trip to esperance
Submitted: Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 13:56
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mim
we are going to travel to
esperance at the end of january and would like to hear from anyone about the best and most interesting way to get there.
we will be towing a small camper van Jayco type with fold out beds so not to heavy and towing it with a landcruiser petrol.
What is there to see on the way.
Reply By: Muzzgit (WA) - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:10
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:10
MIM. I take it you are travelling from
Perth ???
We are also heading that way on 26th of Jan. Normally we would head down to
albany then out to
Bremer Bay (half way to Esperence) but this time we are going inland. We have decided to go to
places like
Wave rock,
Pink lake and also see some of the wheatbelt we've not visited before. Lots to see.
Part of the reason I want to go this way is I want to take a bit more time, stop for one or two nights along the way and see a bit more of WA, instead of roaring off down the road missing all the
places between A and B.
Another way would be to go east towards
Southern Cross / Kalgoorlie and the go south from there.
Cheers,
Muzz
AnswerID:
145995
Reply By: mim - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:20
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:20
Thankyou Muzz for answering.
We were thinking of going to Bremmer Bay and then Hopetown but were not sure what there was to see on the way.
We haven't been that way before so anything would be helpful.
Mim
AnswerID:
145999
Follow Up By: Martyn (WA) - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 15:38
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 15:38
Mim,
We did
Hopetoun last year same time, great trip, caravan Park was great and very friendly, Fitzgerald Nat park is definitely worth a visit, lots to see, good
views etc
Bremer Bay also a good place to drive around, watch some of
the beach driving, the sand can be very soft people hang around certain entries and exits watching people attempting to get in and out of
places. We made the mistake of being close to Bremer New Years Eve, not really a family friendly place at this time. We stay at
Windy Harbour for a couple of nights and explore the local nat park (can't spell the name),
Lake Jasper,
Black Point etc etc all good four wheel driving spots. Have a nice trip you can't go wrong around that area. The Western 4WDriver mag has a South West Coast book out, we went on a few of those trips, good value and
well documented.
FollowupID:
399540
Reply By: The Explorer - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:38
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:38
Hello - A lot of nice bays with campsites between
Bremer Bay and
Esperance.
eg Pt Ann, Pt Charles, Mason bay,
Starvation Boat Harbour,
Munglinup Beach, Stokes NP,
Quagi Beach.
Get the Streetsmart Map that covers this area (Goldfields
Esperance) - it shows most
camp areas and spots to visit.
Goldfields &
Esperance Map
PDF download available here for $4.40
Cheers
Greg
| I sent one final shout after him to stick to the track, to which he replied “All right,” That was the last ever seen of Gibson - E Giles 23 April 1874 Lifetime Member My Profile My Blog Send Message Moderator |
AnswerID:
146001
Follow Up By: The Explorer - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:45
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:45
PS - if the coast bores you and want some additioanl "adventure"
check this out for some ideas
a href="
http://www.dundaspost.com.au/4WD.htm">4WD in
Norseman
Cheers
Greg
| I sent one final shout after him to stick to the track, to which he replied “All right,” That was the last ever seen of Gibson - E Giles 23 April 1874 Lifetime Member My Profile My Blog Send Message Moderator |
FollowupID:
399528
Follow Up By: The Explorer - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:46
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 14:46
woops went too fast...
4WD in
Norseman | I sent one final shout after him to stick to the track, to which he replied “All right,” That was the last ever seen of Gibson - E Giles 23 April 1874 Lifetime Member My Profile My Blog Send Message Moderator |
FollowupID:
399529
Follow Up By: Willem - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 15:58
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 15:58
Thanks for that link, Greg. What a friendly site! Unlike the
Norseman I encountered some 38 years ago lol
Have printed the pages as we will be passing through there on our way
home after next years Big Trip No 2! Will go and have a butchers at one or two of their tracks.
Cheers
FollowupID:
399541
Follow Up By: Member - Davoe (Widgiemooltha) - Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 08:05
Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 08:05
Might pay to contact the guys from the sight before visiting some of the areas. There are more big fires down that way. I drove to
norseman last night and the trees were still smouldering. One of the fires has been burning for 6 weeks now. they get some truly awsome fires in the area that are just left to burn for months
FollowupID:
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Reply By: Member - John C (WA) - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 20:18
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 20:18
Hi,
An interesting way to get to Esperence is via
Wagin, Lake Doubleyung,
Lake Grace,
Lake King,
Ravensthorpe and then to Esperence. The roads are good and there are things to see.
PS I have a BBQ just up the street from the
Wagin Caravan Park.
AnswerID:
146026
Follow Up By: disco driver - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 21:50
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 21:50
Hi ,
Lake Dumbleyung is full of water this year, went there in late Sept for a yacht regatta, great place to visit, Very good C/van pk in Dumbleyung.
Hopetoun is worth a visit too, especially if you are into fishing.
FollowupID:
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Reply By: Member - Davoe (Widgiemooltha) - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 20:41
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 20:41
The days on the south coast would be a good start. A loop could be good. get there via the south coast and leave inland via Mt ridley and then inland via
peak charles and the frank Hahn NP and
lake King
AnswerID:
146028
Reply By: Motherhen - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 21:05
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 21:05
Went that way in January. Bought 4wd days book from this site (have now lost it, darn); great book. One of our early stops was to climb Mt Frankland (north of Walpole) and a guy in the car park who had lived at
Esperance said there's this great new book you must get - and pulled out a copy of the 4wd days book we had already purchased.
Pulling a heavy caravan so didn't do the real 4wd stuff, so couldn't get to
places like
Black Point. Went through the karri forests, and to a few spots we hadn't been to, as much of SW we were familiar with. Went along the coast from
Albany, calling in at most accessible beaches. Stayed at
Cape Riche CP, community run small charge and basic only, but fairly full in peak season. Nice swimming and walks. From
Hopetoun, followed coast road. Stayed at Mason Bay, free
campsite again fairly full, nice regulars who summer there, limited facilities only and no water. Don't miss Cape Le Grande NP; again camps were full in January, so couldn't stay and do the walks in this
well maintained and set out NP. Went on to Cape Arid NP, but didn't go far due to sand tracks and pulling van. Went North from Condingup along Parmango Road (fairly rough) to Balladonia as Mt Ragged road apparently narrow and not suited to caravans like ours. Our previous off-road wind up Jayco-clone type van would have needed a lot of putting back together after taking on a road like Parmango. Get the 4wd days book from
ExplorOz shop and enjoy the holiday.
AnswerID:
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Follow Up By: Member - Davoe (Widgiemooltha) - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 21:47
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 21:47
I reckon you got the wrong info on the Mt Ragged road. it is rough in sections with
limestone but isnt overly narrow or small (have done it twice in my old camper) and shouldnt present a problem for your BT
FollowupID:
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Follow Up By: Motherhen - Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 01:30
Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 01:30
Thanks Davoe - we went with your notes on file, but as both roads were new country for us to see, we took the easier option. I know you said the Mt Ragged way would be OK for us, but had read reports of narrow bits, also i think it was the
ranger said there would be sandy patches - didn't want any additional pull for our poor overloaded 3ltr. Is there any loose sand? My nephew from the city went down that way a while ago (i may have told you before) armed with a book looking for serious 4w driving. Disappointed at not finding anything difficult despite the descriptions in the book, he said "they would call my driveway difficult and yours extreme", although it may be different in wet weather. He enjoyed the
views from Mt Ragged, and loved Cape Le Grange NP. I'm about to book ferry to Tasmania, so it will be straight across this time (
Wagin - Frank Hahn NP -
Norseman). We enjoy that drive and haven't been into Pk Charles yet. Depending on time left, may take a different way back (did
Norseman Hyden road on the way back in January). Have a happy new year. Motherhen
FollowupID:
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Follow Up By: Member - Davoe (Widgiemooltha) - Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 01:38
Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 01:38
No soft sand that i recall - certainly never engaged 4wd or let tyres down. and dont recall any narrow bits as the old camper was a narrow and low track detector. It would be worth the short detour to
Peak Charles. i often
camp there on the way back from fishing and climb it tin the morning before heading back
FollowupID:
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Follow Up By: Motherhen - Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 13:07
Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 13:07
Hi Davoe (and apologies to mim for the thread hijack)
One of our reference books was a BF Goodrich 4wd book, and it said "Track to Balladonia very rough, narrow, with patches of bog, sand and limestone". We discussed with
ranger at Cape Arid and chose Parmango road. What a nuisance i lost the 4wd booklet - it was such a good reference.
Our van is quite high and wide, so we had fun taking it into the Organ Pipes in the
Gawler Ranges - spent more time looking back and dodging branches to avoid the solar panels; caught a few twigs in the annex but we haven't used it to see what damage; just a small tear i think. Then when we got there we had nowhere to turn around. Managed a multi-3 point turn into the scrub (i was direction, not driving - can't back trailers).
FollowupID:
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Reply By: The Rambler( W.A.) - Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 23:09
Friday, Dec 30, 2005 at 23:09
Mim,
Don't know which way you are heading or where you plan to go but if you go through Walpole make sure you go on the inlet cruise with Gary .Costs about $30 but is worth about $300. Also visit Little Beach which is about 40kms East of
Albany.Between
Albany and
Perth The coast line is very specky so take the coast road and take all the roads that lead off to the coast and enjoy.
AnswerID:
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Follow Up By: Motherhen - Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 14:25
Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 14:25
Re
Walpole inlet cruise - I haven't done it, but my sister & partner from the city did and thought it
well worth it. The operator has incredible local knowledge and made the tour very interesting.
FollowupID:
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Reply By: Uppy - Member - Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 11:03
Saturday, Dec 31, 2005 at 11:03
Hi mim,We are doing the same trip in mid Jan.
Perth,
wave rock,Esperence.In a petrol patrol.We will be towing a box trailer.So thanks for the post it has been very helpful,maybe we can catch up some where on the road
regards uppy
AnswerID:
146078
Follow Up By: skarm - Sunday, Jan 01, 2006 at 13:10
Sunday, Jan 01, 2006 at 13:10
Uppy
Wife an I will be camping in
Cape Le Grand from 22 to 27 if there is room. Will be dropping kids of at Granma's in
Bridgetown and travelling across from there, staying at manson one night. If you are in the area look for Gold Nissan pathfinder with blue/aqua trailer. Will be good to catch up with a fellow ExplorOxian.
Regards Steve
FollowupID:
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