Near Everard Junction
Day 5 - Tuesday 26/6/01
Start - Mingkili Claypan
Stop -
Camp BeadellTrip Odometer - 147.6km
Stopped time - 3.09hrs
Moving average - 44.6km/hr
Moving time - 3.18hrs
Max speed - 6.28hrs
We phoned Linda this morning on the Radphone to get her to arrange a tyre for us to pick up in
Alice Springs. We didn’t want to take our chances on the right tyre size/type being available on the only day we’d be there. We bought our Coopers tyres from Richard’s Tyrepower in Osborne Park,
Perth so Linda only had to ring him. Coopers offer a written guarantee for 80,000km on the ST tyres we bought and we felt it must have been a faulty tyre to not have held up the last 5 days (they were only fitted a few days before we left).
We eventually lifted
camp at 9.23am. Just one hour, 53km later we made
Geraldton Bore – an excellent
campsite. There is fresh
drinking water at the bottom of the
bore but you need to take your own string/twine etc to reach it. Water Depth 16m. New
Bore Depth 42m cased.
At the 78.8km mark from the claypan are some more possible camps and after 85km you meet
Everard Junction but there is not a tree or
clearing in site suitable for camping. We sat right on
the junction with our picnic rug and had cruskits and cheese for lunch.
It was here we encountered a convoy of 2 vehicles – the first we’d seen since leaving
Wiluna. They told of rough conditions and great
wildflowers heading east.
Great views of Mt Gordon
9km past
the junction we came across great
views of Mt
Gordon so we stopped for photography and a walk. There are
great camps at the base of the mountain and wheel tracks to the top, which is pretty lazy and unthoughtful as driving on the mountain will just cause undue erosion. There are actually 2 small mountains together so an
overnight camp and a walk to both would be ideal, however we needed to keep moving.
From here on we found amass of
wildflowers. It took us about an hour and a half to make the journey from
Everard Junction to Mt Beadell and Monument and we set
camp just 6km further on at
Camp Beadell. As we stepped out of the car we heard a distinctive “hissing” coming from the front left tyre – we had staked it coming into
camp by picking up a wood chip. There was little choice other than to perform a
puncture repair using our kit from Tyre Pliers. It was only a small hole but just outside the tread on the sidewall. Another Coopers hit the dust! If that repair didn’t hold we’d have to use our last spare before we’d hardly begun the Gunbarrell. There was a lot of rough conditions ahead of us so we weren’t’ too pleased.
We also had to contend with an over-inquisitive
dingo prowling the
camp. He kept coming back, each time a little closer and the Azaria stories in our minds, whatever our beliefs, encouraged us to keep a light on the tent while Leah slept with our chairs facing it and hurled stones at the
dingo every time we came back. We suspect that other campers have been feeding him as it was not only game, but very healthy looking.