• Ord River Cruise

    2023年6月22日, オーストラリア ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    This was one of the highlights of the trip because of the tour guide and his sense of humour and the beautiful scenery in the area.
    Freshwater crocodiles, fruit bats 🦇, fish, lots of native birdlife and some amazing colours and rock formations.
    The Ord river is the centre of a massive irrigation project fed directly from Lake Argyle which has something like 65 times the water of Sydney harbour.

    The Ord River is a 651-kilometre long (405 mi) river in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. The river's catchment covers 55,100 square kilometres (21,274 sq mi).

    The Ord River Irrigation Scheme was built in stages during the 20th century. Australia's largest artificial lake by volume, Lake Argyle, was completed in 1972. It has not been economically successful; $1.45 billion has been spent on the Ord Irrigation Scheme for a return of 17 cents on the dollar, and only 260 jobs created.

    The lower reaches of the river support an important wetland area known as the Ord River Floodplain, a protected area that contains numerous mangrove forests, lagoons, creeks, flats and extensive floodplains.

    The traditional owners are the Miriwoong and Gajerrong peoples who have inhabited the area for thousands of years and know the Ord River as Goonoonoorrang. In a letter to the Surveyor General, dated 12 October 1959, Louise Gardiner, Secretary of the Nomenclature Advisory Committee wrote: "'Cununurra'...means 'Black Soil'. It is the native name for Ord River. Perhaps it may be the native name for any big river, but according to Mary Durack it is definitely the name for the 'Ord'."
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