Monday, September 21, 2009

Kakadu - 8 to 21 September 2009

We drove from Darwin to Kakadu National Park stopping for morning tea at the Old Bark Hut.

The name Kakadu comes from an aboriginal flood plain language called Gagudju. We camped at Kakadu Lodge, Jabiru in the North of Kakadu.

The flood plains are extremely beautiful.

The Aurora park at Kakadu has great facilities, including the best pool of any caravan park [or luxury hotel] we have stayed in. We enjoyed swimming in it at the beginning and end of each day.

        

   

We visited Ubirr which is a Rock Art Gallery and a popular place to watch the sunset.

The rock art functioned as a school for the children, a kitchen and a message board, telling what was available and how to eat it plus the news of the day.

The drawing of the white man [hands in pocket] records contact.

Some of the drawings of ships in the park are so accurate they can be used to identify the actual ship that passed through the Arafura sea over the last centuries.

We flew over Kakadu and Arnhem Land as only about 1% can be seen by road.

Arnhem Land was named by Matthew Flinders after the Dutch ship Arnhem [named after the Dutch town of Arnhem] which visited in 1623.

        

 

The first white men introduced themselves as Hollanders and the indigenous name for whites is still Ballander a corruption of this word.

We had coffee and cakes cooked by a French Pastry chef at the Border Store which is on the Border between Arnhem land and Kakadu.

It shows that no matter how remote you are you can sometimes find a French chef making great mille feulle.

 

 

 

We went on the Guluyambi Cruise up the East Alligator river and saw a lot of [more than twenty] crocodiles. Their population is booming at the moment.

The three Alligator Rivers were named by Phillip Parker King who explored the region in 1820 after travelling in South America. He mistook Crocodiles for Alligators, hence the East, West and South Alligator Rivers. He was not very imaginative either.

The following day we went on the Magela Cultural and Heritage tour to Arnhem Land. Arnhem Land is aboriginal owned and one needs a permit, in this case obtained by the tour company.

We were very fortunate in our aboriginal guide Gary Djorlomon, who gave us an excellent tour. We were privileged to hear his many stories.

We climbed Injalak Hill, visited Injalak Arts Centre and took a boat cruise on Injuku Billabong where we saw teeming wildlife.

The next day we went on a tour of the Ranger Uranium Mine. The trade off for having this mine was the creation of Kakadu National Park. Mining towns are comfortable, they have good water, supermarkets and made roads.

 

 

 

 

We attended the annual Mahbilil Festival at Jabiru. Mahbilil is the name of the afternoon breeze which comes at this time of year. All the locals from around the area come together at the festival which was a combination of corroboree and school fair, including spear throwing and didgeridoo competitions.

We took the Yellow Water Cruise out of Cooinda.

We also visited the Bowali Visitors Center, the Warradjan Aboriginal Culture Centre, Nourlangie Rock, the Mamukala Billabong and Gunlom Falls.

  

The amount of wildlife we saw was astonishing.   

Yellow Waters Cruise September 14, 2009 07h.11m.29s (48 of 61)

Yellow Waters Cruise September 14, 2009 07h.08m.27s (22 of 26) 

      

 

 

 

Kakadu Lodge September 10, 2009 10h.59m.09s (5 of 26) - Copy

Yellow Waters Cruise September 14, 2009 08h.07m.13s (25 of 26)

        

 

 

 

Arnhem Land September 11, 2009 15h.48m.27s (18 of 26)Yellow Waters Cruise September 14, 2009 08h.42m.14s (26 of 26)

               Yellow Waters Cruise September 14, 2009 06h.50m.03s (47 of 61)

Arnhem Land September 11, 2009 16h.05m.50s (19 of 26)

             

 Arnhem Land September 11, 2009 16h.19m.11s (20 of 26)Yellow Waters Cruise September 14, 2009 07h.31m.20s (24 of 26)

              

Arnhem Land September 11, 2009 08h.42m.45s (12 of 26)

Mamukala September 21, 2009 17h.41m.02s (2 of 3)

        

 

 

 

Mamukala September 21, 2009 18h.23m.18s (3 of 3) - Copy

 Mamukala September 21, 2009 17h.26m.04s (1 of 3) - Copy

          

 

Gumlom Falls September 20, 2009 15h.23m.01s (1 of 1)

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Darwin 31st August - 7th September 2009

From Katherine we went to Darwin via Adelaide River.

Adelaide River is a convenient lunch stop on the road to Darwin and as there was a museum we naturally popped in.

The only other visitors were waiting for the wife's cousin, the driver of the southbound Ghan freight train, to pass through in "the next half hour". We waited also, and waited and waited as in traditional form it was late. But come it did and we did get a wave from the driver!!

Adelaide River was the headquarters for US and Australian Military Operations after the bombing of Darwin. There were camps, hospitals and army farms for the thousands of men quartered there.

Men lived in Sydney Williams "Comet" Huts, named after Sydney Williams who designed them as a flat pack to be easily transported and erected, and the Comet company a well known wind mill manufacturer.

After the war all the infrastructure was sold off as army surplus and so there are very few artifacts left. Of the many huge military bases that existed along the highway to Darwin all there is now is the tarmac of old airstrips.



The Overland Telegraph passed by Adelaide River and the museum informed us that the Oppenheimer poles were manufactured by Oppenheimer in Germany, and a fine job they did. Even 130 years later there is no rust on any of them after being exposed in the harshest conditions all that time.

From Adelaide River we drove into Darwin. In September 1839 the HMS Beagle sailed into the Harbour during its 3rd Voyage. John Stokes named the Harbour Port Darwin as a tribute to Darwin, their old shipmate.

Attempts to settle the area failed miserably until in 1869 the town of Palmerston was established. This would probably have failed too if the Overland Telegraph line hadn't connected to the line from Java at this point. In 1911 Palmerston changed its name to Darwin. Darwin is climate challenged and isolated even today. It has 3 seasons The Dry, the Buildup and the Wet.

Darwin's development accelerated with WW2. The Northern Territory was under military command and infrastructure was developed to service the War in the Pacific. In 1974 Darwin was almost completely destroyed by cyclone Tracy. Rebuilding has left a truly modern city built to a higher cyclone standard.

Our first night was dinner at Crustaceans on Stokes Wharf.

We had work to do here. Tricia cleaned the caravan from top to bottom while John realigned the caravan's independent suspension.

The next day we visited the Mindil Market and dipped our toes in the Arafura Sea, we had finally made it from coast to coast.

We watched the first of many sunsets and visited many good restaurants. Saturday at 3:15 pm we bought our first papers that were actually published on that day, a change from the one day and two day old papers we were used to on the track. The cost of the Melbourne "Age", seven dollars. Isolation is not cheap.

It was absolute bliss to go to a cafe and read all the papers over an iced coffee.



Darwin is Australia's front line military town, and the F18's and US F15's roar out of the airbase regularly, producing what we have called in the USA " the Sound of Freedom". With that as background noise we visited the Heritage Air Museum where one of the volunteers gave a fascinating and continuously interesting two hour talk on the B52 bomber, one of the seminal symbols of the cold war.

He had details right down to the survival rates for different crew ejecting from the plane [do not be a rear gunner - even when in later models moved to the belly of the aircraft and at last given an ejection seat you were collected by the pilot's canopy if you ejected simultaneously]. When the B52 was tasked for low level flying - below 500 feet - much of their training was done in the Northern Territory, hence the permanent loan of this B52G model, one of the few not destroyed as part of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with the Soviet Union. The B52H model is scheduled to fly until 2045, a service life of almost 90 years!!

Our Friday night movie was at the Deck Chair Cinema, an outdoor tradition. Homemade meals are available to buy. Friday is Timorese Food.


We went to the Military Museum at East Point. East Point is a lovely place for a picnic and has a safe salt water lake for swimming in. There are no crocodiles in there.


We visited Parap Market another one of the Asian Hawker Markets and saw over Parliament House.

Parliament house is built over the site of the Overland Telegraph office which was badly bombed during the raids on Darwin.

The telegraph technology was obsolete by then but the line was used for telephones and all ten of the post office staff who had volunteered to stay and operate the vital communication link were killed by a direct hit.

We had not realized that the first raid on Darwin, of over 64 raids during the course of the war, dropped more bombs than were used at Pearl Harbour. The only modern fighters based in Darwin were 11 Kittyhawks from the US Army Air Force's 33rd Pursuit Squadron, and most were destroyed on that first day, shot down by the more numerous Mitsubishi Type Zeros. 243 people were killed and 8 vessels in the harbour were sunk. Many of those vessels had escaped the Japanese after the fall of Singapore.

Government House a fine example of colonial architecture survived both the bombing and Cyclone Tracy.




Our our last day in Darwin we took the Turtle Tracks tour traveling on the Snubfin to Bare Sand Island which is a classic Castaway Island. It has one tree. Our route is shown on the map at right.
















Turtles come here to lay their eggs from April to November.

























In the first photo you can see the Turtle carefully mounding sand over the nest of eggs she has scooped in the sand. She then covers the whole area with sand, energetically spraying it with her front flippers.


The whole process is a big effort for her and she had to rest often on her way to the sea.

As it was late in the season we saw a hatch-ling make its way down to the sea. Such a long way for a creature less than four inches long, even our footprints were hard for it to climb.


It was a magic night. We even had the first storm of the year complete with lightning show.
Mangrove Route Ecotours

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.