This Adventurous Age

Adventures travelling and working around Australia.


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2005 Travels April 4

MONDAY 4 APRIL     ADELS GROVE

Today was worth a special write up, for a couple of happenings:

Boss R and the chopper pilot headed off to Darwin for the week of the annual Savannah Guide school. The Savannah Guide Association is a network of tour and accommodation operators, across northern Qld and NT. They have a heavy emphasis on conservation and responsible access to the special places of the region.

Our future employer phoned, as did the Pungalina manager O. The latter had been in Melbourne over Easter and then went on to Brisbane. He was picking up canoes and a boat in Brisbane and driving through on Saturday 9th. We arranged to rendezvous with him at Hells Gate Roadhouse, then, and follow him in to Pungalina. He said that the Gulf Track had a bad washout at Robinson River, which was limiting through traffic, but that the section we would be on, to the Pungalina turn off, would be do-able.

So – that put a definite date on when we would finish here, and move on to the next adventure.

I was really pleased, though, that we had done these few weeks here – it had been a different insight, being here at this time of year.

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Lawn Hill Creek at a somewhat higher level than we had seen before


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2005 Travels March 31-April 5

THURSDAY 31 – TUESDAY 5 APRIL     ADELS GROVE

I was mostly on kitchen duties through this period. I found it quite enjoyable. The boss was responsible for the meals, for the most part. I was being kitchen hand, doing lunches for staff and any visitors who wanted same, making desserts, salads and the like. The numbers were small, so it was a chance to be a bit creative. I think the boss was pleased to have me as backup in the kitchen.

Because of the hot weather and small numbers, I was able to feature salads in the meals more than was usual here. They were fun to make: coleslaw, potato salad, fancy lettuce based platters and the like. I quite often assembled fruit platters for dessert, or made fresh fruit salads, occasionally trifle.

It seemed to be cooling down somewhat, especially at night. Or maybe we were just acclimatizing.

John was on canoes throughout this period. R, who preferred to do this job, had hurt his back before Easter, and John was the most experienced person to replace him.

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X and Y were proving to be pretty useless. They religiously took two half hour smokos each day and an hour for lunch. Longer, if they could sneak it. She, in particular, sneaked off down to their van often during the day. She was very good at hiding from work, or dragging out the few jobs she didn’t object to. I found her a nasty person, too. She definitely did not have the pleasant manner needed to be on Reception! They did not pitch in and help with the dishes in the evening, either, in proper Adels style. He seemed to be obsessed with food – ate hugely. He was always on the lookout to snaffle the best leftovers, and prowled the fridge, freezer and the dry store! I would quite often go to put out food left from the previous evening’s meal, for the staff lunches – only to find that he’d raided the fridges at some stage through the morning and eaten the lot.

Friend F from Griffith  phoned one night. He and V would  be here in May. The boss would like them here sooner. I suspected  she wanted to get rid of X and Y as soon as she could. I had a feeling they would ask for more pay, once we had gone and there would be only L and R left. They were always moaning about the pay and conditions, and trying to get us onside about how bad it all was – which we did not agree with at all. Definitely not the sort of staff one wanted. It certainly brought home how much remote places like this can find it hard to obtain really good seasonal staff. It was always my view that we worked, in part, for the experience itself, and the chance to explore where tourists could not go. It was not just about salary and rigid conditions.

I knew that X and Y had not yet visited the National Park, at the time we arrived. But I also noticed that they avoided doing so, on their days off. Hmmm…..

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Mini rapids on Lawn Hill Creek


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2005 Travels March 25-29

FRIDAY 25 – TUESDAY 29 MARCH     ADELS GROVE

This was the Easter period.

Advance bookings had been poor for this period. Perhaps people had been waiting to see what the weather would do – especially with that cyclone scare earlier in the month. But then they came – in heaps, for DBB accommodation. All the hire tents were used. There were lots in the campground too.

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Twp of the smaller campsites that overlooked the Grove

A lot of the visitors at that time of year were locals from Mt Isa and Cloncurry.

So, it turned out to be a very good start to the season.

I did quite a bit of kitchen hand work and assisting the boss with cooking. They did not as yet, have a cook appointed for the season. X refused to have anything at all to do with food or the kitchen. She really was too precious for words.

I was rostered on the tent housekeeping and laundry sometimes, too. All quite routine tasks for me, given the prior experience. It was very hot and airless working in the tents though, so not very pleasant.

John was rostered on the canoe hire at the National Park, across the whole period, which really pleased him.

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Canoe damage caused by dragging canoes around Indarri Falls

There was a new Head Ranger at the National Park – a lady from down south. When John brought this news back, one afternoon, Y seemed most taken aback. Seemed he knew her from somewhere. From his reaction, we suspected there was some history there!

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The children’s swimming area