Monday, May 27, 2019 at 21:48
Candace, my wife and I drove the Gunbarrel in August of last year 2018 from
Carnegie Station, so we obviously travelled the section you have highlighted on the map.
I'm not great with my memory, but Ivan's assessment - "a dogs breakfast consisting mostly of washouts or diversion around washouts" seems to paint pretty reasonable picture. This applied also to a fair proportion of the
Heather Highway to its
junction with the turn-off to Tjirrkarli. The section of the
Heather Highway from the Tjirrkarli turn-off to the Great Central Highway was in really good nick.
Just skipping back a bit in the journey: the corrugations commenced pretty soon after we crossed the
Wiluna Shire boundary from west to east and were severe, relentless and inescapable to a point
well beyond
Everard Junction (maybe after
Mount Gordon), where the number of washouts increased - which was almost a welcome relief from the persistent battering of the corrugations. In most cases, people have created side tracks around the washouts. And there are huge numbers of side tracks, and side tracks of the side tracks (and side tracks to the side tracks of the side tracks!!!), where drivers have attempted to escape the corrugations.
We camped at the base of
Mount Beadell. The ground was a bit rough, but the sunset and sunrise were spectacular. We had a full moon, or close to, so the outline of
Mount Beadell against the backdrop of a very light night time sky was quite imposing.
We arose early to climb to
the summit of
Mount Beadell so that my wife, who is a keen amateur photograph, could get some shots of the sunrise.
To add weight to the 'dog's breakfast' scenario, in the last couple of hours before we reached
the junction of the Gunbarrel with the
Heather Highway, there were some short sections where we mused about whether they might not have some recent maintenance - even though the mix of hard corrugations and washouts (with side tracks around them) were still dominant.
Not sure this will help your cause, but I hope it is informative.
Ray
AnswerID:
625800