Joanna Spring - Great Sandy Desert
There is nothing like the feeling you get when realising a goal achieved. This year, for three of us (myself and fellow EO members
John & Suzette), that feeling was significant when on the 19th June, we found ourselves sitting round a campfire
Joanna Spring - Great Sandy Desert
some 400 km east of the northern WA coast. We’d slogged it through 4 days of treacherous terrain through thick scrub and often arduous conditions to reach our intended destination,
Joanna Spring. While the
actual location may not be as spectacular as one could wish for (I’m sure the brochure said resort and casino just over the
sand dune!), there is a real feeling of achievement in getting to a place that holds significance in the exploration of Australia, and a place that is certainly visited by very few individuals in a year, if not a decade.
This video takes us west along old Cut lines (more off track than on), past Aubs
bore to the Pegasus Drill
camp and
airstrip. At the eastern end of the strip is a memorial to Wells and Jones who perished nearby during the ill-fated Calvert Expedition of 1896 (See below). Some km further east we turned to the north for the final run to the area that
Joanna Spring is located and after some interesting moments of scrub bashing, arrive late that afternoon. The following day we managed to locate
Griing Spring some distance to the north west.
A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE ILL-FATED CALVERT EXPEDITION
Joanna Spring Route - 2009
Laurence Alan Wells was appointed leader of the Calvert Exploring Expedition in 1896 with the intention of scouting the areas left unexplored by Elder expedition of 1891. Amongst the party of 7 men and 20 camels was Wells' cousin, Charles Wells and second in command, George Lindsay Jones. On entering the
Great Sandy Desert, Wells decided to split the party. His cousin and Jones left the main party at Separation
Well to reconnoitre country to the west of the main party with the intention of a rendezvous in at
Warburton's
Joanna Spring.
Warburton had named the Spring, which had saved the lives of his expedition in 1873, after Joanna Barr-Smith, the wife of his sponsor, Thomas Elder. The Spring, however, had been wrongly located on
Warburton's map, and Charles Wells and George Jones were lost trying to find it in the fearsome heat. The main party, with all
Lawrence Wells' surveying experience, were also unable to locate the Spring. Several camels died in the heat while searching for it and on 31 October 1896,
Route to Joanna and Griing Springs - 19/20 June 09.
with only 160 litres of water left Wells decided to make a dash for the
Fitzroy River.
On reaching
Fitzroy Crossing, Wells immediately returned to the field in search of the lost
explorers and on his second attempt located the elusive
Joanna Spring, ascertaining it had been mapped 24 kilometres too far to the east. He failed to find any trace of his companions. Renowned bushman, Nathaniel Buchanan, led another search expedition and William Frederick Rudall, surveying in the vicinity of the
Oakover River, was also diverted to the cause. Wells undertook another, the fifth search expedition, and eventually located the bodies on 27 May 1897.