Heading west, on the way
home. An easy start today, across to
Burketown from
Karumba - the 296km trip made 40km longer due to a detour just out of
Normanton. Looks like the local council is doing
bridge or ford work on the Bynoe and
Flinders river crossings. The detour takes us 60km south back down the Burke Developmental Road, turning right and back north through cattle stations to pick up the
Savannah Way west of the river crossings. The detour track is a dark
grey clay-like surface, easy on the car. Lots of gates to open and close, and lots of cows looking a bit startled at the stream of traffic that has invaded their paddocks.
A disappointing start to the Savannah Way part of our trip
The map at the road closure showed us the way
The detour was actually a pretty decent road ...
The
Savannah Way to
Leichhardt Falls is
well graded,
well formed and quite busy. Lots of cars towing caravans heading east towards us, we also overtook a few cars towing an assortment of trailers, boats or caravans (not at the same time...). A pair of kangaroos bounced across the track in front of us, Pete slammed on the brakes but started to skid so eased off. One kangaroo cleared the front, the second making a heroic last minute evasive turn as the front wheel skimmed past. No thump, and Pete saw it hop rapidly back onto the bush but we both reckon it must have left hairs on the bull bar.
... but would be an interesting drive after heavy rain
Beware of car-eating cows
The white gums were magnificent in the sunlight
Leichhardt Falls is dry apart from a couple of big pools caught in the deep crevices between rocks. Big white gums and paperbarks line the edges, one gum hosting a large flock of corellas squabbling noisily amongst themselves. The
rock formation of the river bed is amazing; the falls must be spectacular when water is flowing.
Another white gum, this one near the Leichardt River crossing
There was some water in the Leichardt but not enough to flow over the falls
A tree full of corellas
Leichardt Falls would be spectacular when the water is flowing
This log could have come from miles upstream
One of the last remaining pools at Leichardt Falls until the next wet season
From the falls it is an almost dead straight bitumen road all the way to
Burketown over the flat savannah plains after which the route is named. Friday night at the
Burketown Hotel for us, tomorrow will be long day. We hope to make it to
Borroloola but will
camp on the track if we don’t make it that far.