This Adventurous Age

Adventures travelling and working around Australia.


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2006 Travels October 10

TUESDAY 10 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

Today the temperature reached 47.4 degrees and dropped to only 36.4 at night. Working conditions were becoming quite trying.

John was put up in the forklift to get some overview photos of work done to date.

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Pods 1 and 2 and kitchen/mess foundations; two central laundries in place on Pod 1

I was tasked with trying to arrange for the phone systems at RV2 to be fixed up properly. Had thought the recurrent issues were due to K’s not knowing how to work them, but seemed now that there might be a real problem. The expert thought it might be done by Thursday. Hmmm – if it was anything like my office printer…….

H, who had been on a break, arrived back from his home down south,  complete with wife M, and caravan, which they set up to live in, as we do. She seemed a really nice person.

N and S arrived today and set up their camper trailer not far from H and M – both at the other end of the donga line from us, and closer to the bathrooms. They seemed nice enough to me, but S already irritated John, as a lot of females do! She seemed like she might be a bit refined for this place. They turned up to dinner with wine glasses and a bottle of wine – probably not a great idea, as the men did not drink away from their rooms. In our rather rough outdoor dining area, it seemed rather incongruous.

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Fly Camp at dusk – home……..

 

Fly Camp at dusk


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2006 Travels October 9

MONDAY 9 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

The paper work continued unabated.

A couple had been found to work at RV2, doing the jobs that John and I did here. They were supposed to arrive this week, driving over from Alice Springs, along the desert route. They would be towing their camper trailer, so I hoped they would not need rooms, given the tightness of the accommodation. They were friends of wife of BB, so I hoped that would not make things awkward for we “normal” employees.

The lifting of buildings into Pod 2 had been completed.

I was asked to take a heap of photos of the cement paving plant at work, for HO to see.

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Mixed cement fed into paving machine. Only one string line needed.

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Making paths the easy way

John had to take the Acco truck into Hedland to pick up some metal requirements. Also needed were some very long lengths of steel. As it happened, the company’s prime mover and one trailer was in camp – its driver, Brickie (as in, thick as), was having a day off before heading back to Darwin. So R drove the semi into town. On the way back, it was coming up to dusk. John could not work out how to turn on the Acco’s headlights, so he used the CB radio to call R to ask him. The talk was picked up by some truckies on the highway, so there was some to and fro conversation about where John got his licence, etc! John replied that it was in Melbourne and in daylight, so they didn’t teach him about lights…..Kept them all amused for a little while. A bit later, John was radioed by R – who couldn’t work out how to turn on the lights in the prime mover!


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2006 Travels October 8

SUNDAY 8 OCTOBER     NORTHPOINT CAMP

Our day off. Been here for three weeks now – it seemed so very much longer!

Did the washing. Lazed about.

A bushfire developed in the distance – probably started by lightning. Now that we were into the storm season in the Pilbara, bushfires would become more common. The grass was dry enough to be easily ignited and for site spread to be a worry.

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Bushfire to the west

The new Fly Camp manager was quite concerned as night came and the glow from the fire did not seem to be all that far away. I suspected  he would be making more fire breaks tomorrow!

As the night wore on, the fire did seem to be rather too close for comfort and some of the men were mobilized to get some machinery ready, if needed, and to set out hoses and fire fighting gear. In the event, the fire may have been further away than it appeared, or it encountered a patch of already burnt ground, because we got through the night with no extra dramas.


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2006 Travels October 7

SATURDAY 7 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

Now that I’d been down there, finally managed to get a mud map of the directions to RV2 drawn and printed out to be sent to transport companies and subbies.

While verandah framing was happening on the fronts of the SPQ’s in place on Pods 1 and 2, work had started at their backs, installing the plumbing  pipe work, air cons and  hot water services. The verandah work was being done by company employees, the plumbing by subbies.

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There was an enormous amount of this work to be done by these two men……..

One of John’s many jobs had become to try to keep accurate records of what plant was on both sites, and when any piece of machinery needs servicing. It then fell to me to arrange for same with mechanics from Hedland. It was no use leaving the plant record to me – I couldn’t tell a fork lift from a bulldozer! Unless maybe they were colour coded? It was quite costly getting mechanics out to the sites to do the necessary upkeep – but such things were not exactly able to be taken into town to them!

K went on his week’s break, from RV2. P had been sent down there to run that site for the week, and R would run this one.


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2006 Travels October 6

FRIDAY 6 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

John had a Hedland trip today. He took in the two wheels with damaged tyres and bought new tyres. This is not the sort of country to be driving about in without at least one functioning spare – as was obvious from our mishaps.

I sorted future leave dates for some of the men and did Travel Authorization forms. Faxed a Progress Report on Milestone 1 for RV2 to HO. Started to set up a Documents Register for RV2 but didn’t like my chances of K keeping the relevant documents needed in any sort of systematic way – or at all!

Yesterday, on the site here, the men started work on putting up the frames for the verandah roofs that would extend along the front of each SPQ donga. That solved the mystery, for me, of why we had great heaps of roofing iron from Stratco, stacked up; since the buildings were all pre-fab ones, I hadn’t been able to figure out why we needed that. Slowly, the jigsaw pieces were falling into place.

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That’s what all that steel was for……

I was certainly still on a steep learning trajectory.


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2006 Travels October 5

THURSDAY 5 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

Today turned out to be one that would never be erased from my memory – and not in a good way! It did not go well. It was a comedy of errors – compounded by John’s idiocy and pig-headedness.

It had been arranged that John would set out fairly early this morning, in the Acco tip truck, to take some gear that K wanted, down to RV2. John had already been down there on similar errands – it was not new ground for him.

John  left just before 8am, after the gear had been loaded onto the truck by a couple of the men.

I was doing some paperwork, when the phone rang about 8.15, and it was K, asking for some more things – essential he said – to be sent on the truck. After some rather choice comments, R loaded up the items onto his company ute, and left driving, to catch up to John and transfer the items to the Acco.

I kept on with my paper work.

Then the phone rang again, some 20 minutes after R had left. K again. He absolutely had to have some generator leads. The man could not organize his way out of a paper bag! I explained that John and the truck were long gone, R and the ute ditto. All K could say was that he must have the leads. Like it was MY problem!

The only two normal  vehicles left on the site were our Truck and P’s ute – and he was doing more important work out on site than running around with generator leads. It seemed that there was nothing for it but to load up the leads myself, into our Truck, and follow the procession south! It was like something out of a bad cartoon.

I kept expecting to see both R and the Acco ahead of me, but was some 60kms down the highway, almost at the Hillside road turn off, when I spotted R coming back the other way, and flashed lights to make him stop.

It had taken him longer to catch up with John than he’d thought it would. I explained what was going on and he soundly cursed K – a bit more colourful language than I’d used, though! He offered to swap vehicles with me, but not to turn around and chase John again – he had to get back on site. I said I preferred to keep driving my familiar vehicle, especially on the dirt road section coming up. So we went our separate ways.

I did not catch John.

The dirt section of road along side the BHP railway seemed really long, and I started to worry that I’d missed a sign and turn off. I didn’t know exactly how far I should be going, just that it was roughly 60-80kms along the railway road. But, eventually, I saw a sign, in a dip, and a small track winding away to the left. I got to the work site about ten minutes after John – who was very surprised to see me!

We unloaded and had a quick drink of cold water from the site office fridge.

I managed to get a quick look at this site, which I hadn’t been to before. It seemed so much more isolated than RV1.

Then, as I was about to leave again, noticed that a back tyre on Truck was half flat – a slow puncture. One of the men changed it for me. There was a screw stuck in it – probably just picked up on the site!

John was determined to take a short cut back to the highway, rather than follow the BHP railway road back to the Hillside road. Someone had told him about this White Springs track – and that it was a bit rough. So there was nothing for it but that he would go back that way!

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Highway at left, railway at right; White Springs track ran E-W through here, just south of the Yule River at top

In vain, I reminded him about his recent embarrassing attempt to drive the rail survey line. It did not matter what I said, though. I threatened to leave him to go his own sweet way and follow the usual route back myself. That is what I should have done, but soft-hearted me finds it difficult to leave him to deal with his own follies, in case he gets into real trouble.

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A good section of the White Springs track

So we crossed the BHP railway line, where the track branched off to the west, me following the Acco truck. Not too far along, the track started crossing fairly the sandy and loose stream channels that fed into the Yule River. Did John turn around? No. Did he then get the Acco bogged? Yes.

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Bogged!

Fortunately, while he was trying to work out what to do, on this little used track, a couple of men in a FMG vehicle came along – possibly locals doing a heritage survey or similar. They used a snatch strap to pull the Acco through the rest of the river bed, then left to go on their way – no doubt laughing about the clown in the tip truck!

Fortunately for posterity, John had the company’s camera with him – normally used to record progress on the project. This time, it recorded one man’s lack of learning from prior experience. I doubt he ever sent copies of these photos to Head Office….

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John then instructed me to drive in front, in case he got into further bother and I had to go for help. He also said to drive fast, so he could keep up the revs on the Acco on any loose sections.

So I found myself careering along this narrow, overgrown in places, often bendy, bush track.

Next thing, another flat tyre on the Landrover. Staked on the narrow track, due to trying to do the ridiculous speed John wanted.  We both stopped – at least the road surface was firm, here. Of course, the spare was already on Truck – put on at RV2. There was nothing for it but to put back the slow leaking one, after using our air compressor to pump it up.

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With Truck up on jack, tyre damage was obvious

We continued on and soon reached the highway, for which I was very grateful. Headed north, with me trying to nurse Truck along a bit, and hoping the tyre would stay up enough. It didn’t. And was too badly damaged to try to re-inflate.

So, John left me with Truck, by the side of the highway, while he went to RV1 to tell R what was going on – no doubt an edited version – and then to Fly Camp to get the spare off the caravan to bring back for Truck.

I had no reading matter, no camera, nothing to eat, and soon finished what was left of the bottle of water I’d started out with this morning. The external temperature was climbing to the high 30’s. A few approaching vehicles slowed down, but I waved them on, hoping my work regalia made me appear confident and competent, rather than just a stranded, vulnerable female.

I had ample time to think very unflattering thoughts about stupid men (K and John in particular), pig-headed husbands, and how I would never – left to my own devices – have gotten into such a situation! I was berating myself for being so soft headed as to stick with John, rather than leaving him to try the track alone. The D-word definitely came to mind, as I got hotter and thirstier and angrier.

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Stranded by the roadside in this country

Eventually, John  returned in R’s ute, with the van spare wheel, we changed it over, and proceeded back to RV1. John had not thought to bring water. It was 3.30pm when we reached there. I was hot, thirsty, hungry and angry. That little jaunt had taken the best part of seven hours.

R took one look at my face, as I marched into the Office, and headed off to the far reaches of the site, not to be seen again for the rest of the day. Smart man.

Had my very late lunch – it had been a long time since breakfast at 5.15am. Went back to my paper work for what was left of the day.

Later, the company agreed to pay for two new tyres for our Truck – which I felt was rather generous of them.

John was not particularly embarrassed. He seemed to think it had all been an adventure!

The sunset was lovely – best part of a really crappy day.

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2006 Travels October 4

WEDNESDAY 4 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

There was a lot of the usual paperwork and tidying up of loose ends. As more people were working on site, there was much more detail of the work being done. It really was amazing how fast things were progressing. There seemed to be new company employees and various subbies arriving on a daily basis. At times, it took some effort for me to sort out who was who and what they were here to do, not to mention whether they were supposed to appear on my paysheets.

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Quantity of plant on site indicative of work really ramping up

Put in the weekly pay sheets. John had worked 77 hours, I’d worked 73. This meant that, in a week, we had earned nearly as much as one of us did in a whole season in our previous casual jobs!

R asked me to phone Darwin and chase up progress on some bar fridges he’d asked be sent down. These were destined for some of the men’s rooms, so they could keep their after-work drinks cold at Fly Camp as there was no refrigeration provided for such things.

The company semi/road train would be coming on a run from Darwin soon, with some buildings. An issue had arisen over this, because of differing rules between WA and NT. The truck would be a few cms outside WA regulations on length or height – in amongst R’s furious diatribe about it, I didn’t quite catch which one! That meant one trailer would have to be left at the NT/WA border, the front one brought all the way down here, the prime mover would then have to go back to the border for the second trailer. That meant an extra 3,500kms or so of fuel used and extra days of driver time. All for the sake of a few cms. However, they had managed to wrest one concession from the authorities – the second trailer could be brought into WA as far as Kununurra and left there, rather than beside the road at the border! Our federal system of governance often does not make sense.

Amongst the stuff John had to buy on his Hedland trip today were four bottles of Bundaberg rum! A BB order – think he is working very hard to keep the men happy.

PENTAX Image

A happy picture of us; would be a while before there was another of those……


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2006 Travels October 3

TUESDAY 3 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

Found out today that I was supposed to be keeping a Document Register – containing every document of relevance to the project, including emails and the like. Now they tell me!

With fortuitous coincidence, the remote technical guru had finally managed to get my computer and the printer talking to each other, so I would be able to make print copies of my emails to date, for said Register. Seems the problem lay in the fact that he thought one of the machines was a different model to what it actually was! Really? He supplied them. I wonder at the competence of supposed experts.

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Craning SPQ’s into position

I had to phone a fencing company to arrange for fencing to go in around the end of the kitchen complex to make a secure yard. I wasn’t really sure why.

Had to email HO to arrange  for $1000 petty cash for RV2, to be collected by John from a bank. K phoned to ask me to do that. Seemed he did not have an office computer set up down there, or he maybe did not have the skills to do his own communicating.

John had a Hedland trip.

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Taking some shape…..

Back at Fly Camp I had to make up 6 rooms. Would make damn sure that the time taken to do this went onto the tally of hours worked! Not fun when one was hot and tired and hungry.

Now that work on RV 2 was ramping up – we had eight workers down there today – the South Point Fly Camp was also getting short of room. With BHP’s current ban on trucking dongas down there, could not add any rooms on the company’s behalf, like had happened here. The guy that ran that camp had already given up waiting for K to notify him of our workers who would be arriving and wanting rooms – he’d already had some unexpected arrivals – and had asked me to try to keep him updated, as I did here!


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2006 Travels October 2

MONDAY 2 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

I had lots of paperwork to do this morning, catching up on what had occurred on site yesterday.

Had to write up an incident that happened yesterday, and contact the transport company involved, about it. There was a delivery of two donga buildings on one of the usual two trailer road trains. The driver managed to reverse into one of the buildings, after it was unloaded, and put a decent dent in the side. A dinged donga!

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Dinged donga!

John had a trip to Hedland. He had to return the sheets he bought there last week, because the beds in the new dongas  were king single size and the ones he bought did not fit. I had discovered that the hard way, when I tried to make up some of the beds. He was rather lucky, I thought, to be able to get eight sets of king single sets in the town!

I could now make the new dongas up properly, when they were needed.

Negotiations were under way with the housekeeping lady who did the cleaning and room work for the dongas provided by FMG for the Fly Camp, to also do the cleaning and bed changing for the company’s dongas here. I really did not want to be coming back from twelve hours in the office and then having to do that stuff. Turnover through the rooms could be quite quick, as subbies came and went.

Now that H was working for us, his wife would be coming up here too. It was likely that there would be some work for her too, in helping to set up the rooms in RV1.

Today was another big step in the project’s progress. A crane arrived from Hedland and began to lift in the accommodation  dongas for the first Pod – all 24 of them. Our equipment could not do this job without breaking up the newly laid cement paths. The cementing machinery could not do its work with the dongas in place. Catch 22! Hence the crane.

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Using the forklift to take a SPQ donga from the lay down area to the crane – driving blind?

R was really furious. He’d been down to check progress at RV2, where K was in charge, and discovered that the layout lines had been pegged wrongly. This would have created major problems had it not been picked up. I supposed K was the best they could do, but he really did not seem to have much in the way of organizational skills. R would have to do a lot of checking on him.

With SPQ dongas in place, I would eventually have to go round the site and record the exact location of each one, on a diagram, with its ID number. But that was a fair way off yet.

This afternoon, there was a steady build up of really dark storm clouds, that came in from the north west.

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Storm coming from the west

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Looking very ominous…..

Then there was quite a nasty dust storm across the camp.

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We all sheltered inside the office and waited for it to pass. The associated wind was strong enough to make the office donga really shake.

Back at Fly Camp, after work, there were more storm clouds building in the distance and some lightning evident.

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It hasn’t finished yet….

Someone who knew the region had told us that we were coming into the storm season now. The delay in being able to start the project meant a greater chance of being impacted by storms.

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Really clearly defined storm front passing over Fly Camp

 


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2006 Travels October 1

SUNDAY 1 OCTOBER     NORTH POINT CAMP

Our day off. It felt as if we had been here much longer than two weeks!

I did the weekly wash and hung it to dry under the van awning. There was a washing machine in the ablution donga that we two women were able to use – shared with men of course. At least, on days off, it was easy to get access, because just about everyone else on site was off at work. Once the men started arriving back at Fly Camp, from about 4pm onwards, the washing machine was in constant use.

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Washing day…..

We worked on finishing, as best we could, heat proofing the van. By now it was draped in tarps that John had attached to lengths of poly pipe that we rested across the van roof, and then roped and pegged down. Tarps everywhere! Even a big one he found on the roadside, on one of the Hedland trips, that must have blown off a road train.

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There’s a caravan in there!

John’s system was quite ingenious but took some effort by both of us to get up there.

We were really noticing the heat increasing, so trying to keep the van a bit cooler was essential. It certainly was not going to get any cooler for a long time.

John spread some gravel that he scraped from existing paths, to make a little side path to our van. It should not be quite as muddy then, if we did get any rain.

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Making a path. Note tarps tied to PVC pipe cross pieces on roof of van

I went for a walk around the Fly Camp, taking photos of it and the surrounding bush.

There was a Richards Pipit (bird) hanging around near our van, and I managed to get a photo of that.

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Richards Pipit

We were becoming used to the beautiful sunsets that occurred here, every night.

I was starting to perceive the real beauty in this country, which would seem desolate to some.

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