This Adventurous Age

Adventures travelling and working around Australia.


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2000 Travels May 25

THURSDAY 25 MAY   WINTON TO OPALTON   129kms

It took us a while to get away from Winton this morning. We had to get gas bottles filled, stock up on water, and batten down the van contents for somewhat rough dirt road travel.

Refuelled at the Caltex Depot – 83cpl. Also filled up the two jerry cans, which had been empty since last year.

Went to the Post Office and arranged for the mail that was awaiting at Cloncurry for us to collect, to be sent here to Winton. Apparently, there is a full bag!

Then we did a top up of groceries and went to get some meat from the butcher. Whilst I was in there, John came in and asked the butcher if he had any meat scraps suitable for yabby bait. A very attractive looking fellow customer asked him where he was going yabbying and John replied somewhere out around Opalton. She was interested by that; turned out that she and her partner have a claim near Opalton, at Devil Devil and she invited us out there to have a look at the operation. We arranged to meet her at the Outpost store next Thursday, when the mail vehicle comes in.

It was midday when we left Winton. We ate lunch in Truck, going along.

It took us over two hours to get to Opalton, taking it easy with the van. It travelled well and very little got disarranged inside. John noticed altered handling with the extra weight of the jerry cans on the van back – we have never had that before – and with the full water tanks.

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Mulga and spinifex country around Opalton

M and husband B seemed pleased to see us – and maybe rather surprised that we had come, after all.

It took us a while to set up camp, with the van beside a bough shelter, under which we set up the camp gear – camp stove, Chescold fridge, table and chairs. We had the best of both worlds! There was a stone fireplace built nearby too.

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Camp set up at Opalton Bush Camp

There was some piped water to the Bush Camp – from a nearby dam, filled by a windmill pump. B told us it is heavily sedimented but that it can be cleared for dishwashing and the like by using ash from the fire to “flock” it. Maybe by tomorrow we would have some ash. It would be useful if we could conserve the better van water for cooking and drinking.

Our camping here cost the princely sum of $2 a night! There are amenities in an Atco building, with flush toilets and cold showers.

It was nearly dark by the time all was organized. There was enough of a breeze to prevent mosquitoes, but a cloud build up that could mean rain. On yesterday’s drive, John saw a long line of black ants crossing the road; he reckons that means rain is coming.

I cooked tea outside, on the new Coleman stove we had not used before – it was excellent to use. Tea was chicken noodle soup, hamburger in toast, and a pear for dessert.

We stayed outside to eat tea, sat by a small fire in the fireplace for a while, then went in and read for a while. The nights here would have to be early to bed, to conserve the 12volt power in the van. The solar panel does seem to be working but to date, existing for any time on the system is untried.

There were four other lots of campers here – caretakers M and B, a French couple who were here the other day and have been for over a week, someone in an older van who arrived after us, and a couple with a young baby who arrived last night and are camping in a tin shed here, who seem not at all prepared for camping out.

There were spits of rain early in the evening and heavy rain at times during the night.

We went to bed about 9pm. It was great to be camped out in the bush again.

The gidgee wattle that was in the bush around us was smelling in the rain – the “Stinking Wattle” so called.

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To Opalton


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2000 Travels May 24

WEDNESDAY 24 MAY     WINTON

We rattled around in the morning, making phone calls and paying rates, water rates, phone bill, by phone.

We did a big fruit and veg shop, as this was the day the produce arrived fresh in town. I even managed to get grapefruit, often not available in these places, but it was all rather expensive.

After the shopping was put away, set out to drive to Lark Quarry, some 110 kms down the Jundah road, to the south west. This was mostly unsealed, but in pretty good condition.

We drove through varied country that was very interesting. There were some dramatic jump ups and valleys. We got a fright, when an emu shot out of bushes  beside the road, and raced right in front of Truck, with its neck stretched right out – as if that would make it faster! Emu just made it. I am not sure who got the biggest fright.

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Jump-up country SW of Winton

I had read a little about Lark Quarry in tourist information and really wanted to visit it, as something “different”. It was much more impressive, though, than I had anticipated.

Lark Quarry was the site of a dinosaur stampede, something not known of anywhere else. It was nearly 100 million years ago, when this country was vastly different, we were still joined to Antarctica, and all sorts of dinosaurs roamed around. It is believed that a lot of small dinosaurs, ranging from chicken to emu size, had come to drink and/or forage, by a lake. The mud at the edge of the lake was very soft, so their footprints sank into it. Then a big, carnivorous Tyrannosaurus came hunting them, and the little ones stampeded. The footprints filled with soft sediments and the mud turned to mudstone. Later, more recent erosion, exposed some dinosaur tracks and then the “quarry” was excavated in the 1970’s, to reveal the full stampede.

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Little feet scattering in all directions, and footmarks of the hunter

A roof had been built over the prints, and a mesh walled walkway allowed us to view the prints without being able to destroy them. It was pleasing to see these efforts at preservation, although there was no-one there to keep an eye on them, and we were alone there. (We heard later that there was a caretaker, but he had died out there a day or two before our visit).

Just looking at the footprints, we could sense the panic of the little dinosaurs, as they tried to escape the monster.

It was also a great lesson in how the climate and topography has changed over time. Back in the stampede times, this area had river and lakes and plenty of vegetation to feed scores of little plant eating dinosaurs. This sedimentary layer that was well buried under semi-arid rocky hills and outcrops was once a muddy sand bar in a lake surrounded by forest.

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Lark Quarry country

We went for a walk up to a lookout from where we could see other areas of excavation. Then we completed the nature walk. I found the area really attractive.

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We saw some beautifully marked small dragon lizards. They moved extremely fast, then sat up on rocks to watch us and see what was happening. Cute little critters.

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Really little reptile

We ate our packed lunch at Lark Quarry.

Judging from what we saw in the Visitors Book we signed, not many people make the trip out here on the unsealed road.

Cloud was building up between sunny breaks, and the humidity increased through the day.

On the way back, detoured off the Jundah road into Bladensburg National Park, as far as the Engine Hole Waterhole. This was really pretty, with a lot of bird life around. We saw a rufous song lark, for the first time. It was too late to explore the Park – which was a pastoral property until recently – any further, and we returned to Winton.  Drove 264kms today.

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Engine Hole Waterhole, Bladensburg National Park

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Track through Bladensburg National Park

Made radio contact with Alice Springs Base of the 4WD Radio Network, let them know where we were and gave a rough outline of our plans. The duty man said that the road into Lawn Hill  from Gregory Downs was rough. We were planning after the time around here, to make our way to Cloncurry and then on there.

Phoned K to let him know our plans.

Tonight was the last TV for a while!

It was an extremely humid and warm night.


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2000 Travels May 23

TUESDAY 23 MAY     WINTON

We got up at a respectable hour, and after breakfast, drove across the road to the Caltex fuel depot, to top up Truck. Diesel was 83cpl here. The man said he was getting low on diesel, and waiting on the tanker to be able to come down the road from Hughenden – currently closed due to recent rains.

We left about 10.30, to head south to Opalton. Took the Jundah Road, initially, for 15kms, then turned onto the unsealed Opalton road. This skirted the edge of the Bladensburg National Park, on my list of places to visit, here. Its low jump ups – or flat topped hills – looked interesting.

After Bladensburg we were into flat grasslands, but with enough trees and scrubland to keep it interesting. There were good fat cattle about, and some sheep. Roos and emus were also plentiful.

We saw a flock of cockatiels and a number of black faced wood swallows.

It was not too hard to find our way, despite the lack of signs. The man at the gem shop had given us useful information about that.

We got to Opalton about midday, and went to the bush store – the Opalton Outpost – that the shop man had told us about. As this was one of the few structures about the place, it was pretty obvious. It was very rough – a sort of pole construction with brush roofing and lots of gaps to the open air. The shelf stock was very sparse, dust covered, and – I suspected – very out of date. Several chooks wandered in and out and one of their kind – stuffed – had pride of place on a shelf. I had a feeling that the poultry might roost on the shelves at night!

A rather scruffy looking guy – L – was looking after the store. He showed us a piece of the boulder opal that they find in these parts. It was really pretty, perhaps resembling the cooked matrix opal we’d seen at Andamooka last year, but with lots more fire and large patches of colour. L directed us to go to the bush camp area – it surprised us that this existed – where, he said, 76 year old M would tell us all about it and show us what to do to fossick.

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Boulder opal

M was lovely – very talkative. She had a huge blue, rough surfaced sapphire on a chain round her neck. She found it near Sapphire a couple of years ago.

After we’d eaten our packed lunch, M took us out noodling on the mullock heaps of the old mine pits. There was a large area, just behind the bush camp area, that had been mined about a hundred years ago. The miners dug shafts and the mullock heaps were piled up around these. M explained that often they were seeking large and spectacular pieces of opal and didn’t bother with small bits. So it was remarkably easy to find little pieces on the heaps, or rocks that might have opal in.

The opal fields here were developed from the 1880’s. At one stage there were about 600 people on the field, with the attendant small town that grew up to meet their needs. Life was tough, with lack of water being an issue, though, ironically, ground water filling into the shafts was a big problem. A bigger problem was the decline in the demand for opal in the early 1900’s, that affected all the then existing opal fields in Australia. Some say that the diamond mining companies of South Africa felt that their product was so threatened by opal that they managed to circulate the idea that opal was unlucky – this persisted for decades.

So opal mining, and Opalton, declined and the place was virtually abandoned by the 1920’s, and crumbled away. However, a revival in recent times has seen miners using machines take up claims in the area. The central part of old Opalton was designated as a fossicking area and thus protected from machine mining. All very interesting and nothing we’d known about, previously.

John had already decided, before we went noodling with M, that he wanted to come out here with the van and stay at the bush camp for a while. I liked the place and the “away from it all” nature of it. So, we arranged with M to return here to camp.

M and her husband caretake the Bush Camp and stay here for several months over winter.

We inspected M’s gem trees, which she sells for $20. These were small tree shapes made from wire, with 42 small pieces of opal on the branches – all glued to a polished piece of rock. I found them quirky and very attractive, and selected one to be put aside for me to buy when we return here. I thought I might buy a second one as a Xmas present for P and K. There was some really good colour in the chips she uses.

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The gem tree made from boulder opal pieces

We left Opalton at 4pm, after a much more interesting time than I had anticipated.

There were many kangaroos and emus to dodge on the drive back! We drove 261kms today.

Tea was leek and onion soup, steak for John and salad for me.

We had planned to have some bills from home – rates and the like – that would be due for payment, catch up with us at a town, soon. I suggested that we could phone and find out details and pay by phone – and that would solve that impediment to our going “out bush” for a while.

What is really noticeable at Winton is the number of vans that come in late in the day and leave again early next morning. They don’t know what they are missing in some of these outback towns.


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2000 Travels May 22

MONDAY 22 MAY   LONGREACH TO WINTON   187kms

As we were starting to pack up, got talking to the people on the site behind us. He was another retired Victorian primary school principal, so he and John got to comparing experiences and thoughts about the system. So we were quite late getting away, but we did not have too far to go.

It was an uneventful run through to Winton, mostly over the same flat, grassy plains as a couple of days ago. There was occasional flood damage to the road, from earlier in the year, but it was not too bad.

As we approached Winton could see some distant ranges, which promised more interesting country.

We arrived at Winton about lunchtime, and booked into the Matilda Country Caravan Park, on its northern edge, for three nights. Cost was $13.50 a night, after discount.

It was a small park, but adequate. After all, Winton is a small town. The sites were gravel. There were some very nice shade trees for just about every site.

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Set up at Winton

It was a warm day, but pleasant, so after lunch we decided to go walking and explore the town. Given the location of the caravan park, this turned into a substantial walk.

Winton grew up in the later 1800’s, as a centre for the surrounding pastoral stations. It promotes itself as the place where QANTAS began (Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services), in 1920, and also claims that the song Waltzing Matilda was written by Banjo Paterson when staying on nearby Dagworth Station.

We found a shop with an extensive gemstone display. I had seen a reference to a place called Opalton, south of here, in a book, and I’d found some information about it in the caravan park office. It was not on the map in our Road Atlas, though. John talked with the man in the shop about it. So he then decided we would drive there tomorrow and have a fossick for opals. That will be different! We will see some more of the country, at any rate.

I hadn’t known until now that opals were found in these parts, at all.

There was a really pretty sunset.

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Tea was leek and onion soup, pasta with a rosemary zucchini sauce.

I went to shower in the lesser used block of the two available – an older one. The toilet cistern had pulled away from the wall, and there were seven little brown frog faces peering up at me from the gap!

05-22-2000 to winton


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2000 Travels May 21

SUNDAY 21 MAY     LONGREACH

Today was S’s birthday, so John tried to phone her, but no one home.

We went back to the Hall of Fame and spent the rest of the morning there. It was just SO good!

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Memorial stained glass window. John is beside it, for scale. Settler’s hut below.

Some of the twentieth century displays covered things like wheat harvesting with the big horse teams – dad would have loved to see this place because it dealt with the life he lived. His early jobs, in Tasmania, involved working with horses. For several years, he travelled annually, to the area around Balranald, in southern NSW, where his employer ran teams of horses pulling the wheat harvesters.

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Travelling hawker’s wagon; they brought goods to remote settlers

After lunch, we drove out to the west of town, to the Thomson River, just for a look at it. People out there were fishing for yellowbelly.

A sign by the road informed us that the Thomson and Barcoo Rivers join near Windorah, to form – a creek! Cooper Creek. They say it is the only place in the nation where two rivers make a creek.

We had noticed, when coming north from NSW, that the Kidman Way in that State, became the Matilda Way in Qld.

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Matilda Highway information near Longreach. Flood debris at sign base

Refuelled Truck – 87cpl.

Later in the afternoon, we went walking along the footpaths, towards town.

Tea was broccoli soup and a Greek salad.


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2000 Travels May 20

SATURDAY 20 MAY     LONGREACH

The rain mostly cleared overnight, though the sky was still grey. I really did not expect that we would be getting these wet spells up in these parts, at this time of year.

After breakfast, drove to the main part of town, where we visited the newsagent, butcher, bakery and Tourist Centre.

Then we went to the Stockmans Hall of Fame, where entry cost us $17 each. Visiting this was the main reason we decided to stay in Longreach.

Longreach town started as a camping spot for drovers moving stock, by a long reach, or waterhole, on the Thomson River. In the 1970’s, an Australian artist, Hugh Sawrey, had the idea of establishing a tribute to the outback pioneers, settlers and battlers. The concept was shared by other prominent Australians, particularly the legendary RM Williams. The successful fund raising efforts of the founding group must have caught the imagination of Australians in general. Thus, this museum was built and opened in the 1980’s.

The Sydney architect who designed the buildings took as his theme the curved water tanks and silos of inland Australia. The building certainly stands out in the otherwise unremarkable approach to town!

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The distinctive architecture of the Stockmans Hall of Fame

We browsed displays for a while, then bought lunch at the cafe there – pie for John, quiche for me – and very nice too.

Then we did more wandering around in the exhibits. It was all awesome, excellent, huge, comprehensive – and so much better than I’d anticipated. The name is somewhat misleading – it was really about so much more than stockmen. It was a commemoration of life in our rural areas in past times.

As we followed the suggested route through the place we were taken from the actual formation of the continent, then founding by Europeans and the very early years, into multiple displays featuring the pastoral era of the 1800’s, then the 1900’s.

There was a full sized replica of a settler’s hut and a hawker’s wagon.

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Settler’s Hut replica; from an era when nails were not always available

We were really taken with a display showing all the different types of wire used on properties – not something I’d ever thought about before, despite experience with same, growing up on a farm.

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The wire display

The amount of information, everywhere, was incredible. By about 2.30, our brains could handle no more. This was clearly not uncommon, because check out passes were available, to enable one to return the next day!

We went back to the van, on the way extending our stay another night.

Watched Kieran Perkins swim in the 1500 metre Olympic trial, on TV. Impressive.

Tea was broccoli soup, made using a packet base. It was much nicer than it sounded! We had sausages from the local butcher, also good, with bacon, tomato and egg.


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2000 Travels May 19

FRIDAY 19 MAY   RUBYVALE TO LONGREACH   409kms

The day did not look promising.

We packed up, hitched up and got away alright, in the rain and mud.

It was a pleasant enough drive back through the range country and on to Jericho, where we stopped again to eat lunch.

Stopped again, briefly, in Barcaldine, to have a look at the Tree of Knowledge. This ghost gum was supposed, during the 1890’s Shearers’ Strikes, to have been the site of meetings from which grew the ALP. It was right outside the railway station.

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The Tree of Knowledge at Barcaldine

From there, we pressed on to Longreach, through mostly flat black soil and Mitchell grass country. The weather did not improve as we headed west.

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Threatening skies between Barcaldine and Longreach

Booked into the Gunnadoo Caravan Park, on the eastern edge of town, not far from the Stockmans Hall of Fame. Cost us $17 for a powered site. It seemed quite a slick operation and a fairly large park. Due to the day’s rain, it was rather muddy. We paid for two nights.

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Muddy caravan park at Longreach

As we only expected to stay a couple of nights, did not bother to put out the awning. We did have a cement slab where we could put the table and chairs, if it was fine enough to do so.

Tea was stir fried vegetables and rice.

I phoned K and left a message as to where we are.

About 8.30pm, we got quite a fright, when a big jet plane flew over us – very low! Only then did we realize we were right by the airport – and right under the runway approach.

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From Rubyvale to Longreach. Also shows the route when we went to Rockhampton.


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2000 Travels May 18

THURSDAY 18 MAY     RUBYVALE

I took advantage of the good weather to do the washing.

Then we set out, taking our solo traveller R with us, to sieve a barrow of wash at the Miners Cottage. But the man was away in Rockhampton. So we went to the Heritage instead and sieved a bucket each. We did alright, getting four cutters.

Took all our findings from the time here, to J at Old Micks. She found we had, overall, ten cutters, all small, which we left with her to be cut. We were to phone her at the end of the month, to arrange COD delivery.

John washed Truck. We packed up as much as we could. It was a good thing that we did, because it rained during the night, and the mud came back!

Tea was fries, with flathead for John and ray (Qld flake!) for me.

We were finding it hard to leave Rubyvale – it is a good-feeling place.


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2000 Travels May 17

WEDNESDAY 17 MAY     RUBYVALE

We were up early, to leave for Emerald by 8am, for bowls.

It was a pleasant morning. I played adequately. We met a local lady at bowls, who lives between the Willows and Glen Alva, the southernmost areas of the gemfields  here. She said we could go fossick on their place. Next time? We really do need to start moving west again now.

We used our meal vouchers at the club and had an enjoyable meal.

Refuelled Truck – now 85cpl.

It was mid afternoon when we got back to camp. We just lazed about for the rest of the day.

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Rainbow lorikeets, crested pigeons and apostle birds

At one stage, John asked me what the puddle was, on the van floor. Yet again, he had turned off the fridge, last night, to reduce interference on the TV he was watching – and forgotten to turn it back on. Yet again, I was cross! Most of the freezebox contents appeared to be still frozen, so I kept them and hoped they would be ok. But I didn’t risk putting the chicken breasts back, so they became sweet and sour chicken, for tea.


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2000 Travels May 16

TUESDAY 16 MAY     RUBYVALE

Late morning, we drove out to Retreat, to fossick again at our previous spot there. Again, there was no show of sapphire.

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Some yobbos from a camp out there hooned down in their vehicle, drinking beers. They said the gravel wash where we were was not the right kind. We had no idea how to tell the right from the wrong kind, obviously! They were very rough types. Said they’d specked a good stone, exposed after the rain, and sold it rough and were celebrating. I found them rather scary and was glad we were not camped out on the fields!

We decided fossicking was rather a dud, here, this time. It was not like when we had access to undisturbed ground out at Mt Leura.

Tea was cold corned beef again, and salad.