Travelling after COVID 2021

May - November 2021
A 180-day adventure by The Gypsies Read more
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  • 1countries
  • 180days
  • 217photos
  • 36videos
  • 4.0kkilometers
  • 959kilometers
  • Day 73

    Kakadu and surrounds

    July 17, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    Left Katherine but only traveled 40 odd ks to a place called Edith falls. Here there is a beautiful big swimming hole at the camp and a walking track that takes you above the falls and further up the river to more, smaller swimming holes, but still beautiful and refreshing. Two nights here, which gives us one whole day to explore and enjoy the area, and then we pushed on up the Stuart Highway to Pine Creek, a small mining town at the turn off to Kakadu.
    We headed off up the Kakadu highway looking forward to seeing the sites Kakadu national park has to offer. We started to get disillusioned when the first and the most popular, attraction Gunlom Falls was closed due to a disagreement with the local aboriginal community.
    So on to the next most popular, Jim Jim falls and Twin falls, but Twin falls was closed, for similar reasons. We have been on some really bad roads, but the road into these two falls was so badly corrugated, and with only Jim Jim Falls open, we turned around after 10 of the 40 odd ks and gave it a miss. Now considering we had to pay a Kakadu National Park entry fee of $40 each and then $15 each per night to camp in any campground, which only gave you a long drop toilet, we were feeling a little ripped off.
    We stayed a night in one of these very basic camps called Malabanjbanjdju, see if you can say that? 😄. Thank goodness it was an honesty box system I don’t think I need to elaborate, and then we moved on to Jabiru itself. Jabiru township was built by the Ranger mining company, which mined uranium, to house the miners and their families and give them some basic shops. To get that over the line with the locals they had to agree to pull the town down when the mine closed. So now its 20 years on, and the mine has finished and closed. Well the hew and cry by the locals about closing what is now seen as their town is quite ironic .
    The locals have closed some of the best places in Kakadu national park, and now the government has handed the running of the park over to the them plus the township, history will tell us what happens from here.
    We went out to Cahills Crossing, on the Arnhem highway which leads out to Arnhem Land, and is famous for Barra fishing and croc attacks. There are some great stories about this place. From here we went out to a site with a lot of aboriginal rock art called Ubirr, apparently renowned as one of the world’s oldest rock art places. Here there is a lookout over a massive plain that fills up over the wet season, now that was something to behold.

    After this we took the Arnhem highway, and drove towards Darwin. We stopped at a caravan park called The Bark Hut Inn. Did some washing and had a beautiful burger and cold beer in their alfresco bar which had such great ambiance we just had to do it again the next day.
    It was at this park’s campground that my bum nearly had a close encounter with a snake. I was about to sit and eat my dinner when I noticed something that I thought was a scarf draped on my chair. Well it started to move and I realised it was a snake! It was in no hurry to move but it did slowly amble away over the next 20 mins or so. A google search told us it was a Brown Tree Snake. A cream colour with dark orange bands around its body. Mildly venomous but not considered dangerous to humans.

    Next was a highlight The Mary river!!
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  • Day 74

    The Mary river house boat

    July 18, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    We wanted to see the wetlands in Kakadu because they are so beautiful and full of life. After having been disappointed with what Kakadu had to offer we looked a bit harder and Bess found this place on the Mary river that runs house boats. It’s just outside Kakadu but still very much in the wetlands. It was expensive but instead of 2 hours on the wetlands we got 2 days and nights out there at our own pace.
    We fished as we motored along at the blistering pace of 2 knots, could have gone faster but there was just so much to see, and yes we did catch fish as a bonus. The amount of crocs we saw was frightening, although very safe on the houseboat , but we did see a croc eating another dead croc, so it certainly was a dog eat dog world. The bird life was exceptional and they all were in huge numbers. Apparently there were buffalo there too however we didn’t see any, but the two nights we had were just pure magic, just us and the wild life including some mozzies although the boat was well set up to keep them out especially the sleeping area. What a magical two nights!!!
    From here we went out to virtually the mouth of the Mary river to a man made barrage which maintains the water levels in the wetlands and keeps them just in fresh water. We spent one night there, then we moved 20k up river to another spot on the Mary river which had a beautiful rocky out crop for us to fish from. Had to move a couple of big rocks the authorities had put in the way to stop anyone camping in the best spot. By then we had meet another guy, Darren, ex SAS, so the rocks were not a problem. Had two lovely nights and days there with our new found friend fishing our hearts out with the usual success, zero, but hey that’s fishing. We were reminded it’s called fishing not catching. 🤣. From here we went back to the Bark Hut Inn for more of their hospitality before heading to Darwin for some truly well earned R and R.
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  • Day 83

    Darwin

    July 27, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    Well after all the excitement of the past few weeks we definitely needed some real R and R😉😄😄. We had one more day to fill in before Darwin so we camped on a guys farmlet which was close to Berry springs, more warm artesian water as if we need it in these temperatures, but when in Rome do as the Romans do so off we went for a swim. It was very nice but very crowded.
    Now we had booked into a hotel in the middle of Darwin, so we could enjoy what Darwin has to offer. We walked everywhere we could, taking in all the sites and touristy things there were, like the Mindel markets, Stokes wharf, the beautiful walk along the western side of the city which has an uninterrupted view of Darwin’s bay and Cullens bay, at which the sea is held in by a loch so all the mansions built on edge don’t have to put up with the eight metre tides.
    One of the days we hired e scoters, which were a lot of fun. The Mindel markets were, for me, just another lot of markets selling a lot of junk and temping me with a lot of junk food I didn’t need, but sadly I did partake.
    Darwin itself is a beautiful city as I said with a lovely outlook over the bay, reasonable shopping and a great entertainment street called Mitchell street 😎. We dined out every night with a different cuisine each night. As our bank accounts deflated we expanded but a lot of fun. Whilst playing around we had the blown out tyre fixed and our aircon fixed again! The bloody thing keeps failing us.
    All in all a very different five days but we had a great time. Next is Litchfield National park and down to Daly river.
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  • Day 88

    Lichfield national park to Daily river

    August 1, 2021 in Australia ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    All rejuvenated we left Darwin and headed south about 80 clicks back to a beautiful bush camp for a good quiet nights sleep in our own bed. The next day we headed to Lichfield National park to find out what it had for us to see. First up was an old tin mine, built in the late 1800s in the middle of nowhere where everything was done with a pick and shovel and the skill full use of gravity and water. Once they harvested the tin they bagged it, then back packed it on horses to where they could put it on a dray to take to the train station which went to Darwin. All that in this incredible heat and humidity, brave soles!!!
    We then hoped back into our air conditioned truck and drove 50 or 60 clicks to a beautiful waterfall and swimming hole , which was closed because of a fresh water crocodile, l’ll bet a penny for a pound those tin miners would not have cared and gone for a swim!!!! When we found out the truth it was the people who wouldn’t leave the croc alone not the other way around. We camped that night in a shady, grassy camp ground in the middle of the national park, so peaceful. The park has lots of waterfalls and swimming holes, so much so by the end I reckoned I was washing off my tan😆😆.
    We stayed another 4 days in the park and saw a lost city, which was a whole lot of columns of rocks stacked on top of each other, another tin mine even more remote and as I said lots more water falls.
    The top of Lichfield park is on a sealed road , with hundreds of people on it at any one time, whereas the connection road down to the Daly River Road was a lovely four wheel drive only road, so instead of having 50 or 60 people in a swimming hole we only had to put up with half a dozen folk, and like minded people they were too, so a lovely ending to Lichfield.

    From there we went to the infamous Daly River Crossing, which is famous for its crocs and mishaps. No free camps here so we stayed in a camp called Nancar Wilderness Retreat, only $26 a night, right on the Daly river and three beautiful big billabongs to walk around. We saw lots of bird life, crocs,wild pigs but still no buffaloe. It would be a great place to be in the wet, completely surrounded and cut off by the Daly river for a couple of months (heaven). Only way in and out is by boat and at that time of year you can catch Barra both ways. 😃😃.
    From here we’ll go back down to Katherine and hopefully this time we will get to see Katherine gorge.
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