The Pinnacle Desert. |
The Pinnacle Desert is all these rock structures that look like weird fingers pointing out of the sand, in fact the Aboriginal stories are that they are fingers of the dead trying to drag people down. No-one knows how they are formed; trees that have been fossilised by sand is the most popular answer at the moment.
Heading up to Kalbari National Park afterwards, camped and readied ourselves for the first day of proper hiking. Our first site was the Mushroom Rock loop walk which want right down to the sea, you could climb up the rocks and watch the sea crash about, brilliant. Also got to see the first wild red kangaroo. Then we moved onto the Nature's Window walk, 8km up and down 300m high gorge. It was beautiful, scrambling up the sides of gorges, swimming in the rivers, saw wallabies and kangaroos, trapdoor spiders and amazing sights.
Nature's Window. |
The lost path... |
Coral Bay was packed full of hippies, divers and general travellers. We decided on a manta ray dive and snorkel over the Ningaloo Reef. It was amazing, we saw huge 5-7m manta rays feeding off the bottom doing enormous loop-de-loop's, also saw sea turtles, coral and we had a stalker fish who we named Bob. All manta rays have different markings on their underside, like a fingerprint, so each of the one's we saw we could then search for back on the ship's log.
Leaving Coral Bay we moved onto Karijini National Park/Tom Price, en route blowing out a tyre that took a lot of muscle to change it. Karijini was the closest I'd come so far to the wild life, camping in the National Park I saw red back spiders, other spiders I couldn't name but ran away from, huge biting ants, all sorts of animals moving around in the night and termite mounds taller than me. Our first walk through the park was the Kalamina Gorge, we had to cling to the rock faces at parts but the contrast of the red rock and the turquoise water was stunning. We went swimming in the Fortescue Falls and Circular Falls to cool down, it's amazing to be able to swim under waterfalls and dry off in the sun.
Towed... |
This was our final stretch to Darwin, our car was fixed and things were looking up after a stressful few days.
Wangi Falls. |
Moving on up to Katherine, we watched the last match of the State of Origin, QLD won 34-22 much to Amanda's annoyance and saw lots of snakes, wold hogs and cows on the roads as well as a toppled over road train which was pretty scary, luckily no-one was hurt. In Katherine we went to the hot springs for a morning swim which was lovely, even if the crocodile signs were a bit of-putting! Leaving Alix in Katherine with relatives we headed onto Litchfield National Park for our final hike and camp. Litchfield was possible the best one yet, we walked the Walker Creek path, saw the Wangi Falls and the rainforest walk, Tolmer Falls and Buley Rockholes and Florence Falls. Swimming at Florence Falls was breathtaking, a huge waterfall you could swim straight under and look up.
Florence Falls. |
Getting up early the next day we saw the sun rise over the Magnetic Termite Mounds, looking like huge tombstones all lined up North to South. It was a lovely start to the last real day of our road trip.
Reaching Darwin in about an hour, camped and headed to Mindil Beach to watch a tinnie boat race and do some shopping round the markets. Meeting up with Alix again we had dinner, watched the sun set on the beach and headed back to camp for Lucie to pack for her flight in the evening. With Lucie leaving in the evening, Victoria the following day and Alix the day after it was back to Amanda and I within two days, it was sad but nice to get some time together before we all left off. I was headed back to Melbourne via some friends in Wollongong and Amanda was going down to Alice Springs and over to Cairns.
It was an amazing trip, more than I can fill in on here and would recommend it to anyone as a way to see a country outside of the tourist spots. If you're going to do it anywhere you might as well chose Australia, it's so different and varied you can see a completely different place every day.
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