Travelling after COVID 2021

May - November 2021
A 180-day adventure by The Gypsies Read more
  • 30footprints
  • 1countries
  • 180days
  • 217photos
  • 36videos
  • 4.0kkilometers
  • 959kilometers
  • Day 1

    Denham WA

    May 6, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    WELL finally back on the road 😃😃
    Could have waited to have my birthday with my family but hey I’ve got better things to do 😁😁. As indicated it’s May and getting far to cold for this old black duck!! so I am heading north for the warmer weather. Bess can’t get away for another month ( grandies and that sort of stuff ) so I’m going to a fishing spot I have wanted to go to for a while , 🎣, only got a month but that will have to do 🥲. It’s 900k away , in Shark Bay just above a town called Denham, so I pushed along and got there in 5 days 😅. Well what a great spot! Got my camp set up and settled in for a very tiring month. I even had a spot out in front of my camp where I could put my chair with a view of the bay and watched dolphins,turtles, the odd shark and lots and lots of fish. I could even watch sun rises and sun sets ( not to many rises as they happen quite early I understand) with wine 🍷 in hand of course.
    I even caught fish 🎣 off the beach and from my kayak, as well as a few squid for good measure. I ate like a king. I had lots of late starts with early finishes, as you could imagine this sort of life is really tough as you will see in the photos. Only got towed once in my kayak while fishing, don’t know what it was as I couldn’t get close enough to see (but it is shark bay ) so once I felt like we were going up on to a plane it was time to cut the line and start heading back as by then I was about 2k out to sea. I also had time to bake a couple of loaves of sourdough bread ( see photos ) using a starter Bess’s sister in-law gave me and very very nice it was, fresh fish and fresh bread. 😎😎
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  • Day 5

    More photos of fishing trip

    May 10, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C
  • Day 41

    From Shark Bay to Mt Augustus

    June 15, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    Sadly my month was up so left Francois Peron national park near Denham and headed to Carnarvon to pick Bess up and continue our trip north to warmer weather. We spent 4 days in Carnarvon doing my washing ( thanks darling ) and loading the truck up for the next journey. We headed inland ( east) to Mt Augustus. Some where in our planing we had the bright idea to climb it ( dumb real dumb). Well a couple of days travelling another day acclimatising and up we went, 660m. It was 5 and half hours return and we both pulled up surprisingly OK. A fantastic view from the top and a very interesting walk through several different flora’s. We were in winter woollies the whole climb which is interesting as 3 people have died last year climbing this hill from heat exhaustion and lack of water. It was late September. This is the biggest monolith in the world, so another bucket tick. Eyres rock is only the 3rd biggest with the two biggest residing in WA and I have climbed all three 😎😎😎Read more

  • Day 43

    North to Camballin

    June 17, 2021 in Australia ⋅ 🌙 13 °C

    We left Mt Augustus and traveled another couple of hundred clicks out to the Great Northern Highway. Once again we took a back road ( no traffic ) which was beautifully graded and through fantastic station country. We passed 3 stations, one near Augustus, the next one about half way and the last one near the great northern Highway. Now all the stock from the first two stations go west to the Coastal highway, and the last stations stock go out to the Great Northern Highway. What’s interesting about that is the four lane beautifully graded road changed as you went past the second station to a single lane, grass in the centre of the road and is probably graded every few years going by the size of the trees growing right next the road. We honestly thought we had missed a turn we should have taken but alas no it’s just what happens in out back Australia and as we passed the last station it was back to a four lane highway again amazing. We had a lovely bush camp on the last station with plenty of fire wood. Then we went north up the great northern Highway to Newman then north east up through Nullagine, and Marble bar, bush camping on these back roads as we traveled to Broome. On one of the back roads we encountered a train carrying iron ore from Gina Rinehearts Roy’s Hill mine, on a railway crossing in the middle of no where, and as we approached we decided to let it go first and watch the 100 odd carriages go past. Well as Mr Murphy would have it the train stopped right on the crossing, two carriages in with no way round him. We sat there for a few minutes wondering what was happening then train driver yelled out to us, have a beer as we might be here awhile. He then invited us up into the train to have a look at one of the latest trains pulling iron ore. It was while we were getting the low down on this very plush machine we found out what the holdup was. Although he is in control of the train he gets all his orders, on computers, from Perth, and Perth computers had crashed so he had to stop where ever he was, unfortunately right in front of us. It took about half an hour before he was going again, by then there was 6 other vehicles waiting, but none of them got a VIP tour of the train, a small blessing in our favour.
    Then a few more bush camps as we headed to Broome. We were going to stay a night in Broome and stock up a little and fuel up , but as there is no free camp within 150k of Broome and no accommodation in Broome we moved on to Derby. Before we left I went and saw the council ( much to Bess’s disgust ) and what they could do for us and basically got told to f….k off, politely of course. But really for a town that squealed like a stuck pig when Covid hit , took hand outs from the government tax payers money , but now they are full again they couldn’t give a shit!!! They are copping a lot of flack because of their attitude and hopefully it might lead to change ( dream on). So we fuelled up and stocked up in Derby and moved on to Camballin.
    At Camballin we went out to the barrage, a dam on the Fitzroy river, to divert the water to irrigate a big plain around Camballin. It failed after about ten years as two massive floods ( not seen before and has never came close to it again ) and this is a river that gets to 23 kilometres across in flood so it begs the question what was the width during those floods. There are lots of fresh water croc’s and Barra here and even with out Tristan I caught my share. Had six beautiful days here and met a lots of lovely people, one who had been coming here for the past 13 years just to catch Barra and cherrapin ( a type of small cray fish).
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  • Day 58

    Camballin to Halls Creek

    July 2, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    We left Camballin and headed towards Fitzroy Crossing. On the way we had two gorges to see, which we missed last time because of Putts. Tunnel Creek and Windjana. Spent the night in a bush camp called lake ellendale, and the next day took the turn off up to Windjana and tunnel creek. We stayed one night on the way at a bush camp called Cadjeput Creek. From there we went on to Windjana on a very rough Rd. The gorge itself is beautiful but quite small at about 3 or so kilometres long. After a couple of hours spent here we left and drove back towards Tunnel Creek.
    Tunnel Creek is about 3/4K long and lets the water through like a culvert, and in the wet season it is choc a bloc. At this time of year it is not flowing, however we had to swim through a very short section as the water was over our heads. There were many other pools of water which we had to wade through. It is also home to fresh water crocodiles, which don’t seem to bother you. I guess that’s fortunate. 😂. We took our torches, because the tunnel is as dark as an elephants tummy, but soon realised they weren’t torches, but only glow plugs, which made the journey very interesting, as we don’t know what the tunnel looks like on the inside. After that we went back towards the Gt Northern Hwy to a lovely camp built by the RAAF during WW2.

    From here we headed towards Fitzroy Crossing to do some shopping, but found the town a bit intimidating, with all shops surrounded by 2 metre high iron bar fencing with razor wire on the top. We thought about staying, but the camp ground looked like Stalag 13, and other travellers said definitely don’t stay there.
    We pushed onto another bush camp before arriving at Halls Creek, where we did some shopping and got fuel and water for the next big leg of our journey.
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  • Day 62

    Duncan Road to the Norther Territory

    July 6, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    We left Halls Creek leaving the Gt Northern Hwy behind, to take the Duncan Rd which goes up the eastern side of Lake Argyle. The first camp was only about 35k out from Halls Creek and a beautiful spot it was. Called Palm Springs, it was right on the side of the road, but next to a beautiful spring fed river with the spring just 30 metres up from where we parked. Stayed one night, then pushed on to the next camp, just 2 kilometres up the the rd, called Sawpit Gorge. Here we stayed 2 nights as we had to catch up with some washing. The river water was beautiful and clean and ideal for a big pile of washing. We headed off up the Duncan again, up through big station country. At one stage we ran into one of the stations mustering and the mob of cattle had to be 3 to 5000 strong and stretched for at least 3 kilometres where a helicopter was pushing up the back of the mob.

    We carried on to our next camp on the Negri river. We stayed here one night and in the morning were approached by the station manager who as it turns out just wanted a chat. Well 2 or so hours later we were a full bottle on how the station was run and with lots of brilliant stories and the numbers of cattle they run on the station. His father ran the station for 25 years then he took over from his father and has run it for the past 12 years. His father got the cattle numbers up to 44,000 breeders before the droughts of the 90s reduced that number to just 11,000. He has slowly built it back up to 24,000 breeders where he says they can handle most seasons at that number. This year most of the cattle he will sell will be in fat and forward condition for the market instead of store cattle. So when he sends the 8 or 9 thousand head off this year to the market he reckons he’ll make a bob or two. The farmers out there will understand what I’m saying and I’ll let you do the arithmetic.

    From there we went to where the Duncan meets the main highway, the Victorian highway, in the Northern Territory. Once we hit the highway we only had 30ks to our next camp so decided not to air up until we got there. Big mistake , 10 or so k in we got a blowout, a very interesting few seconds before we had it under control and pulled safely up on the side of the road. We fitted another tyre and went on to our camp and left the sorting out of the problem for the next day.

    As we had not come through any check points into the Northern Territory, because we came through the back roads, we had to apply for a permit due to COVID-19, which as it turned out wasn’t a problem as we were coming from WA. The next problem was the border wasn’t open for travellers to get into WA from the Northern Territory so for next 700k to Katherine every free camp and caravan park was full waiting for the border to open which was happening in3 or 4 days time. We managed to find a spot in the overflow of the overflow which was a boat ramp on the Victoria river at Big Horse Creek. Turned out to be a beautiful place, we had internet, watched the crocs from the ramp in the afternoon cruising up the river and had some interesting people staying next to us with interesting stories. In 3 days we left for Katherine but that’s another story.
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