Talk about an overload of fabulous
scenery! I am exhausted from looking and shooting! Of course I should
not be tired at all because I am sitting in air conditioned comfort
as someone else does the driving! I just get so excited when I see
the different landscapes and the different wild flowers that are here
in the Kimberley Region of Western Australia that I want to preserve
everything I see. Of course I cannot but that does not stop me from
trying!
After our breakfast at Halls Creek, in
the Kimberley Hotel, we were taken out to see the “Old Wall of
China” which is an agate outcrop that does look very much like a
wall that has been built from white bricks. Unlike most of the group,
I clambered down into the gully to get a different viewpoint. One of
the other women tried to follow me down and slipped over on the rocks
– they were covered with small lengths of dry grass which rolled
under her feet making the surface feel like it was covered with
slippery ice. She did not hurt herself, fortunately, but it shook her
up a bit.
A small waterhole was around the corner
from the Agate wall so I just had to take half a dozen shots of that
too!At each of the places we have stopped the rock formations are
different, the colours are similar – rich nuggety red from all the
iron in the ground – but the contours are so different.
The service stations in Halls Creek had
run out of diesel fuel so Firie (my son and our coach driver) was
delighted to see the fuel road train pulled into one of the service
stations as we drove back into Halls Creek. Without fuel we would not
have been able to do the distance we have covered today, from Halls
Creek to Fitzroy Crossing. While the coach was being filled we
passengers explored the town. It is only small but interesting and at
the Information Centre there was a statue that commemorated one of
the early characters of the gold rush days, Russian Jack. He brought
a sick “mate” in a bush made wheel barrow from the gold fields to
the closest medical help at Halls Creeks, a distance of 300
kilometers.
I am sure you will laugh when you see
the sign I found outside the butcher's shop. I could not help myself,
I just HAD to take a photo of it! This is typical of the humour of
the people here.
When we clambered back into the coach
we were told that we were returning to both the Old Wall of China and
to the Kimberley Hotel. When Maria had slipped on the rock when out
at the Old China Wall, she had lost her gold watch. Fortunately that
beauty spot was not far out of town and it took us hardly any time to
return to it – and Fran with her eagle eyes managed to find the
missing watch almost immediately she reached the spot Maria had
slipped. We must have walked right over the top of it without seeing
it when we climbed back out of the creek bed – and so must other
sight-seers. Then we went back to the hotel where one of the hotel
staff had found money lying on the grass in front of one of the rooms
- $100 no less! How honest is that? So a sheepish Peter went up to
the Reception and was given the money back in an envelope.
We then had a fairly long drive to our
next stop, a private school for indigenous children. The young
principal had been at the school for quite a few years and in that
time had married (a white girl) and had recently increased his family
to three children, two boys and a girl.
The principal – Nick Try – was our
host for an hour and told us of the way the community worked together
and grew together, we were shown through the “Laarri” art gallery
where there were lots of bright acrylic on canvas dot paintings. I
wonder why this style of art has been adopted? I am sure the
aborigines believe it to have been handed down through generations –
but it hasn't, it is a fairly recent style from around the 1950s.
Anyway, it is now a style that is recognised as being “typical”of
the Australian Aborigines.
From this school we then drove for two
hours with the coach DVD playing part two of the story of the
Durracks, “Kings in Grass Castles” as we scooted past never
changing countryside. The movie finished just as we arrived at
Fitzroy Crossing but although we passed the hotel we were to stay in,
we drove another few kilometers to where we were to board a couple of
punts so we could enjoy an hour sailing down the Geike Gorge. The sky
was strangely cloudy but that meant that it wasn't unpleasantly hot,
however the light was not really all that brilliant on the unusual
colours of the cliff faces.
Our punt guide was hoping to point out
the abundant wildlife but the wildlife was in rather short supply. We
did manage to see two fresh water crocodiles from rather a long way
away. This sighting caused quite a lot of excitement! We had been
warned about crocs in all the waterways of the north and this was the
first time we had actually seen one!
The trip along the Geikie Gorge was
slow and leisurely and the scenery gorgeous. The white area of the
limestone cliffs is where the flood waters after the summer “wet
season” scour the iron staining away. Floods here are a regular
occurance. Where the high water swirls and tumbles the limestone has
been cut into fantastic shapes and the calm waters reflect and
enhance the formations.
So! Another amazing day in this part of
Australia. Every day has been perfect.
AJ