Saturday, July 31, 2010

Change of State

VICTORIA HIGHWAY it was a really lovely drive from Kununurra through to Katherine with various ranges and at one stage we were beside the very wide Victoria River. Only 46 km’s out from Kununurra we crossed the border into the Northern Territory.
MUSTERING great to see this happening as we were driving along. Due to the wet weather in Broome earlier in the month we are a few days behind schedule so will have to stop and explore some of the spots around Timber Creek and Victoria River on lap 2.
CATCH UP Dee has lived in Katherine for the past three years so well and truly a local, we had a good Saturday checking out where she will be moving too and then being joined by fellow Gold Coast campers John and Maureen for a bbq.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Last day in WA

IVANHOE CROSSING just a few km's out of town crosses the lower Ord River below the Diversion dam and is the back way to Wyndham. This gives you bit of an idea of the speed of the river, just upstream from where the car is was a saltwater crocodile sun baking.
Trivia - the new homes in the area are made of corrugated iron as they are cooler, there are no gutters as they don't cope in the wet season. They also don't have any  letter boxes as it is too hot in the wet season, 50 degrees to go out and check your mail and for the poor postie. Older homes were double brick and just retained the heat.
DIVERSION DAM showing a portion of the water being released. There are so many areas up here that must look spectacular in the wet season with water in this area alone being at least 10 metres higher.
ZEBRA ROCK unique to this area and mined around Lake Argyle, just a youngster at 600 million years old!
Tomorrow we cross the border into the Northern Territory, we have really enjoyed the last four months in WA, just don't know where the time has gone.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

East Kimberly

KUNUNURRA only 42 kms from the Northern Territory border is like an oasis. Serviced by the water in Lake Argyle the area is classed as the salad bowl with the various crops grown in the area such as water melons, mango's and rock melons. There are also a lot of sandalwood plantations with the trees being exported to Asia.
MIRIMAR NATIONAL PARK just a few kilometres out of town looks like a mini version of the Bungle Bungles.
LAKE ARGYLE wow, lake as far as the eye can see, the wet season water is stored here and then released down into the Ord River, through Lake Kununurra, Diversion dam, water passed on to local farms at $5.00 per million kilolitres and then further down the Ord River and out to sea. Unfortunately it is not cost effective to pipe the water south and enough water to provide Australia for a year goes out to sea every few days - amazing.
ORD RIVER flowing today at about 14km's, interesting the changing vegetation along our 55km trip from the Lake Argyle dam to our caravan park in Kununurra. The river is home to the most freshwater crocodiles in Australia.
LAKE KUNUNURRA at sunset.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

WA's Top Town

WYNDHAM is the most northern town in Western Australia with a population of 900. This is a view from  the five rivers lookout over the Cambridge gulf and part of the Ord River flood plain. There is a big port here for cattle, mining and sugar.
MARLGU BILLABONG an oasis for bird life close to where we are staying at Parry Farm, Parry Lagoon nature reserve.
MARLGU BILLABONG with Mulligan's Ranges in the background.
GROTTO just south of town, there was some water at the bottom of the gorge, it must look great in the wet season with water cascading down the hills into here.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Purnululu National Park



BUNGLE BUNGLES what can I say, absolutely breathtaking and something you have to experience for yourself. The drive in from the main highway was 53 km’s, is four wheel drive only and took 1 ½ hours. Once into the national park the roads weren’t too bad.

BUNGLE BUNGLES our first real view of them, very impressive.
CATHEDRAL GORGE you cannot do justice to the size of the amphitheatre at the end of the gorge, the size of the walls that the water cascades down is incredible. Overhead is a solid rock ceiling.
CATHEDRAL GORGE showing the height of the walls reflected in the little bit of water in the pool.

BEEHIVES  the description of the shape of these 200 million year old weathered sandstone domes.
PICCANINNY CREEK you get to walk along here amongst the beehives, must be an impressive sight in the wet season with water flowing through here.
ECHIDNA CHASM is at the northern end of the park, entering the gorge are some lovely palms and you come to what you think is the end, but you turn a corner and walk further in through a very narrow fault line with rocks perched above your head.
ECHNIDNA CHASM  part way through, just loved the colours bouncing off the walls, some parts were less than a metre wide.
END OF ECHIDNA CHASM, can you spot me? Just amazing the conglomeration of rocks that form the walls of the chasm. Near the end I spotted a small bright yellow snake which was apparently a yellow tree snake, must have been a bit lost as there were no trees where the two of us were.
KUNGKALAHAYI LOOKOUT a fabulous view of the Bungle Bungles and the 500 million year old limestone ridge. This gives you bit of an idea of the scenery in the movie “Australia”, although you keep waiting for cowboys and Indians to appear on the horizon.
I could go on about the history and formation of the area, but in all honesty you have to come and experience this National Park for yourself!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Halls Creek

OLD HALLS CREEK is along the Duncan Road which takes you the back way to Kununurra on the fringe of the Tanami Desert. The town was moved 16kms to it's present location on The Great Northern Highway several years ago. The old Halls Creek is a much more picturesque spot in the Albert Edward Ranges.
CHINA WALL is a ridge of quartz up to 6 metres high, just a few kilometres out of town. 
                                        
PALM SPRINGS is like an oasis along the dusty road. When the area had it's gold boom in 1885 around here were market gardens providing for the area.
SAWPIT GORGE, easy access into the rock pool where the Black Elvire River has carved a way through the rocky ridge.
SAWPIT GORGE ROCKPOOL
CAROLINE POOL a natural waterhole with shady banks and the eucalypts were home to a family of black cockatoos. 
JUST found our next car, this was outside a derelict mechanical workshop along Duncan Road.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

From Fitzroy Crossing

FITZTROY RIVER  Yesterday we drove through to Fitzroy Crossing, bit of a milestone as we have now been on the road 78 weeks/18 months, where has the time gone? The caravan park we are at is on the river behind a lodge, heaps of vans and lovely grassy sites, makes a change from red dirt. The river floods and in parts can be up to 30kms wide, very hard to imagine.
GEIKIE GORGE is just 20kms out of town on a sealed road. The colours in the background give you an idea of how high the water gets in the wet season, up to 12 metres higher than now.
GEIKIE GORGE bit of a variety of colours. We did a boat cruise up the gorge and then a walk along the sandstone walls and sandy banks. Saw more freshwater crocodiles sunbaking, apparently there are sawfish and stingrays in the water that have adapted to the freshwater, we didn't spot any. There was one pelican fishing, first one spotted this season, wonder if he came from Lake Eyre.
JABIRU again the first one spotted this season, last time we saw them was up at Kakadu in the Northern Territory.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Windjana National Park

WINDJANA GORGE is about 150kms from Derby down the Gibb River Road, the section we were on wasn't bad and about 80% would of been sealed. The road into the gorge off the GRR was closed earlier in the week while they graded after all the rain last week so it wasn't in too bad condition for gravel.
Although this photo is taken in the gorge, these 90 metre limestone walls welcome/confront you as you enter the car park. In Karijini you walked along flat land and looked down into the gorge, here the fact it is a wall is what impresses you.
                                       
WINDJANA GORGE as you wander further in.
FRESHWATER CROCODILE one of the many locals basking in the sunshine and this is actually how close we got.
TUNNEL CREEK is 37 kms further on into the national park down more gravel road. You scramble over some huge black dolerite rocks to enter the 750 metre long tunnel which was formed by the creek cutting through a spur of the Napier Range. We wore our reef shoes as you walk along sandy ledges and then through the water up to your waist in parts armed with your trusty torch.
The roof in the tunnel was amazing with hugh rock stalagtites and various formations.
Stream at the exit of the tunnel.
BOAB TREES are the symbol of this area and these ones looked good surrounded by all the termite nests.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Day Has Arrived

HORIZONTAL FALLS day trip, it was just fabulous! We flew from Derby in the seaplane, with the flight being about 30 minutes.
Flying in this was our view of the horizontal falls at low tide, lucky for us one of the best tides of the year. Our day in the area meant that we got to experience three trips between the two gorges.
Top gorge, at low tide and high tide, the drop being four metres.
Bay at full tide, at low tide 70% of this  water has disappeared and the water is still 40 metres deep.
Lemon sharks hear the seaplanes and then line up for a feed, you can swim in a cage off the floating pontoon to see them underwater.
Flight home this gives you bit of an idea of the speed of the water when you see the different colour swirls of the water around the Buccaneer Archipelago.