We drove into the wide street of
Isisford and were greeted by other caravanners as we stopped. “I’m going to pay for another week” one man said “Been here for three weeks already, but at
$9 per week you can’t get better than that.”
Note that while the daily fee of $2 per pay applies, the weekly amount has risen to $10.
This small outback town that invites visitors by providing cheap camping along the Barcoo River both in town and at Oma
Waterhole fifteen kilometres from the town.
Barcoo riverside camping Isisford
Oma
waterhole is known for good fishing for Yellowbelly, with an annual competition being held there each July. All amenities are provided in the town for campers including a
dump point and hot showers. As the sites along the river are on the black floodplain clay, a hard
parking area is provided near the Shire Office for campers to move to if it rains.
The Outer Barcoo Interpretation Centre features Isisfordia Duncani, a 95 to 98 million year old fossilised skeleton of a crocodile one metre long. Named after its discoverer, former Deputy Mayor of
Isisford Ian Duncan, the first fossils of Isisfordia were found in the 1990s in a dry creek bed on the outskirts of town. This was a significant discovery on a world wide scale. Isisfordia is the oldest known ancestor of the modern crocodilians throughout the world.
Fossilised crocodile Isisfordia Duncani
A complete animal was discovered with the exception of the front portion of the skull. In 2005, paleontologists discovered a complete skull from the same species which differed from the original specimen in size only, enabling them to create a complete picture of the animal. The discovery of the fossilised remains led paleontologists to believe that modern crocodilians first evolved 30 million years earlier than previously thought, and here in what became Australia.
Is this what Isisfordia Duncani looked like 95 million years ago?
Clancy of the Overflow Hotel in the wide main street features Jackie Howe memorabilia. Jackie Howe was a record breaking shearer in the era of blade shears.
We then went to
Isis Downs station twenty kilometres to the east of the town to see the unusual 52 stand circular
shearing shed. This shed was completed in 1914 to replace the 100 stand
shearing shed which burnt down in 1912. It is believed that 450,000 sheep per annum were shorn with blades at
Isis Downs. Station owners contracted a
Melbourne Engineer to design the new
shearing shed. The shed was hot with no breezeways so shearing plants had blowers incorporated to cool the shearers.
Isis Downs curved shearing board with overhead blowers
Due to the curved design of the shed, each stand has an individual shearing plant, rather than a number of stands being driven by a shaft from one power source.
Isis Downs Shearing Shed
The original power supply for the shed was from a steam powered generator burning scant timber and was later replaced by a diesel powered generator.
In its heyday of the wool era,
Isis Downs resembled a small village with staff cottages. There was even a school on site. The last 10,000 sheep to be shorn in the shed were shorn and sold in 2004, marking the end of 138 years of sheep farming on the station. Only cattle are now run on this large former sheep station.
Read more detail about this trip and see all the photos in our
2009 travelogues