Rain, rain, rain and lots of it. What started as a light drizzle when we left the
Birdsville pub heading for our room turned into a steady downpour then an absolute drenching throughout the wee hours of the morning. Ali laid awake listening to it, thankful there is a tin roof and not a tent roof between bed and the elements. Pete laid awake listening to it, thankful the lakes, claypans and creeks of the
Simpson Desert are behind us. By sunrise the lightning and thunder had set in with a vengeance, torrents of water turning the car park at the motel to mud and pools of water.
Sunny Birdsville
Lots of standing water beside the road
Checking out, Ali eagerly read the freshly printed road reports and double checked the track and town names against the map on the wall. All tracks south all the way to
Lyndhurst closed. All tracks and roads north not mentioned. Phew. Looks like a trip to
Cloncurry is not out of the question. Leaving the mass of people trying to extend their tenure on a motel room (those heading south, presumably) and the ladies behind the desk phoning prospective customers to see if they would be taking up their booking (those heading up from the south, presumably), we left the motel, found the
bakery, purchased coffees and a couple of rolls for lunch, then headed north out of town in the downpour.
The gravel starts immediately,
well graded but very slippery with big puddles and rivulets flowing across the countless floodways. The first vehicle we came across was a police van heading towards
Birdsville. The driver waved at us in a friendly sort of way, not in a frantic "stop, you are heading towards danger you lunatics" way. Reassured we continued on. The next few cars appearing out of the stream falling from the sky were towing caravans. They also waved in a friendly manner. Looking even better! If caravans made it this far we should be able to get out alright.
And so we did. The track had long sections of bitumen, easing the strain on driver and car. By the time we reached
Cacoory Homestead ruin the sky to the north was a light
grey instead of dark charcoal and the downpour had reduced to a drizzle. A bit further north we crossed Eyre Creek, this time running steadily under the
bridge at the point where, according to the Queensland department of Transport website the road was closed yesterday. Our thoughts went out to the gum trees on the Eyre Creek bed at the end of the QAA Line, and the poor people still out in the
Simpson Desert who hadn't come into
Birdsville last night. This rain must be making life very interesting and may mean another couple of days camped in red mud. Wonder what happened to the Holden Adventra? Hope they are OK.
Cacoory Homestead
What would have been the living room
The back of the homestead
Our next crossing of the Eyre Creek, over a
bridge near
Glengyle Station, exposed an avian sanctuary. Parrots swooping and calling raucously across the stream, tiny finches collecting bugs and majestic pelicans swimming down the muddy waters.
By
Bedourie the rain had stopped all together, the bitumen settled in and we were on our way north through Western Queensland. There is not a lot out here apart from cows, birds, rocks and
Mitchell grass. We crossed the
Tropic of Capricorn on the way to
Boulia, heading north to
Dajarra and the right turn along the
Cloncurry Dajarra Road. This is a
well graded gravel road through cattle country with many flood crossings, lots of cows, a couple of kangaroos and four little pigs.
Pelicans on Eyre Creek, a thousand kilometres from the sea
More rain coming from the north west
Four little pigs
The rain persisted in fits and starts throughout the day offering a fantastic cloudscape, increasing in beauty as the sun set. We passed through
Duchess, a town consisting of a pub,
mine and rail siding looking forward to the gravel to end and
Cloncurry to appear. The final 40km was in darkness, Ali peering through the windscreen sweeping from right to left looking for cows and kangaroos, Pete keeping the car on the narrow road to the highway and safety.
We are safely ensconced at the
Post Office Motel in
Cloncurry, a meal and a couple of beers under our belt and a nice easy drive north to
Karumba tomorrow.