 days just happened to walk by. Janet shrieked, unnecessarily I thought, and rushed back inside to hide her embarrassment. It was still a nice looking frog though and definitely not a "Tane Coad".

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Janet's frog in the door frame of the Oka.

The roads are pretty rough on Cape York. This Toyota Hilux has bent its axle just a bit.

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Bent axle. Look at the wheel, not the legs.

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Close up of the axle, not the legs. Sorry.

Monday, 20 September 2010

Cooktown to Cairns

Cooktown to Cairns

After the Lakefield National Park we were a bit apprehensive about the Battlecamp Road into Cooktown. The last time we were on it, it shot to the top of our Worst Roads in the Country list, but it has since been graded and widened and is now a very smooth gravel road, and even sealed over the hilly sections.

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The newly completed Battlecamp Road (sealed over the hilly sections only).

A few metres of Armco wouldn't go amiss, the sides are very steep.

We spent a few days in Cooktown which we last visited in 2005. We assumed that the subsequent sealing of the road from Cairns would have had a major impact on the town with caravans and motorhome filling the streets, but luckily its impact has been fairly minimal. Life goes on in its quiet way but this time the weather was against us, and everyone else. It was extremely windy all the time and showered quite a few times.

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Cooktown water front

But we did explore the botanic gardens (set up to stop the spread of nearby Chinese market gardens) and watched a few sunsets across the same unspoilt bay that Lt James Cook (he was not Capt. until much later) would have seen in 1770 when he beached (careened) his ship the Endeavour for repairs after "finding" the Great Barrier Reef, and finding that it was very hard on his ships bottom. He named the river after his ship and was the first explorer to see the "kanguroo", which he said tasted very nice.

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The Endeavour River, just as Lt Cook would have seen it.

We visited several "exact" spots where Lt Cook beached the Endeavour and all of them looked plausible. Certainly the river and it's far views have not changed in 240 years.

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The "exact" spot where Lt Cook careened his boat for repairs...

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...and we even found Lt Cooks original thong.

And Janet mounted the exact steps which HM QE the 2nd used when visiting Cooktown in 1977, only Janet had mislaid her tiara.

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A huge frangipani tree in Cooktown

Each year the Cooktown historical society holds a reenactment of Cook's landing on June 17th 1770 to repair his ship which had been seriously damaged on the barrier reef. Until a couple of years ago, this had been a purely European celebration but for the past 2 years and for the foreseeable future, the celebration will be shared with the local indigenous people as they commemorate the introduction of European culture as well as sharing their own with Europeans. This is the first time we had seen such an integrated approach and wish that all Aboriginal communities would accept the same philosophy. The people in Cooktown, both European and Aboriginal, seemed to us to just be Australians, the first time we had experienced this.

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A propellor outside the RSL in Cooktown

Half way between Cooktown and Mareeba our troubles started again. The alternator started making loud screeching noises which we I fixed by removing the alternator belt. We had the alternator bearings fixed in Mareeba. Also a relay started clattering behind the seat. I finally found the source of these and our starting problems, a wire was loose in a connector and only making intermittent ground contact.

(For the technically minded, there were 2 relays with common coil pins connected together and thence to ground. But when the common ground wire is broken or intermittent, all sorts of indeterminate currents can flow, turning the relays on and off, but it still took a frustrating week to track down).

Then today we had a wheel bearing replaced since it was getting a bit rough and noisy. I would have done this myself had we been in a remote location but Mareeba is very well supplied with services and shops so we sat in the cool of the library while it was done. A free-wheeling hub is also clicking so I dismantled it and found nothing much wrong. It will need some more investigation later but is not considered serious.

But tomorrow we are heading off west and will ignore all noises for the foreseeable future.

Yesterday we popped down into Cairns for a couple of hours. We had to visit an electronics store for some LEDs and bits and pieces to do some electrical repairs to our lights. We had lunch on the foreshore (I hesitate to call it "beach front" since the beach consists of 2 meters of imported sand and hundreds on meters of mud). Not very attractive even the though the foreshore is beautifully landscaped and manicured. Popping back up from Cairns is not so easy and it's a long drag on winding roads up the Great Dividing Range past Karunda.

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Cairns beachfront, some sand, mostly mud...

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...and an appropriate name for it too.

Today we visited a very good private war museum in Mareeba, The Beck Museum, with missiles, tanks, lots of old aircraft and a very knowledgeable owner, a Mr Beck. He had an Ikara missile there, the guidance electronics for which was manufactured by EMI in Adelaide when I first started work there in 1975. See http://www.exploroz.com/Places/77920/QLD/Beck_Aviation_and_Military_Museum.aspx

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Becks private war museum in Mareeba.

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Tanks, planes, engines and even a WW11 hanger at Becks War Museum...

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...and an Australian designed and built Ikara missile.

The world's first cruise missile and the only one in a private collection.

It flies low towards a target and drops a torpedo by parachute.

And it worked, it was fitted to several Australian, British and Brazilian warships.

Last night we went to Granite Gorge (see http://www.granitegorge.com.au/activities.html) where there was a lot of granite (obviously) but it's also home to a species of wallaby endemic to Granite Gorge, the "Unadorned Rock Wallaby". They were very friendly and approachable and many were pregnant. Being unadorned obviously hasn't affected their attraction one bit.

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"Unadorned" they maybe but they still look pretty.

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Oh yes, Janet also did the washing and shopping.

Sunday, 19 September 2010

Cairns to Katherine




West from Cairns to Katherine

Haven't heard much from Adelaide lately except its cold and raining and the Crows lost to the Power.

We were heading west to Katherine where we had tentatively made plans to meet up with Charles and Fred, our friends from the UK, who were planning a trip to Oz to pick up their caravan from storage in Katherine and continue their travels west. But while we were struggling with the wilds of the cape, they were still wandering the bonnie hills of Scotland or the villages of Sommerset, (not Midsommer,where murders so often seem to happen), but soon they would take a big bird into the sky to Adelaide and start the long drive north.

And we'll have to find somewhere to vote along the way. We actually found that there are lots of pre-election polling stations set up in little towns and communities and most people we spoke to had voted long before election day. We actually voted in a Katherine shopping centre the day before the election. They had voting papers available for every electorate in the country.

Georgetown and Croydon

Setting out west from Mareeba, we retraced our steps along both the unsealed and sealed section of the Savannah Way through Mount Surprise to Geogetown and Croydon.

Croydon was particularly hot, 36Āŗ, but it has developed from a small dusty town of Nevil Shute fame to a significant tourist centre.
Interesting seat design, flanked by (male) kangaroos.
It has a brand new information centre-cum-museum, a row of olde streete lampe postes, circa 1895, powered by compact flouro globes, circa 2009, and an old Bank of NSW building which has been tastefully converted into a public toilet. How appropriate.
The NSW Bank is now a public toilet.
Lamp post c 1895, compact flouro c 2009
In the olde police statione, Janet found a set of naked manikins awaiting their place in the museum and couldn't resist patting their bottoms. She also found a policeman whose dress desperately needed adjusting. In the gaol, the last remaining prisoner actually talks at you as you walk past.

Janet checking the sizes...
...and the policeman's dress needed adjusting.
Most importantly, Croydon is the end of the line for the Gulflander railmotor line from Normanton, which we experienced more personally when we reached Normanton. The Normanton railway station is an original heritage building dating from the 1850's. By contrast, the Croydon equivalent is a modern corrugated iron shed without much appeal, but it probably keeps the rain out better.

We camped near the Cumberland Chimney, the remains of a tin mine set up by Cornish miners in the 1800's. There was a large lagoon nearby covered with birdlife.
Croydon Railway Station, keeps out rain but not pretty.
The Cumberland Chimney near Croydon.



Red Tailed Black Cockatoos near Croydon

Normanton and Gulflander

Like Croydon at the other end of the line, Normanton has improved significantly since our last visit and is now a very pretty well kempt small town.
The Normanton Railway museum
The Normanton Railway Station, pretty but probably leaks in the rain.
It's highlight of course is it's history with the Gulflander railmotor line to Croydon. The line still runs with the timetable established in 1859, (down on Wednesdays and back on Thursdays) and is the only Queensland rail line still officially measured and run in miles. It has never been connected to any other rail system. The rails and steel sleepers are still the originals manufactured in 1857 and laid in 1859, and since 1927, it has used railmotor cars and rolling stock, steam having been replaced by truck-engined rail cars.


The Gulflander passing our campsite on the Norman River.
The historical reason for the line (transporting gold mining related people and goods to and from Croydon) has long since replaced by tourism, but it still delivers mail to remote cattle stations along its length.

Tempted by the 50% discount for pensioners, we did a 2 hour trip on the Gulflander from Normanton to the junction at Critters Camp (population nil)and back. It was only about 25 km each way but the line is old and so are the railcars so that was the best they could manage.
I must have made a very rude train joke
We went one way in the comfort of one the a 2 remaining carriages and then retuned in the railmotor prime mover. Well that was a mistake. The railmotor only has one set of driving wheels, over which we sat, and the jolting shock as we passed over each rail joint was extremely painful and we couldn't stand much more than an hour of it. The horsehair padded seats did little to lessen the pain.
We took a 1 hour trip on the Gulflander, which was quite long enough.
But it was a good experience and we are glad we did it. The commentary was informative, even if the driver did chastise people for camping too close to the crocodile infested Norman River as we passed over the bridge. We kept very quite at that point because we had camped at that exact spot the night before. And survived.


In Normanton there is a replica of the largest crocodile ever captured, 8.5m long. Everyone puts there head in it's mouth for the camera. Everyone that is, except me.
I just held its tooth.
While in Normanton, we did a side trip to Karumba, which the only place with a beach where you can actually reach the sea around the Gulf of Carpentaria (as Burke and Wills discovered on their ill fated expedition. 3000 km they trudged and never actually got to the gulf, stopped a few km short by mangroves and mud).
Janet at Karumba where the flying boats from Europe used to land in the 30's.
Unlike Normanton, Karumba and Karumba Point have sadly deteriorated since our last visit and are now predominately fishing and boating communities and smelled that way too. But the history of flying boats landing there in the 30's on the Europe to Australia run, and the US Catalina Flying Boat base during the war are still in evidence. And it's still hard to beat a cool chardonnay at the Sunset Tavern at dusk, watching spectacular sunsets over the gulf .

Burke and Wills last stand

Moving westwards the bitumen stops shortly after Normanton and will remain that way for around 1000 km until we reach Roper Bar on the Roper River, except for some short sections near towns.


We visited Burke and Wills Camp 119, their final campsite before retreating south, having not quite made the south to north crossing of the continent. 14 trees around the camp were blazed by King and Grey, the only remaining members of the 12 original expedition members, while sitting around waiting for something to happen, while Burke and Wills tried unsuccessfully to make it to the sea on the Gulf.
One of the 14 trees blazed by King and Grey,
while waiting for Burke and Wills to return from
not quite reaching the Gulf in February 1861.
In fact we camped there too, although it was only our campsite number 65, and we didn't go around blazing trees. The other 8 members of their team had either died of injuries sustained or bailed out along the trek somewhere, fed up with the arrogance and bad planning of Burke and Wills, or maybe the skills of an artist or policemen or a camel handler (they had horses) just weren't being utilised enough.


Their foolhardiness and lack of experience is shown by the fact that they still had half their journey to go but only had 1/4 of their supplies left.

Burke and Wills died of starvation and beriberi (a disease causing inflammation of the nerves and heart failure, caused by a deficiency of vitamin B1, which I personally think was caused by eating unprocessed nardoo nuts which are a Thiaminase, which depletes the body of Vitamin B1 (Thiamin), but then I'm not a medical man) near Innamincka, right next to Cooper Creek which was teeming with fish. They had no fish hooks with them, but they had thoughtfully taken a sailmaker as one of their team. If only they hadn't shot at the aboriginals on their way north, they might have got a bit more help from them when they needed it coming south.

The Burke and Wills story would be a good subject for a comedy of errors series, if it hadn't been so tragic.

Strangely, the fact which is most overlooked is that they did actually pioneer a northerly route across the continent, when previously there had been none, roughly following the 140Āŗ line of longitude. And they did discover huge areas of good grazing country around the gulf, and somehow Burke managed to get a town named after him, so, even though 7 of the 12 member team had died on the trip, it wasn't all a total disaster.



Leichhardt Falls and Burketown

Further across the gulf towards Burketown we came to Leichhardt Falls. This is a magic spot and even though the falls had all but dried up we still spent 2 days there. The falls, or more correctly the causeway across the Leichhardt River, are on Highway One about 70 km south of Burketown. The causeway is nearly 1 km long and crosses a huge flatish rock shelf just above the falls. There is a track alongside the river which provides access to a hard, bumpy camping area on a rock shelf overlooking the falls. There are no fees and there are no facilities either but the lagoons on either side of the causeway are full of beauty and interest and crocodiles. There are beaches to explore and rock pools to investigate.
The beautiful Leichhardt Falls
A good reason not to swim here
About 50 m downstream from the current causeway is a 10 m length of bent concrete road, all that is left of a previous causeway over which we drove in 2005. The remainder of that causeway was destroyed and totally disappeared in the floods of 2006. The power of water is just amazing and each year after the wet season, the local council has to bulldoze thousands of tons of sand from the causeway, in places 10 m thick, to reopen the road.
All that's left of 1 km of concrete causeway after the 2006 wet season
The rockshelf at Leichhardt Falls. We are camped in the distance.
Burketown was small and quiet with a nice green centre but not totally uninteresting. We did locate the old Boiling Down Works which was just as exciting as it sounds. And we did camp on the banks of the Albert River which looks just the same now as when Landsborough and other early explorers charted the north flowing rivers of the Gulf in the 1860's.
Sunrise on the Albert River at Burketown, near the site of the very first port on the Gulf.
It was the navigability of the Albert River that enabled the first river port to be establish on the Gulf in October 1861, near the current town of Burketown. And it was from this first camp that Landsborough launched an unsuccessful search for the lost Burke and Wills expedition who had supposedly reached the gulf earlier the same year. Unbeknown to them, Burke and Wills had already returned to the Cooper Creek where they had died several months earlier.

Lawn Hill and Riversleigh

We were a bit ahead of schedule to meet up with Charles and Fred in Katherine so we diverted south to visit the beautiful gorge with palm fringed banks at Lawn Hill (Boodjamulla) National Park.
Lawn Hill Creek
Lawn Hill Creek
The National Park campsite was booked out so we had to stay at the normally very pleasant nearby Adels Grove where we had stayed several times before. This time, "under new management", the place had deteriorated into the most expensive campsite in the country, certainly the most expensive we had ever stayed at. I made my feelings known to their management but only got a "take it or leave it" response. The receptionist was very abrupt and said "I'm just the messenger", and I replied "And I'm just a customer". We felt exploited and will never go there or recommend Adels Grove to anyone again until they change their ways. [When we reached Kingfisher Camp further north, we found several other people had had the same experience and I felt vindicated, but the stress level remained for several days].
While at Lawn Hill, we also revisited the nearby (50 km south) Riversleigh Fossil Reserve, a world heritage location and one of the few places you can see dinosaur fossils still protruding from their original rocks. In this case they are mostly giant emu and giant crocodile fossils, the precedents of current day versions.

The area open to public display is only a few hectares but the whole reserve is over 100 sq km so who knows what other finds remain hidden from view?

Kingfisher Camp

North of Lawn Hill on the Nicholson River is a superb cattle station resort on Bowthorne Station. Kingfisher Camp a very grassy camp area stretched alongside the Nicholson River and good place to chill out for a couple of days, especially after the traumas of Adels grove.
Hard to believe this grassy campsite is in outback Queensland.
A blue-winged Kookaburra after which Kingfisher Camp is named.
The Nicholson River at Kingfisher Camp
The back tracks up from Lawn Hill were very slow and rough however, over station tracks and though several wide and/or deep creek crossings. The Lawn Hill Creek was the first, not deep, but since you can't see where the track emerges on the other bank, as it's round a bend, entering the crossing required a giant leap of faith. 

Elizabeth Creek was next and looked like a huge lake. Once again a leap of faith was required and although we could make out the exit point on the far side, it was quite deep and we built up quite a bow wave as we sailed across.
Elizabeth Creek. Looks like a wide lake and felt like it while we were crossing it.

Fortunately diesel vehicles are almost immune from water problems. It had taken us a day to get this far so we camped alongside Elizabeth Creek that night, relived to have got through unscathed.

The final large creek was actually the Nicholson River itself, although it had dried to a series of huge billabongs several km long, the crossing involved about a km of deep sandy river bed and shallow pools between the billabongs. The 140 km involved more than a dozen heavy gates to struggle with (one of which ricked Janet's back) and had taken us 2 days, hence the need to chill out.


After 2 days we moved on from Kingfisher Camp but the lady in the kiosk could see that I was still stressed out from our rotten experience at Adels Grove and gave me a big hug as we left. Lucky for her we didn't spend a week there.


The track from Kingfisher Camp to Borroloola is along Highway One, the same major highway which runs around the south of the country, like the Port Wakefield Road, but up here it's a near deserted rough gravel track. Once again the track crosses several creeks and rivers and was closed when we first reached the Cape.
Borroloola or Booroloola?
It's a long dusty track from Burketown to Borroloola, and roadhouses are few and far between. Hells Gate Roadhouse near the NT border has recently reopened, otherwise there would be nearly 600 km between fuel supplies, now that Wollogorang Roadhouse is closed permanently. Even further if you deviate to Lawn Hill as we did. That's OK for us (we have a range of over 1200 km), but not for your average motorist.

Av-Gas and Beer available here.
There is a Telstra pay phone which someone had stolen from a phone box and bolted to a gum tree long side the road. Of course, everyone stops and makes a pretend phone call.
Hello Telstra? Your phone box is full of woodworms.
The trickiest river crossing was the Calvert River and although it doesn't look too bad, the entry and exits are quite steep and the river bed is very rocky and uneven with deep rock pools to trap the unwary wheel. We made it across OK and videoed the next vehicle who demonstrated how rocky it was.


A video of the next vehicle to cross the Calvert River after we had come the other way. Doesn't look too bad does it?




Highway One in the NT.
It was at a very nice palm-lined creekside camping spot that we first noticed a drip of oil from the power steering box. We monitored it's loss for a few days and then bought a 4 litre can of fluid from a scruffy looking mechanic (there were no other kind) in Borroloola. That kept us going for several weeks while we determined if the leak was getting worse or not.

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Limmen National Park

North from Borroloola lies Limmen National Park, a huge area of savannah which straddles the Nathan River Road. We'd visited the park on a previous trip and waxed lyrical about in in writing. An article was published the CMCA Magazine "The Wanderer". You can see it here.


Amongst the long distances are scattered a few gems to visit.

The Southern Lost City, an area of crazy leaning rock pinnacles, like sky-scapers after an earthquake.
At the Lost City where everything leans at crazy angles.
Butterfly Springs, the only croc free swimming place in this area,
Janet cooling off amongst the fishes at Butterfly Springs
Towns River, clear and as smooth as glass but with hidden death just below the surface. The fishing here is said to be very good.
TheTowns River, deceptively calm but salties live here...
St Vidgeons lagoon, covered in lilies and abundant with birdlife, lies about 200 km east of Mataranka along the Roper Highway (actually the Nathan River Reoad). It's part of the Roper River, a wide expanse of blue water and very attractive to boaties and fisherpeople.

It's hot and sticky here and we are heading for a meeting with Charles and Fred in Katherine tomorrow. They are currently north of Alice Springs having left Adelaide on Monday. They know all this of course since they also read these emails.

Our route across the gulf has been long, rough and slow, and we've had to cross some scarily deep and wide creek crossings. But we've been to some lovely places and had a ride on the Gulflander Train from Normanton.

Now we are into tropical wet lands again with lilly pools and cloudy, sticky conditions.

And today is our wedding anniversary but we have no champagne to celebrate with. Orange cordial just doesn't have the same impact somehow.


Luckily Charles and Fred heard our call and came to our rescue in Katherine with a welcome bottle of Grey Nomad Vintage Brut.
Champagne, Ummmm!
Anyway, all good fun still, as long as the leak in the power steering box doesn't get any worse (which it did, and also a small water hose on the side of the engine sprang a leak, and a free-wheeling hub locked itself).