This Adventurous Age

Adventures travelling and working around Australia.


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2005 Travels July 30

SATURDAY 30 JULY     PUNGALINA

Worked 6.30am till 10pm.

I made the usual breakfast. The couple man wanted eggs and bacon as well.

It was quite a flurry to get the lunches and smokos done in time. The men’s smoko was biscuits, date loaf. I made sandwiches for the couple and O – egg and lettuce, ham, cheese and celery. Added biscuits, raspberry slices, fruit cake. Had to make sure they had a water container, and a smaller one with the wife’s water, the tea and coffee makings for smoko, fruit boxes and fruit.

Once they had set off, I tidied the tents. A cleaned the showers and toilets.

Made bread rolls, gazpacho soup for chilling, likewise cucumber soup. Cooked a carrot and ginger cake and a double batch of Cornies biscuits. Made pannacottas.

Made the survey men’s lunch – open sandwiches, using leftover cold roast beef as I had done before, with a variety of salad makings. It could be relied on to present well.

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I made a batch of hedgehog. Trimmed the steaks for tonight. I had asked O to bring me some reasonably tender ones, this morning – hoped he’d managed the tender part! Did the other dinner prep.

Made the usual assortment of pre-dinner nibblies – really only for the couple, as the survey men tended to wait for dinner.

This was cold cucumber soup and little bread rolls, steak in green peppercorn and brandy sauce, with oven baked potato and green salad. Dessert was pannacottas with berry coulis – mashed tinned raspberries and strawberries.

There was no time for resting on these days. A came to help for some of the time and did cleaning and some kitchen hand work, which I really appreciated. But I really missed M’s help – she tended to show more initiative.

Again, our couple stayed up late, with him doing most of the talking. I could tell that O was itching to go back to the house, but he had to stay and do the expected host thing. I could not close up the kitchen till they had gone to bed, in case they wanted late drinks and the like.


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2005 Travels July 29

FRIDAY 29 JULY     PUNGALINA

We worked 6.30am to 10pm.

O arrived back during the morning with the supplies from the truck, so I had that to sort and put away.

It was also mail plane morning. Suspected it would be some time before I would get to read last weekend’s Australian, which came on the plane, as usual.

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We were expecting a couple in today, coming in their own plane, for five nights. They had visited here last year, too, so this was a return visit. I finalized a tent for them.

Did the men’s breakfast. Like yesterday, they did not require a cooked component, so it was relatively easy. I sent them off with biscuits and cake for smoko.

Marinated chunks of roasting beef for tonight.

The expected couple arrived, were met by John and brought to camp, settled in, and joined the survey men for lunch.

Lunch prep involved me making roti breads, boiling and mashing eggs to make a curried egg spread, mashing tuna for a spread, mashing cream cheese, chopped ham and pineapple together for a spread.  I served the roti  with these and the cannellini bean spread made yesterday. Made a green salad to go with this. I warmed up leftover Apple Danish and served slices of that, with the ginger cake made yesterday, and fruit, as afters.

I was hoping that the cakes I’d made fresh, together with a reserve of sultana cake, and zucchini cake, in the freezer, would see me through this period.

We sat down with the couple and worked out their program for their time here. They had some very clear ideas, due to their previous time here. She had some health issues and had brought her own supply of water, which I had to keep chilled and separate just for her. I felt some sympathy for her – not easy to be touring remote places, with unknown water quality, with such issues.

They would just relax at camp for the rest of today. Tomorrow they would be taken to the wetlands, Fern Springs and that area, with lunch out. Sunday would be down to Bathtub Springs, Bluff Waterhole and those parts, again with lunch out. I did like lunch out days – much easier! Monday they would explore some caves, Bubbling Sands and Croc Hole, have lunch in and nibbles on the Escarpment for the sunset. Tuesday would be either the Lower Calvert or Hot Dog Creek – lunch out again. O was going to be busy over that period, being the guide!

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Preparing the evening meal kept me busy through the afternoon.

The nibbles I prepared for tonight were salted peanuts, eggplant, semi dried tomatoes, olives, salami rollups.

Dinner – at 7pm – was the usual roast beef meal with all the trimmings, followed by an Apricot Cream dessert. Coffee was served with Pocos.

The survey men headed off to bed early, but now the couple was here, O – and ourselves – must stick around till the couple was ready for bed. The man was content to sit round the fire and talk – for ages. Talkative type. I hoped he might be more tired on future nights and turn in earlier!


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2005 Travels July 28

THURSDAY 28 JULY     PUNGALINA

Today, we worked from 6am to 9.30pm. It was still very dark when I headed for the kitchen tent!

Breakfast was the usual range of tinned fruit, cereals, toast, and I cooked bacon, eggs and tomato.

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The men took some Anzac biscuits and buttered date loaf with them, for morning tea.

I made a raspberry shortcake slice – from a packet mix, two pull apart bread loaves flavoured with cheese and herbs.

The men came back to camp for lunch. They had the helicopter in a cleared area beside the airstrip, near where their fuel drums had been put. They used their vehicle to ferry themselves between camp and the airstrip, so they were independent of our transport.

Lunch was chilled carrot soup, then bread pull aparts with choices of cheese spread, ham slices, flavoured tuna – they could make up their own choices. Then there was the raspberry slice and fruit for afters.

After the lunch clean up, I made an apricot jelly, for tomorrow, a cannellini bean spread, and cooked up some eggplant, for nibbles. There was quite a bit of prep to do for tea.

Pre-dinner snacks tonight were salted peanuts, celery pieces stuffed with cream cheese, kabana, some roasted capsicum strips from a jar, and olives.

Tea was sausages in gravy, a mash of potato and parsnip, a bake of tomato and onion, and sauteed strips of zucchini. Dessert was heated Apple Danish ( frozen, came on the last supply truck) and cream.

Sad news today, from boss A, to O. The Piper Chieftain plane, that had flown his group here, was no more. It was written off in a crash in Victoria, on Monday. Apparently a new pilot he had hired was doing his first charter flight, did something wrong, and the plane ran off the runway and into paddocks. The three passengers were shaken but not seriously injured. The pilot was no longer working for the company! But A was sad – he had been really attached to that plane.

O left in the night, to drive out to Wollogorang to meet the supply truck.

 

 


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2005 Travels July 27

WEDNESDAY 27 JULY     PUNGALINA

I started at 7.30am and finished at 9pm.

John took our Truck up to do the watering, and refuelled it. Had done 382kms.

The three men of the survey party arrived. They had a vehicle, which two of them drove in, and a helicopter. This had a device resembling a rocket, slung underneath it, which was the actual aerial survey machine. Apparently, it was potential diamond bearing material they were surveying for.

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Part of survey team arriving

The helicopter had to go into the Robinson River community, before coming on here. I wasn’t sure why – whether to refuel, or for some other reason. No one had informed the general community members about what was coming. Apparently they took fright at this appearing, thought they were about to be bombed, and took to the bush!

I welcomed them, got them settled into their tents, then served them lunch – on the table outside. Plates of assorted salad and cold meats. There were muffins (from my freezer stock) and fruit.

They went off after lunch, to start their work, and I got on with tea prep.

Because we were expecting other guests over this period, and they would overlap, I had put some thought into menus, trying to prevent too much duplication of meals for the longer staying survey men.

I made carrot soup to chill for tomorrow’s lunch. Made a fruit salad.

Served only a few pre-dinner nibbles – didn’t think the men would be much into these.

Tea was BBQ steaks, with potato and sweet potato chippies and green salad. Dessert was fruit salad and cream.

These men did not have to be “entertained” in the same way as other guests. They could be served their coffee after dinner, then left to their own devices. But they did need to get working in the morning as early as possible, so that meant early mornings for us, to fire up the donkey and get breakfast ready.

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2005 Travels July 26

TUESDAY 26 JULY     PUNGALINA

Turned the fridges on to cool down. Stocked the drinks fridge with cans of beer and pre-mixed spirits, and soft drinks.

Did a couple of runs between house and camp, ferrying supplies for the fridges.

I faxed the mail plane order to Tennant Creek, while I was up at the house. It was not all that much, mostly items that A wanted for the house.

I cleaned the showers and toilets. Swept out the dining tent and tidied it.

Baked a double batch of Anzac biscuits. Cooked a date loaf.

By now, there was not the same sense of tension about expected guests – we had proved to ourselves that we could do a good job with them.

John refuelled Truck – had done 342kms since last time.

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2005 Travels July 25

MONDAY 25 JULY     PUNGALINA

The campers left today. Their comments in the guest book were:

* Just bloody fantastic.

* Thank you, O, for the wonderful, unique, experience.

* Fantastic. What an experience. Thanks O.

We were gearing up for a series of guests and a long spell without a break.

I worked on finalizing the tents, ready for occupation, and preparing more food ahead of time. Made a boiled fruit cake, which should keep well.

John had to mow the camp lawns and rake leaves.

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John watering his corn patch by the van


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2005 Travels July 24

SUNDAY 24 JULY     PUNGALINA

O managed to coax Beau to bring her pups to where he could reach them. She allowed him to put them into a secure cage he had cobbled together in the house/shed, beside the Troopy. She could jump over the side when she wanted out, but the pups were secure. Beautiful little creatures. One male and one female.

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Beau and babies in a much safer area

I did dinner for the six camper friends of O’s, plus him. They paid for their meal – to O. We had decided a while back that $25 a head was a fair price for my incidental evening meals.

I had to fetch needed items from the house, in the morning. I got by with just the drinks fridge turned on; it had to be on anyway, in case the guests wanted cold drinks from it.

I served pre-dinner nibbles while the visitors sat round the camp fire, yarning with O. Nuts, semi-dried tomatoes, olives, fried eggplant, salami rollups.

Main course was roast marinated beef, with vegies and gravy, and muffin Yorkshire puddings. Dessert was pannacotta with berry coulis and cream.

This meal was becoming quite routine, now. Really, the only variable was the quality of the beef, and there wasn’t anything much I could do about that. Marinate, slow cook, and hope!

Last, served some biscuits with a couple of cheeses, and walnuts. This was served when they were back around the camp fire, having coffee.

The clean up was not huge, compared to when A’s group was here. The campers were not inclined to linger too late, so we got to bed at a reasonable hour.

 


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2005 Travels July 23

SATURDAY 23 JULY     PUNGALINA

We took our day off today, because tomorrow I had to do a meal for camping guests.

They were a party of six, again  known somehow to O, from his childhood home area in northern Victoria. He had put them in a site not often used – beside the Safari Camp Creek, but on the opposite side. We hadn’t noticed when they came in and hadn’t been told at the time, but I thought it must have been about last Sunday. They had been doing their own exploring about the place, although O had taken them out and about a couple of times.

We decided to try to find Ringo’s Song, out to the east. This spot was marked on the mud map of the place, and O had talked about it. He had indicated that the track out there should be dry enough, now, to travel on, but he had not had time, this year, to clear it of any debris.

I was intrigued by the name for the place. Apparently, it derived from when there was a mustering group camped out there – when the feral cattle were mustered, after the purchase of the place. The mustering crew were from the neighbouring Seven Emu Station. One of the stockmen – Ringo – had a guitar, and did some singing around the evening campfires. Quite a poetic name, I thought, and I was keen to go see if the place lived up to it.

Took the driveway track, then the one towards the wetlands, for a little way, then branched off this to the north.

We had to proceed even more carefully than was usual on the property tracks, because the track was hard to discern.

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Track towards Ringos Song

In some places, we had to clear light fallen timber from the track.

It was worth the effort – there were a couple of really pretty water hole/creek areas. I thought the first one of these was what was marked as Shadforth’s Camp on the map. This had a lot of water lilies growing on the water hole.

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The track went sort of round that and across a gutter like creek, then further on we came to what seemed to be more of a flowing creek, and presumed this was Ringo’s Song. But we were guessing, really. Could not discern a track going further on, though the mud map indicated it did.

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We walked around for a while, exploring.

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Admired the excellent stands of pandanus growing here, particularly a fan shaped one.

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It definitely was worth the effort to get out there.

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2005 Travels July 22

FRIDAY 22 JULY     PUNGALINA

O left before daybreak, with tractor and trailer, on the fuel drum run. The delivery truck would have dropped them off – just up the entrance track a little way. There were 6000 litres of avgas to be transported in large drums.

Mail plane came, with the small food order.

John’s corn crop by our van was growing well. The regular dose of “fertilizer” from our night bucket in the van, seemed to be to its liking!

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O got back with the fuel, right on dark. He had left instructions that, if he was not back when it got dark, we were to send out a rescue party! It was a relief for all concerned, to have the fuel all organized now, meaning the survey group’s booking would go ahead.

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Fuel drums on makeshift trailer

 


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2005 Travels July 21

THURSDAY 21 JULY     PUNGALINA

This was not a day off for us, but we went out to the wetlands for a while, in the afternoon, to do the monthly bird survey there, while we still had the time. I kind of consider this to be within the scope of our work, rather than leisure. Who knows what we might find, that would bring bird watchers flocking?

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Courtship bower of Great Bower Bird

The lake had shrunk quite noticeably – what was a wide area of mud was now dry, powdery dust.

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Shrinking wet lands