This Adventurous Age

Adventures travelling and working around Australia.


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2002 Travels May 21

TUESDAY 21 MAY     DUCK CREEK

Over breakfast, we decided to leave here tomorrow. We both feel we’ve had enough time here, for the time being, and it is time to experience somewhere new.

The ABC Radio weather forecast also predicted rain for SW Queensland, tomorrow, so that was another reason to leave while the roads were dry.

This morning, Mike took the new camp visitors over to his workings and they watched him put some dirt through the rumbler. I think the English visitor bought some opal from him. The group packed up and left at lunchtime.

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Track to Mike’s current mine, between old shafts

I made bread in the bread making machine, to test out the solar array. It does all seem to be working well now. The machine worked alright, making a 750gr loaf – from a packet of wholemeal bread mix.

However, cloud came across in the afternoon and prevented the batteries from being fully recharged. But there was still enough power to see the fridge and lights through the night.

A 4WD vehicle called in. He was checking out the route for a Kidney Kar Rally in August. There will be some 80 vehicles go through – that will really raise the dust! I would not want to be here then!

We went for a last walk – to the old cemetery reserve. There was not much there now. Just a couple of piles of stones that mark old graves. The original Cheepie/Toompine road was near there, but without an old sign post I am not sure we’d have picked it as once being a road.

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Cemetery marker

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Old graves

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Once was the road to Cheepie and Toompine

Mike was being really friendly again. We went and bought an opal from him – for $150. He did not have a great deal on offer. We felt we should buy something, though, in return for the campsite and his hospitality. He said there had been poor pickings, in the mullock heaps, lately.

I think we find more enjoyment in “proper” mining, like we did at Leopardwood, rather than in this fossicking about old heaps.

B and wife called in, and another miner, and we all had a pleasant afternoon, chatting.

So, we did not get back to the Gorge, after all.

When the visitors had gone, Mike insisted on teaching me a new card game, that he called Observation. It was quite enjoyable, too – I must teach John.

Whilst I was playing cards, John started the camp pack up. We did as much of that as we could.

Tea was soup, ham steaks and pineapple – very nice.

After tea, John had to go and watch a final film with Mike. I read.


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2002 Travels May 20

MONDAY 20 MAY     DUCK CREEK

After another chilly night, it was a fine day.

After breakfast, John got organized to go fossicking, as usual. He went out to where Mike was already at work in his shaft. John was soon back, saying Mike was stand-offish and said he’d work on his own today. John could fossick elsewhere on the claim.

John’s feelings were quite hurt, and he felt we should leave tomorrow. However, I thought we should stay longer and not appear to leave just because John could not go through the material from the tumbler any more. I suspected that, now Mike had bottomed the shaft, with help from John’s labour, he thought the dirt going up to the top would contain more opal, didn’t want John seeing what was being unearthed, and certainly did not want to share anything found with him. Thus, labour no longer needed!

So we just pottered  about in the morning, reading, sewing.

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Mike’s bathroom, amongst the trees, with camp area and road beyond

After Mike knocked off work for the morning, I had a brief chat with him – encountered him as I was walking to the toilet. He seemed to be in a better mood. Told me there had been mullock fallen down the shaft again, and the dust from that was affecting him.

Then B called in. We’d heard that there were the remains of some old police barracks, dating from the opal rush days, and asked him where they were. He said he was going that way and would show us. So we followed his old Landrover up past where we’d walked the other day, to where there were some old stumps on the flats. It must have seemed a God-forsaken place back then! There was a hand made, rough, sign, saying that it was an “historic site”. Probably put there by Mike?

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Remains of Police Barracks

We were not far from the open cuts where we’d walked yesterday, so we drove in there again. John went off to do a bit of fossicking, while I went off bird spotting.

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The open cut and intersects with old shafts

After much persistence, I saw a chestnut-breasted quail thrush – an elusive bird, thus much walking around was needed before I could get a clear view of it in the binoculars. Getting a photo was impossible. John abandoned the fossick and came out to join me bird spotting.

While we were both off, thus occupied, away from Truck – fortunately – C’s old Toyota truck drove in and parked near Truck. We thought he was checking up on us, as the handful of regular residents of the fields seem to do with any visitors, but stayed out of his sight. I found out later that he thought our vehicle was B’s, and wanted to ask him something. We were lucky to be out of sight and not get cornered for a massive talk-fest, as C is wont to do!

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Opal mining on the flats at Duck Creek

Went back to the van for a late lunch.

I knew, from the earlier conversation with B, that Mike had said that Bl needed bread. I had no idea why he didn’t take some with him yesterday. I think Bl had brought supplies for Mike with him – maybe he left the bread by accident.

B had said that he wasn’t going out to the Gorge, where Bl went to camp – I got the impression that he did not like or trust Bl. We decided we would go and take the bread out there. It might get us in Mike’s good graces, and would be a chance to see some new scenery that sounded interesting. Mike told us to call in to B’s camp at Sheep Station Creek to get directions, and told us how to find them.

We drove to that diggings area and found B’s place. Like Mike, they were going through old mullock heaps too and B was working down an old shaft. We had a chat and a cuppa with them – they seemed pleased to see us. They talked about their mining and showed us the mullock washing machine that B had designed and made. It was much better than the dry rumbling that Mike does, because more opal material shows up when wet.

B escorted us to the Gorge turnoff. It was only a few kms out. We followed wheel tracks and found Bl’s camp. There was a big open cut and a derelict caravan near it. That had broken windows and we assumed it had been broken into, at some stage. Mike told us later there had been a huge wind storm that damaged the van – the owners were in it at the time!

Bl’s camp was very isolated – just how he liked it. It was on a low rock ridge, overlooking a surprisingly deep creek gorge. There were still a couple of small rock holes with water in, at the head of the gorge, and a slight flow between them – seepage from a small spring?

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The Gorge near Sheep Station Creek diggings

It was really too late in the afternoon for decent photos – a pity, as the area was quite scenic.

Bl said he’d been walking down the gorge and that was really nice. We gave him his bread. Apparently Mike had been out to check up on him, on his bike, yesterday, and see where he had set up his camp!

We said we might come back tomorrow, in brighter light. That seemed fine with Bl – he even offered to run us down to the ford, so we could then walk the gorge one way.

When we got back to our camp, there were five other new people camped there too – two couples out from Yowah and their English visitor. Mike was being the genial host.

We chatted for a while. One man told John that he made his own spirits, in his own still. He gave us some whisky to sample – it tasted very good! He said it was really cheap to make. John got the name of the place in Maryborough that sells the stills – said he’d like to call in there when we are on our way south again. I was dubious – as far as I knew, such activity is of dubious legality in this country! I just hoped John forgot all about it, in the intervening time.

The whisky man was originally from Victoria, a retiree. He told us to call in on him at Yowah, if we come this way again next year. He also told us that he’d towed his camper trailer across the Simpson Desert, and seemed proud of this. It was a black mark in my book! One of those that churns up the dunes unnecessarily and makes it hard for following drivers!

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Another Duck Creek sunset

Our tea was a bit ad hoc. We had a big bowl of guacamole – my avocadoes were ripe and about to deteriorate. Ate that with rice crackers and biscuits and followed it with minestrone. That was quite enough.

It was a cold night.

 


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2002 Travels May 19

SUNDAY 19 MAY     DUCK CREEK

After another chilly night, it was cold again in the morning.

I got up about 7.30am. The sky was much clearer than yesterday – almost totally blue.

Mike does not mine on Sundays – it was rest day.

After our usual leisurely breakfast, I made focaccia bread, with a topping of onion, dried sage and cheese on top. With this local wood, it was hard to keep the coals sufficiently hot and the bread took a while to cook. It turned out to have more of a cake texture, than bread, but was nice eating. We had half for lunch and left half for tomorrow.

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Bl left about lunchtime. He was going to prospect and camp out beyond Sheep Station Creek.

After lunch, we went walking, out the back of Mike’s place, past the Telstra tower. Went back to an old humpy hut that John had found when walking yesterday. It looked like it had only really ever been a sort of lean-to, put together with scavenged materials.

Inside, there had been an attempt to line the roof, by putting netting wire between the rafters, which held up pieces of corrugated cardboard.

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Old camp

There was a lovely bird nest on one of the old supports – a mud-builder’s nest.

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Very strategically placed bird’s nest

We speculated about the ruin’s history; given some of the stuff still there, it looked like the occupant had intended to come back, but hadn’t – plates, old foodstuffs. There was no obvious mine or claim nearby, and it was in some mulga scrub on flats that had obviously flooded at times. It just didn’t seem an obvious place for a miner’s camp. Later, Mike told us that it was a “blackfeller’s camp.”

We walked on beyond that and came into another mined area – on the flats, as opposed to the area where Mike is, amongst low rises. Although we novices would have thought the flats unlikely, there were lots of old shafts here and some open cuts.

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The stony flats beyond the mining claims

In one of these, it was evident where the cut had intersected old shafts and tunnels, and that was interesting. We could see what was presumably the first opal level, where darker surface material intersected with the white sandstone or clays. It looked like there might have been a second level of opal here – towards the base of the white material. Some of the old shafts were at that level, as well as the base of the open cut. It was a big cut, but did not look like there had been any activity for a year or two.

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Old machine dug open cut opal mine

We saw a family group of Splendid Wrens. The male was only showing a blue wash on his wings and tail, not the full brilliant blue of the mating season.

It was an enjoyable walk. The wind came up during the afternoon, and streaky clouds developed, too.

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The old and the new

When we got back, Mike was about to have a shower. This seemed to be a weekly event – part of the Sunday routine. He’d had a fire going in the drum next to his bath house, to heat the water. I gave him some of the minestrone soup. He’d been out on his motor bike, visiting and just generally checking over the area, for most of the afternoon. I had gained the impression, by now, that he liked to know exactly who was on the fields, and where they were.

Back at the van, the butcher bird that visited regularly, was being very bold, even walking around on the table, right in front of me.

Just on dark, a red Jeep that we’d seen a couple of times in the distance, drove in and came over to us. He thought the Defender was B’s. He introduced himself as F – another of the regular inhabitants of the fields. We explained that we were tourists, not miners, so he then went off to visit Mike.

Out tea was soup, then potato and corn patties. The latter was John’s idea – for some reason he was feeling rather queasy and didn’t want anything more substantial.

There was a half-moon tonight.


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2002 Travels May 18

SATURDAY 18 MAY     DUCK CREEK

It was cold through last night, and the morning was cold too, and overcast. This made it too dull to mine.

I was on to the powdered milk in my breakfast coffee now – fresh milk all used up.

John went for a walk, while I washed my hair – in the van sink, with cold water!

I washed the van floor, then decided to make minestrone. It seemed like soup weather, for about the first time since we had been in Qld. It would use up some of the rather elderly vegetables, too.

After lunch, decided to go driving and exploring.

Mike had told us where there was a government provided bore head – for water for those on the fields. We drove there, in order to fill some containers to use for washing up, and the like, in order to conserve our good drinking water in the van tanks.

There was a big dam at the bore head, with an enclosing fence. There were some kangaroos inside the fence. We opened the gate and tried to drive them out. Two hopped over the fence – out the way they had come in! One seemed to be ill or injured, and couldn’t get up, so we left the poor thing alone.

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The Government Bore at Duck Creek diggings

Out in the open, by the bore pipe, there was an old bath tub for the miners to use – for a bath! John took the chance to have a bath in it.

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The bore bath!

We drove on, beyond the bore, on what seemed a fairly well used road; it was the main way to Toompine and Quilpie – not the way we came in on. We drove out about 28kms from Duck Creek, then went back we way we’d come. It was pleasant, interesting driving, through mulga scrub country with some interesting colour contrasts.

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Country beyond Duck Creek

At the bore, one of its mates had come back to the injured roo, so it had company again.

We gathered some firewood on the way back. John lifted up a nice dry mulga root log, and a lizard looked up at him! John put the log back down, gently, rather than take away its home.

There was quite a maze of tracks through the diggings areas, but we found our way alright. I thought I now had a reasonable mental map of the layout of the area. We had no paper maps to help with this process, and my Road Atlas does not even show Duck Creek. The 1:100,000 topo map sheet of this area is old and out of date.

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One of the local tracks we explored

On the way back, we could see where the neighbour – C – was working, putting up a shed, which was why he was raiding the old camp for iron.

Mike told us that C has his phone at the old camp, near us, carries the handset in his car, but has to come back to the old camp to make calls. His new camp is too far to link the phone to.

The others who live in these parts all regard C as a bit of a comedy of errors, it seems. Apparently, he fell down his own shaft, yesterday!

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Looking over the diggings to Mike’s house

Mike went out for dinner – to B and wife. Therefore, no pressure to watch videos.

The sunset was lovely; though the cloud had cleared somewhat during the day, there was still enough round to create a glorious sundown.

The soup we had for tea was great. Also had corn cobs.

After tea, sat round our campfire for a while – since John did not have to go out being social! That was really pleasant. We saw a bright, blinking, satellite pass overhead.


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2002 Travels May 17

FRIDAY 17 MAY     DUCK CREEK

Today was warm and a little humid.

Mike did some mining in the morning. Bl helped with the bucket raising. Some mullock had fallen in from the top, overnight, and this had to come out.

John and I sifted a couple of tumbler lots from earlier dirt, without finding anything of note, only a few small chips.

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At Mike’s current mine

Mike finally reached the bottom of the shaft and said he could see some opal bearing material. Whether this shaft will prove to actually bear any opal remains to be seen!

After lunch, I went for a walk along the dry bed of Duck Creek. It was an attractive area to walk, providing an easily followed “path” that took me through mulga scrub.

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The dry bed of Duck Creek

I discovered a water-filled open cut, behind Mike’s place. I was taking a photo near the camp, when there was a loud, close, hissing noise – made me jump and think “snake”. Wrong – it was a Spotted Bowerbird, in a nearby tree. I didn’t know they hissed, until now.

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A leopardwood tree

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Sign by Mike’s entrance – and the main road through the area

Back at the van, I made some guacamole dip and took it over to Mike’s house, as a treat. B and his wife arrived just then, so they had some too, as did Bl, who arrived back from somewhere he’d been, just in time.

Our tea was battered frozen fish, and fries.

John and Bl went to Mike’s to watch videos.

I had a wash, from a bucket, in the van. Then read. I was asleep by the time John got back from the picture show.

John felt that he had done his “duty” now, after three video sessions. I hoped Mike would be  satisfied with this! Still, it was not costing us any money to stay here, so the video watching was a small price to pay.


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2002 Travels May 16

THURSDAY 16 MAY     DUCK CREEK

Again, we spent the morning at Mike’s claim, with John helping him in the same way as yesterday. I was not sure that this was quite what John had in mind as opal mining! But I think he is hoping that if he racks up some brownie points in this way, Mike will point him to somewhere he can mine himself. But – going down the bottom of a shaft to do so is also not quite what he had in mind!

Lazed around the van for much of the afternoon, enjoying being out in the bush.

Already we have a very friendly grey shrike thrush that visits us frequently and sits on the guy ropes, top of the camp stove and on the outside table.

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Later in the afternoon, we went for a walk, out of Mike’s place and along the road track for a way.

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Duck Creek country, away from the mined area

Another camper – Bl – came in and stayed the night. He had been prospecting in these parts before, and knew Mike.

The sunsets here were brilliant!

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The discovery of opal and mining of the Duck Creek and Sheep Station areas was part of a wave of such opal finds – mostly of boulder opal – from the 1870’s. It is now known that opal occurs in a wide band of sedimentary rocks, stretching from down near Hungerford, on the NSW border, NW to Kynuna. The period from the 1870’s to the 1890’s saw a number of mining clusters along this formation – from here, through Quilpie, Eromanga, Opalton. Duck Creek mining started in 1891 – some of the opal found here was in seams and thus really prized. Opal mining in Australia mostly ended about the beginning of WW1 as European demand decreased and many miners went off to war. The revival of interest in opals and opal mining, since about the 1960’s, has led to renewed activity around some of the old fields, like Opalton, and the declaration of specified fossicking areas for small scale mining and tourists.

1997 saw Duck Creek and Sheep Station Creek declared Designated Fossicking Land.

05-15-2002 duck creek map