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Gwydir

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    • Day 194–196

      Bingara in Schleife

      February 12 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

      In Bingara an unserem Standort am Fluss hat es zwar an diesem Tag geregnet, doch war die Aussicht wirklich schön. Am Ende des Regens wurden wir mit einem doppelten Regenbogen belohnt - Da beschwert man sich doch nicht.

      Am nächsten Tag ging es weiter Richtung Küste. Einen ersten Stopp haben wir beim Myall Creek Memorial gemacht. Dabei handelt es sich um einen Ort, an dem 1938 ein großes Massaker an den Ureinwohnern Australiens ausgeübt wurde. Gräueltaten wie diese gab es bis 1930 zuhauf. Das Besondere an diesem war, dass die Täter tatsächlich überführt und verurteilt wurden. In den meisten Fällen wurde einfach über die zahlreichen Morde hinweggesehen. Unfassbar.

      Weiter ging es nach Inverell, wo wir mit Tom und Lulu verabredet waren. Während wir auf sie gewartet haben, haben wir erstmal einen Kaffee getrunken. Später saßen wir zusammen in einem Park und haben uns gegenseitig upgedated.

      Leider ist mir zu dem Zeitpunkt aufgefallen, dass ein Teil meiner Kopfhörer nicht mehr da war. Nach einer ausführlichen Suchaktion haben wir uns dazu entschlossen nach Bingara zu fahren, um ihn dort zu suchen. Und tatsächlich - am Flussufer konnte man den weißen Kopfhörer direkt erkennen. Manchmal muss man eben einfach Glück haben.
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    • Day 193–194

      Mount Kaputar National Park

      February 11 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 29 °C

      Von Park zu Park geht es weiter.

      Auf Empfehlung von Tom & Lulu machten wir unseren nächsten Zwischenstopp im Mount Kaputar National Park.

      Was für ein Ort.

      Wie häufiger in der Region zeichnet sich auch diese Bergkette durch die felsigen Gipfel und grünen Wälder aus.

      Nach etwa 300 Höhenmetern wurden wir auf unserer kleinen Wanderung mit wundervoller Aussicht belohnt.

      Und auch sonst ist die Region interessant. Die Vulkanregion zeigte einmal wieder zu welchen Phänomenen die Natur fähig ist.

      Der Ort namens „Sawn Rocks“ besteht aus Vulkangestein eines vorherigen Ausbruches und bietet einen ganz besonderen Anblick.

      Pentagonförmige Quader aus Stein brechen von ihm herunter und geben ihm eine einzigartige scharfkantige geometrische Form.

      Es sieht tatsächlich so aus, als hätte dort jemand Hand angelegt. - dem ist allerdings nicht so.

      Nach einigem Regen setzten wir uns dann im nächsten Ort in eine Bar, genossen einen überraschend guten Kakao und anschließend ein kleines Bierchen.
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    • Day 4

      Coonabarabran

      April 23, 2022 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      We left Bingara with no real idea of where we were headed but decided on Narrabri. As we travelled over the mountains we stopped at the Glacial Area. It is an amazing spot and you can actually free camp there.

      We shopped in Narrabri and moved on to a free camp at the Coonabarabran Golf Club where we had a Chinese takeaway from the club. A bit chilly here but lovely old golf club. We might play a few holes of golf in the morning.

      We didn't play golf, my shoes would have been soaked. It would be best to play in the afternoon, but we won't be here then.
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    • Day 3

      Bingara

      April 22, 2022 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

      We drove from Inglewood to Texas where we stopped for morning tea, then headed off south through Bonshaw, Ashford and Delungra where we considered staying for the night, however we decided to head to the beautiful town of Bingara. We camped on the western banks of the Gwydir River and it was running. Horses roaming free and quite a few people but no one on top of each other. Excellent spot.Read more

    • Day 1

      Mt Kaputar National Park

      December 14, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

      2 campgrounds, we stayed at Bark Hut. The other is Dawsons Springs. Well set out sites, plenty of fire pits, BYO timber, clean amenities with open ceiling, clean free BBQ. Walked to the Euglah Rock lookout & waterfall first thing in the morning (after a coffee of course!). We drove to the summit, stopping at 2 lookouts on the way, parked and then hiked the Dawson Springs Loop trail and the summit track. Dawson Springs campground is nice also with cabins to rent. Came across 3 rangers putting up a sign. And a family going for a hike/ride also. Not many people around...maybe because it's mid-week and not school holidays? Absolutely cracker of a day...blue skies and a slight breeze. Forecast is 27 degrees. Car went well on the drive here, impressed so far. Mt Kapatur NP only has an unsealed Rd entering the park for maybe 1-2 kms then it's sealed...alot of the walking tracks are sealed as well which we've not seen before. Plenty of flowers springing up due to all the recent rain. And lots of wildlife- saw some Wallabies and goats on the way in yesterday evening. Wasn't quick enough to get a photo though! Had a fire last night which was nice...making the most of it as not many places allow fires after this. Loving all the new gadgets Pete has organised- headlamps (so good for setting up in the dark last night), walkie-talkies (which I've been taking to the loo with me), Bluetooth selfie stick (from Aldi for $29) and the impact gun which brings the stabiliser legs down without any effort and so much quicker! 2nd night of steak and salad so did something different and sliced up the steak and marinated in sriracha sauce. Made for a nice meal 😋Read more

    • Day 3

      Day 2 Mt Kaputar

      December 16, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

      Had a great nights sleep last night...9.5hrs! Up at 8am, muesli and a coffee before setting off on the Kaputar Plateau Walk. 8km return the info board says. First stop - Lairds Lookout. Absolutely stunning views...we sat here for around half an hour soaking in the scenery. Further uphill was Rangers Lookout - not as awesome as Lairds but still nice. Lots of uphill walking...I was knackered...not very fit atm. So many trees down. You can see where the bushfire have torn thru the place and it has started to regenerate. So many wild flowers...really pretty. A sign read baits placed around for feral pigs...wish we had've seen one. Not much wildlife seen today other than birds. Thought we may have seen a lizard or snake but none around...12.72 kms according to my phone! Big day, need a Nanna nap 😴Read more

    • Day 2

      Mt Kaputar Day 1

      December 28, 2022 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

      Bit of a mission to get to Dawson Springs camping area.. 5km of gravel roads, then a very narrow windy road to reach the top at 1500m asl.
      Quick little meander around Dawson Springs Nature Trail & then sorted dinner.. it was super warm so we didn't even consider a fire.. lucky, because there's a full fire ban atm 🤦🏻‍♀️
      Had a bit of an issue with the kangaroos at dusk.. they have obviously been fed by campers & come in to be fed. They came up sp close that James had to pull alpha male rank 😂
      Settled down & had a good nights sleep in the van & a bit of a sleep in the next morning
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    • Day 37

      Bingara Riverside Camping.

      March 27, 2023 in Australia ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

      We finally pulled in at the Bingara Riverside on the banks of the lovely Gwyder River. We have setup camp on the higher part of the river bed. It rocky with large pebbles making it a bit of a challenge to bolt things down. Our tent screw pegs took several attempts at some places to run down between the rocks.

      We have decided to rest here today and get moving tomorrow. It's overcast now with some hint of some showers of rain. Seems no matter where we are for the next few days we might get a wet tail.

      This camp is for fully self contained, leave no trace campers. We have deployed our secret outhouse, normally packed in the new toolbox fitted especially for this trip. Stowing the toilet in this box ensures any spills, however unlikely would be only an inconvenience.
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    • Day 102

      Tamworth & Bingara, NSW

      May 31, 2022 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

      Tamworth was a delight after all the small country towns we've been to. Huge country town with all the shops AND UberEats ( 😍 ) the height of sophistication!

      The caravan park was lovely, lots of space for the mutt to frolic about. He made lots of Cavoodle girlfriends but seemed to prefer a huge white Husky called Ghost. Well, I called him Ghost. I think his real name was Sarg. Which does not work for me so Ghost it is.

      To the UK massive: I was today years old when I discovered the 'Travel Man' series with Richard Ayoade. I have binged all ten series and had to go for an eye test from staring at the telly for so long. Telly gold.

      We moved on to Bingara yesterday. Just a quick stop here as we're keen to get back over the border into QLD. It's chuffin freezing in NSW. Queensland, I take it all back - I love you!

      Bingara is right in the middle of the Fossicker's Way, a main road wending its way through gem fields and old mining towns. Bingara was a mining boom town of the 1800's, when gold, diamonds, sapphires and tin were found. The good stuff was pretty much gone by the 1900's, but the towns remain and struggle on.

      There's an eery feeling at the Riverside Caravan Park in Bingara. No one talks to one another and the permanents completely ignore the caravanners. Initially, I wondered if they'd all abandoned the town and headed up north for some warmth. But I did spy two of them today doing some gardening, keeping their backs to the park the entire time, pointedly avoiding conversation.

      In fact, the whole town seems to be full of slow, dull eyed droids with painfully nasal voices. It's really odd. I went to the local IGA for some groceries and it was like walking into a saloon bar in the old western movies, when everyone stops what they're doing to turn and look at you. If they had raised their nostrils to the air to sniff the new blood in town, I would not have been surprised.

      Sidenote; they had a deli with home made stuff so I tried something I can't pronounce that seemed to be warm quiche with veggies. This was a mistake. I was very poorly later that night and the empty streets echoed with the sound of my stomach emptying itself, as I took the dog for a late night stroll.

      Anyway, I set about googling the arse out of Bingara, wondering whether the town was built on an old Aboriginal settlement or cemetery - hence the ghost town feel.
      And I'll be damned if I wasn't nearly right.

      So, the park is on Copeton Dam Road. And under Copeton Dam itself are two villages, submerged under the cold, dark waters. When the area has droughts and the dam is at 4% or less, the remains of Copeton town (known as Boggy Camp) and Dasey Town are revealed, specifically their cemeteries. Some of the headstones and graves are perfectly preserved, despite being submerged for 100yrs. I wouldn't like to hazard a guess at their state beneath the silt and mud. I've attached some photos.

      There was worse to come.
      Just up the road at Myall Creek Station, one of Australia's worst massacres of Aboriginals occurred in 1838. Twenty eight Aboriginal men, women and children were murdered by twelve local station hands. The massacre is a harrowing reminder of early colonial violence and the only case, where most of the killers were tried and hanged.

      It was a cold, premeditated murder. The victims were rounded up and most were decapitated. It would have taken a while, as the station hands only had two swords (and one gun with two bullets) between them. When the crime was reported by a squatter, the offenders burned the bodies and crudely swept the scene - although burnt bones were found a few days later, by a magistrate.

      It is thought that similar massacres had been occurring all over Australia, as the early pioneers settled on land that had belonged to the Aboriginals for 60,000 yrs. As the newly arrived settlers spread out and grazed their sheep and cattle, the Indigenous fought back by killing the cattle and damaging their property. Remembering that Aboriginals were not given human rights until 1967, it was commonplace for parties of early white settlers to hunt and kill them, with impunity.

      The locals have worked tirelessly for decades, to have a memorial dedicated to the Myall Creek Massacre. I went to see it today and it was a sobering experience. There's a podcast to listen to on your way around the walking track, lined with memorial stones, telling how it happened in the voices of the descendants of the original parties.

      From memory, eleven of the twelve stationhands were rounded up and sent for trial. The ring leader, John Fleming, was hidden for two years by locals and never found or prosecuted, despite being identified as a wanted man. He lived into his 80's and later in life, sat on a town council, the board for the local school and unbelievably, was sworn in as a local magistrate. He married a local girl, raised a family and bought swathes of land in the area, close to the massacre site. He never offended again. Seven others were hanged for the murders. It was the first trial of its kind - and the first time that white men were punished for killing Aboriginals. It is believed that massacres of this kind continued until the early 1900's.

      I'd have loved to have hung around and done some panning for gold and fossicking for sapphires, but northwards we must go before my fingers fall off from the bitter cold.

      Off to Goondiwindi tomorrow - where Dick has been promised 5 acres to gallop about on and I have been promised a heated spa!

      Such luxury!
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    • Day 204

      Oakey to Bingara

      November 10, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

      We left Oakey this morning using plan C or D I am not sure which one. We have had to be very flexible. Kept an eye on road closures as there has been a lot of rain.
      Well it happened we were going to go out through Goondiwindi but not stop due to Covid then the Gore H'way on the way to Goodiwindi was closed due to flooding. We crossed the border at Texas and made it to Bingara. Expecting lots of rain tonight will have to check road conditions tomorrow.
      We had plans to be in Victoria on the weekend, but it may be a little later.
      Hopefully we will make it to Peak Hill tomorrow.
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