Sunday, August 30, 2009

Katherine NT - 24 to 30 August 2009


We stopped at Katherine, named [and misspelled] by John McDouall Stuart after Catherine Chambers, the daughter of South Australian pastoralist James Chambers, who had supported Stuart's expedition.

Katherine Gorge is not far from the town and a if you take the three gorge tour it includes a swim which you can enjoy as long as you make sure the freshwater crocodiles are in the pool above you.




Katherine has a nice musuem, with a good exhibit on the Overland Telegraph and exhibits of life in the outback.

John was troubled to see his mother's Lightburn washing machine as an exhibit. It was built by a cement mixer company which explains the shape.


We loved the early advertising for a brand of meat, which went "Many a man thinks it is his goodness that keeps him from crime when it is only it his full stomach - On half allowance he would be as ugly a knave as anyone. Never mistake "Collins' Beef" for good principles."

We also swam at Edith Falls at sunset. Trish described it as like swimming in liquid gold.


We saw Springvale Station, established in 1879 by Alfred Giles, one of the first two stations in the area. We enjoyed a drover's dinner at the museum.


Saturday, August 29, 2009

Alice Springs 11-17 & 22 -23 August 2009

Alice Springs is a good stopover. We serviced the car and the van's brakes and wheel bearings.

We also cleaned the car and van and were pleasantly surprised by how little dust entered the van.

Then we were free to enjoy the town. We liked the MacDonnell Ranges Camping Park which had excellent activities scheduled most evenings, including a very knowledgeable NT Parks Ranger.

We enjoyed the cafes and bookshops and purchased rather a lot of books.

We visited the AIM Hospital designed by John Flynn to act as a large evaporative air conditioner. Hot air was drawn in through the basement and passed through wet sackcloth which cooled it and filtered dust.

It was then drawn up through the wards and vented through the ceiling.

Attached to the Hospital was the shed where the first pedal radio transmissions occurred.


The pedal radio, developed by Alfred Traeger in 1929, solved the problem of communication in the outback. The pedal mechanism powered the radio and as a side benefit gave outback ladies great figures and a social life through what were called the Galah sessions.

Having followed the route of the Ghan from Port Augusta, Alice Springs was the last last stop. As the sign on the poster said "Just getting to Alice was an experience." A copy of the Alice Springs Station has been built as a museum for the Ghan.

Adjoining the Ghan museum is the National Transport Hall of Fame.

It is an amazing collection of trucks and memorabilia. Their brief is unusual in that they don't restore all of them to factory perfect but leave modifications in place to show how the trucks were used. The trucks are registered and can be driven. They have a lot of one off trucks such as an experimental hybrid Hino and a Rotinoff Road Train that Vesteys [Lord Vestey was the second largest owner of Stations after the Kidmans] had built as they didn't want to use American trucks.

WWII revolutionized trucking in Australia as Army surplus trucks were sold off and trained drivers returned from overseas.

This was the end of the road for the Afghan Cameleers. When the camels were no longer needed they were let loose in the desert. The Cameleers and their camels are viewed with a lot of respect and affection here for the part they played in opening up the outback. This is possibly the only place in the world where you can buy an Afghan biscuit (cookie).

Inside the Transport Hall of Fame is the Kenworth Dealers Hall of Fame, which includes one of every Kenworth model sold in Australia. Tricia used to drive past the Kenworth Factory daily and often saw the heads going out, all painted up, for their final test run. She enjoyed this very much and consequently it was a big thrill for her to see this museum. They have the first truck delivered from Bayswater.


We saw the Pioneer Womens Museum which is also the old Gaol. John questioned why this was the venue, and apparently it is still a hot topic with some of the supporters, but it saved the gaol from demoliton and they do have a lot of space for expansion. As well as pioneer women they commemorate women who were the first in their field.


We saw the School of the Air. Originally remote and isolated children were educated by Correspondence School, however it was noted that they often lacked socialization skills. In 1944 Adelaide Miethke thought that the Flying Doctor Radio could be used to reach children learning by correspondence and give them a wider range of experiences. This was trialled and has evolved into the modern School of the Air, which uses computers to provide the children with classroom experience. At 1,300,000 square kilometres it is the world's largest classroom, and it is fascinating to watch videos of the class in progress. www.assoa.nt.edu.au
There is also a good description in Wikipedia.

Alice Springs is also the site of John Flynn's Grave.

John Flynn's first parish was at the tiny Smith of Dunesk Mission at Beltana, [See our previous posting on Beltana]. At Beltana, he saw at first hand the difficulties of Outback life. He was commissioned to prepare a report on life in the Northern Territory, to be presented to the Presbyterian Church in 1912. The General Assembly acted upon Flynn's recommendations and appointed him the head of a new organisation, the Australian Inland Mission (AIM).

 

Flynn's ideas and hard work were responsible for alleviating much of the isolation that makes the outback such a challenging place to settle. The outback was a frontier through to the 1950's It can be romanticized, but it was a place of great loneliness where people suffered and died unnecessarily. Human contact and medical care helped to make life on vast Stations such as Anna Creek possible. Flynn's work provided a mantle of safety for outback people through medicine, aviation, pedal radio and visiting padres.

During our travels we have been following the Cameleers, the Old Ghan, John Flynn and the Royal Flying Doctor Service. Alice Springs marks an end point in that journey. The Overland Telegraph continues to Darwin.

Sunday we visited the West Macdonnell Ranges,

seeing Standley Chasm, Ellery Creek Bighole,

















the Serpentine Gorge,The Ochre Pits,

















Ormiston Gorge and Glen Helen Gorge. Our final day we saw The Residency which was built during Central Australia's brief period of legislative independence and remained a social hub in Alice Springs and The Old Stuart Town Gaol.

We enjoyed a final coffee and wander up the Todd Mall.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Stuart Highway - 24 to 26 August 2009

We travelled north on the Stuart Highway, following the route of the tough Scottish explorer John McDouall Stuart who blazed the way for the Overland Telegraph. This Highway is has many significant sites commemorating the history of Stuart, the Telegraph and World War II.

Just north of Alice Springs we crossed the Tropic of Capricorn - so now it is official - we have gone "Troppo"

The Stuart Highway was a dirt track until WW2 when the need to move troops and goods back and forth from Alice Springs where the Ghan terminated meant the track deteriorated badly under constant traffic and the road was bitumenised. All the States Public works departments were assigned a section.




Shortly after we stopped to move a dead Kangaroo further from the road to help protect the Wedge Tail Eagles which are killed in increasing numbers as they rise into the path of cars after feeding on the carcass.







We stopped for coffee at the Aileron station roadhouse and admired the aboriginal art and the huge [12 meters high] sculptures of the Anmatjere man, woman and child and Hollywood style sign erected by the Alice Springs sculptor Mark Egan.

We then passed the marker for Central Mount Stuart which Stuart calculated as the point equidistant from North, South, East and West coasts and thus in his view the centre of Australia.



At Barrow Creek there is a well preserved Overland Telegraph repeater station. It gives a sense of the isolation and scale of undertaking to construct the line in the space of two years less than ten years after the country was first explored. It was an amazing technological feat to connect Australia to the rest of the world in that era and through that rugged country.


Our overnight stop was at Wycliffe Wells the unofficial UFO Capital of Australia. Unfortunately no luck in seeing a flying saucer. However we drove to watch the sunset at the Devils Marbles which was wonderful.





From Wycliffe Wells we drove to Tennant Creek, a town which arose from a 1930's gold rush. At Tennant Creek we saw the Battery Hill Mine and the Old Telegraph Office.


There is a great social history display which shows how hard it was to be a miner and miners family in such a remote mining town where initially the water had to be shipped in 44 gallon drums.

Outside Tennant Creek we came to the Three Ways, the intersection of the Stuart and Barkly Highways and the site of another memorial to the Rev John Flynn.

We then detoured to Newcastle Waters, the junction of the North South Murranji and East West Barkly stock routes from the days when drovers moved cattle to the seaboard markets. It had a Stockman's Memorial and the Junction Hotel built for "free" by a group of the hoteliers creditors out of disused windmills on stock bores.


There is also an AIM Church built from a Sydney Williams Hut or Comet hut. These were used to house the troops during WW2
From there we drove to Daly Waters. This has an historic pub and serves a great Barra and Beef Barbecue.

It has Australia's most remote traffic light - always red and always ignored, but fortunately no sign of Australia's most remote traffic policeman.Daly Waters is also the site of Australia's first International Airport and the hangars and terminal remain. It is also the site of what remains of an "S" carved by Stuart on a tree nearby, almost impossible to see and impossible to photograph.





From Daly Waters we drove to Katherine, stopping for lunch at Mataranka to see the "Big Termite" mound and swim at the Mataranka Springs [created by soldiers in WWII without the need for an Environmental Impact Statement] and then at the naturally occurring Bitter Springs.


Bitter Springs is in Elsey National Park.

Mataranka is where the Elsey Homestead was located. Mrs. Aeneas Gunn wrote ' We of the Never Never' and 'Little Black Princess' about her experiences here.
Never never means never never go there or never never leave depending on your point of view.



Friday, August 21, 2009

Ayers Rock, Olgas, Kings Canyon - 18 to 21 August 2009

At Yulara we stayed at the Ayers Rock Camping Park and saw Uluru [Ayers Rock at sunrise and sunset.

 


We drove to Kata Tjuta [The Olgas] which means many heads and walked through the Gorge

At Kings Canyon we stayed at the Kings Canyon Resort in the Watarrka National Park and did the rim walk. 
 













The next day we drove back to Alice Springs via the Mereenie Loop Road which passes through Aboriginal Land for which a fee is paid.

We debated the meaning of this government sign.

The owners provided clarity at both the start 


and finish of a dangerous curve in the road

 


The Meerenie loop brought us to what was the Hermannsburg Lutheran Mission established on the Finke River in 1877.