This Adventurous Age

Adventures travelling and working around Australia.


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2000 Travels May 10

WEDNESDAY 10 MAY     RUBYVALE

In the morning, i took advantage of the finer weather to do the washing. I walked to the store for the papers that had accumulated in our absence. I lazed about and read some of these.

John helped E, the park owner, unload a trailer full of wood and lent him the big round magnet to help him find some screws he’d lost from the chainsaw.

Our mail was in – a package from home containing John’s left-behind tools, as well as normal mail.

There was no contact from JJ. Not surprising.

After lunch, drove out to Retreat, to the south west of town,  and did some digging. E hired us a Willoughby and a half 44 gallon drum.

We put the gravel we dug into buckets and washed it at a big waterhole that had been made by machine mining, to the great interest of some campers who came in while we were there. They were camped nearby, in motor homes.

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Washing gravel with Willoughby. Waterhole made by past machine mining

We found a couple of small chips of sapphire, only. The late afternoon sun was not great for trying to sort the wash in. The angle of the light was wrong.

The mozzies were really bad.

Tea was pork steaks, with apple, and salad.


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1998 Travels October 9

FRIDAY 9 OCTOBER     MOUNT SURPRISE

We had to be up much earlier than usual for our trip out to O’Briens Creek. This “official”  topaz fossicking area is about 40kms to the NW of Mt Surprise, along a reasonable gravel road.

We had arranged for a lesson on fossicking for topaz, from Sam, at Elsie’s Place, on the fields.  He does the instructing on her leasehold. We had to be there by 8.30am. Starting at this hour made sense on a hot day. The lesson cost $10 each. We had no trouble finding the place, following the instructions given at the PO yesterday, by the lady who booked for us.

The fossicking is easy enough – just dig up the gravelly dirt, sieve it, and look. The hard part is figuring out where to dig, when you are on your own! Sam is an interesting old guy. He and John got on really well. After he had showed us the basics – and we had found a few little pieces – he showed us where he is currently digging at Tourmaline Gully, up O’Briens Creek. We had to drive there, following him, but it was not far. Glad he showed us though, as the area is rather a maze of tracks.

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Sam and Wendy digging for topaz at Tourmaline Gully

We finished with him about midday – by which time it was pretty hot.

On the way back, we called in at Diggers Rest, the main establishment out there. They hire out digging equipment and sell topaz. The owner has sold up and is going back to Cairns. He lent us a sieve. He has lots of fairly tame birds at the place, which is a bit of an oasis. He showed us the bower of a bowerbird that lives in the garden – most intricate and attractive, with an entry “pathway” of white stones. Apparently, every so often the bird finds some topaz and puts it there, so the owner exchanges that for a different white stone! We noted that there were oddments of other coloured things, discarded beside the bower. Some trial and error perhaps? There were also apostle birds around, out there.

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The bower of the Great Bower Bird at Diggers Rest

Back in the township, we bought a fossicker’s  licence, for $7.50 a month, for both of us. That will allow us to go looking for topaz, on our own, out there.

Fuelled up Truck – 76cpl. The price is dearer inland!

We went for a lovely long swim.

There were several people from the Savannahlander train, now on its return journey to Cairns, overnighting here, in the new cabins. They went over to the hotel for a counter tea. This is the first time this has happened – people usually stay at the hotel – and we hope this is the start of some extra business for Jo and Joe, whose enterprise we admire. I think the Savannahlander would be an interesting little trip for people to do; it certainly covers a range of dramatic country.

Tea was sweet and sour fish. I used a recipe for sweet and sour chicken to get the sauce and it was excellent.