• The Ungovernables Winging It...
  • The Ungovernables Winging It...

Western Australia

Western Australia is a state of Australia occupying the western third of the land area of the Australian continent. It is bounded by the Indian Ocean to the north and west, the Southern Ocean to the south, the Northern Territory to the north-east. Læs mere
  • Borrgoron Coast To Creek Tour

    18. oktober 2024, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Terry Hunter fourth generation pearler and proud Bardi man. We explored the tidal flats learning about all the sea creatures and hearing about the Bardi Jawi people’s customs and traditional coastal techniques. We foraged for Oysters & Terry smoked us up the rock oysters right on the beach, as he customarily does at the full moon - delicious!
    By lighting the spinifex by the reef it calcifies the rock and opens the oysters.
    During the full moon shell fish , fish are at their most plumpness and secreting spawn this creates the perfect environment and encourages reproduction and attracts the oysters to the rocks to reproduce for another harvest in a few years.
    It is encouraged for visitors to forage for oysters during the full moon as it helps the area to rejuvenate. So it would be rude not to , the following morning we went down on low tide and went on the hunt, it was like a huge strawberry field but full of oysters, breakfast was a dozen fresh raw oysters of the rocks! Yum yum!
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  • Cygnet Bay Secret Beach

    19. oktober 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 29 °C

    Willy collected us from reception at 16.00 and to our surprise we were the only ones on the boat. Armed and dangerous with supplies we jumped aboard and headed down to the beach. The boat was fitted with wheels so it could drive into the sea and then the wheels could be raised up allowing the boat to then ride the waves, we felt like a we were staring in a scene from a James Bond movie.
    Willy launched the boat from Cygnet Bay into the warm , opal waters of mission bay heading to a secluded part of Jologo Beach.
    We arrived and there was no one on the beach, we spent two hours totally alone, fishing, drinking a chilled bottle of bubbles and taking photos of this special, magical place.
    Willy came to pick us up and we sat on the sand chatting about his home (island) Dreamtime, his culture and ceremonies , the threat of mining companies after the iron ore in the area.
    The bay has an array of bush fruits and bush medicine, Willy told us of the stories that the old man of the village would heal the kids bronchitis and how the sap of a native tree has healed his own child’s eczema when he was born.
    Time to leave we jumped into the boat and spead off from the beach bumping over the waves, laughing as the sea sprayed us in the face while the sunset over the ocean.
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  • Port Smith

    24.–27. okt. 2024, Australien ⋅ ⛅ 35 °C

    From Cygnet Bay we stopped off at Broome again for 4 nights then moved on South to Port Smith.

    Port Smith is a piece of paradise tucked away down a 22km dirt road off the Great Northern Highway. We soon realised that paradise can come at a cost!? Fly’s Fly’s and more flys and then you have the pin prick midges.

    The place was a flat bed of red soil, a well stocked shop and fuel. The shower/toilet blocks were surrounded by flowering bushes which had a striking resemblance to the outside of the Bangkok Hilton, a beautiful garden oasis from the front that puts you into a false sense of security before you enter though the gates of hell! Thankfully the blocks had only seen better days but were clean and also came with a resident frog down the loo and if one decided to drop the kids off the temperature inside the block with the door closed must of been higher than cooking a joint! And the warm shower was such a relief after the intense heat of the Kimberly’s , a must do on anyone’s bucket list!

    We adventured down to the lagoon with the idea of staying all day with the mystery bus as a base to retreat too, armed with the generator, fishing rod, crab pot and ice off we went into paradise.

    Port smith lagoon is incredibly beautiful, the tide was out so it was a bit of a hike to the waters edge so the idea of the mystery bus being the base was a no go as we couldn’t drive any further unless we wanted to recreate Top gear!
    No one there ,we had the whole lagoon to ourselves, we set up under the mango trees with the flys. The water was crystal clear , the sand was white and a nice breeze blew cooling the hot Kimberly landscape. The heat of the day kicked in , we retreated back to camp, the hotter you got the more the flys, it got that intense, up your nose, in your ears , in your mouth at one point the only salvation was a big rimmed hat, sunglasses and a sarong rapped rounded the hat and across the face, the idea of an idilic day in paradise suddenly became an endurance run as we ran for cover
    of the mystery’s bus.,

    We were pleased we stayed and pleased we were leaving, as we pulled off the 22km of dirt track back onto the Great Northern Highway the memories of Port Smith endurance stay shall be forever etched into one’s memory as a place they should send the SAS for training!
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  • Pardoo Roadhouse Tavern

    27. oktober 2024, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    Pardoo Roadhouse Tavern coast to Outback.
    I say it again if these guy’s didn’t exist the long journey on the Great Southern Highway would be more painful and difficult, people have some respect and don’t sneak in with your $300.000 set up at midnight hopefully avoiding paying $40 my god what is wrong with people!

    In April 2023 this Roadhouse was flattened , completely squashed by Cyclone IIsa , Pardoo was right in the eye of the cyclone as it touched down.

    A lovely family from the Phillipines run the Roadhouse who also spent 17 years in Afghanistan, the wife was involved in Bomb disposal and whilst involved with the military Robert served Trump on his visit to the base and we totally agree his Pad Thai , Fried Rice is excellent and we all agreed there’s something you can’t trust about Trump!?
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  • Cape Keraudren

    28. oktober 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 30 °C

    Just up the road from the Pardoo RH you turn right onto a tarmac road which turns into a red corrugated dirt track to Cape Keraudren.

    Cape Keraudren is a coastal headland on the northern coast of Western Australia.

    The colours of the landscape are incredible, the blend of red, blue, green and white are mesmerising!
    Three off grid camp sites to choose from , we went to the tip!
    We set up camp with a 180degree sea
    view.
    By now we’ve worked out that the further you go South the flys and midges are getting worse.
    Paul had decided to invest in a mozzie head net! lol but “it works’ he’s not threatening to kill every single million fly that gets into every craves possible.
    It’s hot , the sand burns but the wind is a blessing. A boat ramp leads down to the coral bed at low tide, so many rock pools to discover. The gradual colours of the tides is visible on the edge of the headland crazy shapes created from the sea, oysters stuck to the reef.
    The sunsets right in front of the mystery bus and a little track leads to the edge of the headland where we sat and end joyed the last of the light free from flys and midges.

    Early morning we adventured back down the track with Bill to be greeted by two furry visitors watching us through the bushes.
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  • Port Headland

    30. okt.–2. nov. 2024, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 35 °C

    I had reservations about Port Headland and sadly for “us” I was right!
    My gut said not to bother as I had a feeling the place would confirm what man is doing to Earth.
    BHP and Rio Tinto say no more!

    Port Hedland is one of the three major iron ore ports in the Pilbara. It is an industrial city committed to the extraction, processing and exporting of iron ore. The city is defined by a huge port at Nelson Point with its gigantic iron ore carriers; and the seemingly endless iron ore trains (as long as three kilometres and with up to 300 wagons) which move backwards and forwards from the mines at Mount Newman. It is also the major port for Rio Tinto's salt export business.

    In my life time I have never seen such devastation created by mining , the place is barron, the minerals have been sucked out and the big companies reckon they are keeping the headland safe for the turtles and are enviro friendly, what a crook of shit only a poster like that belong in the dunny because that’s where it was!

    Along the road side you could see the trains 2.5km long full of iron ore and that apparently fills half a ship.
    The commercial salt plantation sands out like a mountain of snow.

    This town is being raped by man and the big corporates , yes the workers slave everyday and most likely “might”pay off the mortgage, have the holidays, the toys but this place is programmed to mine for another 100 years what the hell will be left behind? Your guess is as good as mine!?

    So the grubberment bang on about enviro friendly ideas and the incoming implementations that they want “us” to fund and these corporates are greasing their palms, where’s the “saving the plant” here? Not one solar panel just great big power stations and huge trains guzzling fossil fuel, like to see those things plugged into a charger!

    Makes you sick to the stomach watching this 24hr operation glowing in the distance during the night!

    I’ve attached a PDF if one is inclined to read about the worlds biggest bulk exporter and other surrounding companies around the Port.
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  • Point Samson

    1.–3. nov. 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 32 °C

    Historic Point Samson is located on the eastern tip of Western Australia's Dampier Archipelago.

    The town and the peninsula was named Point Samson in honor of Michael Samson, a member of a prominent WA family, who accompanied the district's first settler, Mr Walter Padbury, on his journey in 1863. Mr Samson was the second officer of their ship, the '˜Tien Tsin', and it was during Walter Padbury's expedition to Nickol Bay, that the town was named. For years the point was misspelled as Sampson and the error was not brought to the government's attention until 1918, after which both the point and the town site were corrected.

    In contrast to the peaceful seaside town of today, it had a very active history as a deep water port, handling the third largest annual tonnage in WA. The port of Point Samson and its deep water jetty were built in 1902/03 to service Roebourne, the then boom town of Wittenoom and the developing community of Wickham.

    The original T head jetty, nearly 1,900 feet long, was destroyed by a cyclone in 1925. The remaining part of the jetty was badly damaged by Cyclone Orson in 1989 and was completely removed in 1991. A small section was rebuilt on land as a reminder of the jetty's significant role in the town's past. The customer service counter (at Karratha Visitor Centre) was also made from remnants of the old jetty.
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  • Cossack Pt 1

    2. november 2024, Australien ⋅ ⛅ 42 °C

    Cossack is an historic ghost town at the mouth of the Harding River. A thriving port in the 1870s, it was a sleepy ghost town by the 1910s and by the 1970s it was nothing more than a few buildings on the edge of Butchers Inlet - a place which today attracts anglers and curious travellers and lots of fly’s.
    It is an interesting collection of buildings , you only have to look at the structure of these buildings to understand they have withstood the violence of the cyclones and stood silently on this lonely shoreline.

    Galbraith Store -
    Galbraith's Store (c.1891) was the first building erected from local bluestone. Galbraith's had started in Scotland. It is a comment on their intentions about establishing stores around the world, and the status of the port at the time, that they chose Cossack as a suitable place to open a store.

    Courthouse -
    The two-storey courthouse, built in 1895, was designed by George Temple Poole, an Italian born, British architect who was, at the time, the WA Superintendant of Public Works. Built of stone from the ballast of ships, its wide veranda and heavy rusticated pillars make it the most prominent building in the town. It is also a monument to Poole's understanding of the heat in the area. It is designed to keep the interior cool. Today the Court House is a free museum with a genuinely fascinating collection which includes an intact old court room complete with benches and the elevated place for the local magistrate or judge. A history of the Asian population in Cossack and a personal history of William Shakespeare Hall, a pioneer explorer and early settler.

    European & Asian Cemetery

    Located along Perserverance Road, the cemetery offers a unique insight into the life of Cossack in the 1870s. At that time the port was the winter home for the Asian pearl divers. It was divided into 'Chinatown', 'Japtown' and 'Malaytown' and there is evidence that the separate areas had stores, tailors, bath houses and even brothels.
    The two cemeteries (the European and Japanese) are located on the sand dunes beyond the edge of town. The Japanese cemetery - a total of nine grave sites - is the resting place for Japanese pearl divers who either were lost at sea or drowned while diving.
    The European cemetery is the resting place of William Shakespeare Hall, one of the members of F.W. Gregory's party, and of 10-year-old Laura Peirl, the daughter of the local policeman, who died of tetanus after treading on a nail: a stark reminder of the hardships of isolated life.
    Let’s hope the amount of fly’s that attack you whilst visiting doesn’t put you a plot right next to them.

    Readers Head Look Out

    Reader Head is recorded as early as 1863 when Government Surveyor, C.C. Hunt, included it in a map of Tien Tsin Harbour. It is located at the northern end of Butcher's Inlet. The first light beacon for Cossack was a oil or kerosene light which was hung from Reader Head. This predated the lighthouse on Jarman Island. The Head has extensive views up and down the coast including the mouth of the Harding River, the towns of Roebourne, Point Samson and Cape Lambert and the Perserverance Rocks.

    Jarman Island Lighthouse
    The Jarman Island lighthouse is not accessible unless you have a boat. For many years it has been on the endangered list but there is a new level of commitment from both local residents and the local mining companies.

    "The Jarman Island Lighthouse is a segmented cast iron sea lights which used a newly developed pre-fabricated cast iron tower imported from England.
    "Cast iron towers were established as a viable way of getting lights to remote areas. The new design technique was innovative and represented a new era in lighthouse construction. As they were pre-fabricated, they could be constructed in remote areas with much more ease than one of stone. The lighthouse industry had reached the point in 1887 where a complete lighthouse could be packed and shipped from England for erection in Australia. The lighthouse at Jarman was complete except for the lens which seems to have been sent separately. The tower body of the Jarman Island lighthouse is composed of cast iron plated a little more than one inch (28 mm) thick, flanged and bolted on the inside presenting a smooth face to the exterior. This type of construction was developed so that salt laden spray would not cause corrosion at the joints. The lighthouse came complete from England with the tools for its construction and the paint to protect it.
    "The Resident Engineer for the North West, W L Owen and Chief Government Architect George Temple Poole were responsible for the design and construction of the new light station.
    "The labour for the construction were prisoners from Malaysia, the Philippines, China and Arabian countries, the majority of which were from the pearling fleet which was at that time laid up in Cossack during the cyclone season.
    "The rubble and concrete duplex keepers quarters were also erected in 1888 and is typical of other buildings around Roebourne of that era. Pre-cast concrete blocks were used for corners, doors and windows. The unique feature of the 1888 dwelling is the curved concrete shell roof. Unfortunately this did not suit the climate and in 1895 the whole structure was given a new roof and a verandah all around.
    "The original light was a flashing second order lantern with a four wick Douglas burner. The fuel was kerosene or paraffin oil. The lamp was replaced in 1910 by a 55 mm incandescent lamp using a vaporised kerosene mantle."
    "Between 1922 and 1941, the island was leased to J & T Muramats who are said to have used the place for holidays. In the 1950s the quarters and adjacent buildings were stripped of useful material and abandoned. The lighthouse was turned of for the last time in 1985 when the Cape Lambert lighthouse became operational.
    "The size of the island is approximately 16 ha. The lighthouse is painted red and white. Steel ladders and landings provide internal access to the lantern room."
    Recently the Shire of Roebourne was awarded $75,000 to conserve and restore the lighthouse.
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  • Cossack Pt 2 -

    2. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 37 °C

    No the Ungovernable’s haven’t been locked up yet!

    Due to the construction materials of these buildings the temperature inside was a pleasant surprise.

    Police Barracks, Cookhouse and Lockup-
    Located in Perseverance Street, the old stone police quarters and gaol date from 1898. Today it is modestly priced dormitory accommodation. The first policemen in the town were three water police who arrived in 1866.

    Post and Telegraph office-
    The Post and Telegraph Office was one of the earliest stone buildings in the town. It was constructed using local shell limestone, most probably in the early 1880s. The ground floor was originally a customs house with a chemist and post office upstairs.

    Customs House and Bond Store-
    The Bonded Store and Customs House (1895) was designed by George Temple Poole. The supervisor of the restoration of the town has written of this building that "It was built for administrative purposes and its design reflects the still high prominence of the British Empire in Australia. It was built to last."
    The stone Customs House is testimony to the period when Cossack served as an important colonial port, prior to the transfer of the port to Point Samson at the outset of the 20th century. It was restored and re-opened in August, 2001 with the following press release: "The port of Cossack, established in 1863, was the first port in the north-west of Western Australia. In a short time it became a very busy port, greatly relied on by settlers for essential supplies, as well as news from Perth, interstate and overseas. Customs played an essential role in the control of imports and exports, and the collection of duty and taxes. It is very fitting that this historic building, which was constructed six years before Federation, has now been restored.
    "Achievements since Federation in 1901 are woven into the interpretation of the site. This history is displayed in pictorial form and represented by artefacts of customs and pearling in the Pilbara."
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  • Roebourne Lookout

    2. november 2024, Australien ⋅ ⛅ 39 °C

    Roebourne is the oldest settlement between Geraldton and Darwin - the one isolated community on the whole vast and lonely coastline which is now the Kimberley and Pilbara. It was once the administrative centre of the North-West.

    Mount Welcome Lookout-
    The lookout offers an excellent overview of the town and the surrounding countryside. In recent times it has included the silhouette statues of six Aborigines all with spear in one hand and standing on one leg. A plaque titled A View of Our Land explains: "Each of these six statues represents one of the immediate neighbours of the Ngarluma people and they are facing toward their country. These tribes reside in and around Roebourne and stand respectfully alongside the Ngarluma traditional owners of the land on which you are now standing. Each statue is looking toward their homeland. Tindjibarndi people are our immediate neighbours to the south, their lands commencing at the Chichester Ranges. Immediately south of their border, starting at the Hamersley Range are the Banyjima people. Our southernmost neighbours are the Kurrama people. The Taburara people are our neighbours to the northwest and the Martathunira people are our neighbours to the west. To the east our neighbours are the Kariyarra. Their respective boundaries with Ngarluma country are the Maitland River to the west and the East Peawah River to the east."
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  • Onslow- Cyclone City

    3.–4. nov. 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 35 °C

    Cyclone City!

    Onslow is a sleepy little town where people go to fish and to have quiet holidays by the sea. Historically it was created as a mixture of pearling, farming and gold mining, but today, in part because it lies on the coast 82 km from the main North West Coastal Road, it is a true Cinderella - a gorgeous coastal retreat where only those who know of its charms tend to divert from the long journey from Perth to Broome. It has become known as 'Cyclone City' as, since its establishment in 1883, it has experienced major cyclones in 1909, 1918, 1926, 1934, 1953, 1958, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1975, 1995 and 1999. The 1963 cyclone had winds which were measured at 232 km/h. In fact the cyclones have occurred with such regularity that they have had profound effects on the town - it was forced to relocate after the 1926 cyclone and the frequency of cyclones in the 1960s forced the reconstruction of the local jetty to be abandoned.

    Paparazzi Pack
    Gillie and Marc’s Paparazzi Dogs are the world’s most notorious photographers. The four bronze Dogmen have sniffed out the rich and famous in Melbourne’s Federation Square, Woolloomooloo Wharf in Sydney, the Jing’an Sculpture Park in Shanghai, outside Raffles City Shops in Singpore, and New York’s Brooklyn and Greenwich Village. The sculptures have gone from being an art experiment about photographing celebrities to sought-after celebrities in their own right. When Gillie and Marc first launched the series, within days the life-sized dogs went viral with millions of visitors coming to see them. People from all over the world, along with celebrities such as Snoop Dog, were eager to pose with the Pap Dogs, quickly giving them a celebrity status. Trey Ratcliff, considered to be one of the world’s best contemporary photographers, also came and was followed by 500 professional photographers to take a photo of him Gillie and Marc had intentionally created the interactive piece to expose the pack mentality of the media and how we hunt celebrities to get their photo. “Trey is a celebrity in his own right,” explained Marc. “So it’s amazing that we finally have a photograph of life imitating art. It summed up everything the sculpture was intended to say.”

    The Jetty
    It is hard to tell exactly what it is - could it be the wreck of a ship? - but just off the coast to the north of the Anzac Memorial is a jagged collection of remnants which is all that is left of a jetty that was built in 1925 and used to be 1.2 km in length. It was badly damaged by cyclones - cyclone damage in 1934, 300 metres removed by a cyclone in 1961, and finally destroyed by the Army in 1982.
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  • Exmouth

    4.–21. nov. 2024, Australien ⋅ ☁️ 33 °C

    The Shire of Exmouth is situated 1,270 kilometres north of Perth, on the tip of the North West Cape in Western Australia. Covering 6,504 km2 the district is bordered by the Exmouth Gulf and the pristine Ningaloo Coast World Heritage area. Exmouth is one of the few areas in Australia that can boast the reef to range experience.

    While the town was founded around defence industries, tourism is now the largest industry in the Shire with eco-tourism development experiencing significant growth. Other industries that contribute significantly to our local economy include defence, government services and industries to support the offshore oil and gas industry, tourism support services such as hospitality and accommodation along with fishing, pastoral, aquaculture, light engineering and construction.

    Every year, in the winter months the number of visitors arriving in Exmouth triples the resident population of Exmouth. While this presents significant challenges for a small community with limited financial resources, it also provides important stimulus for the local economy.

    The Exmouth Shire has 170km of sealed roads and 300km of unsealed roads, including roads providing access through Exmouth’s National Parks and three boat ramp facilities.

    The outdoor recreational opportunities in Exmouth are complemented by a range of local government funded facilities including a 50m pool, sports ovals, squash, tennis and hard courts and skate park.
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  • Exmouth- Mildura Shipwreck

    5. november 2024, Indian Ocean ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    The steamship Mildura. Lost in Lighthouse Bay near Exmouth in 1907. The SS Mildura was travelling from Cambridge Gulf to Fremantle with a cargo of cattle in June 1907 when it hit shallow reef at the top of North West Cape. The steamship was wrecked without any loss of human life however, very few of the cattle survived.

    Visible from the shore, the swell regularly breaks over the two large exposed boilers that mark the site. The wreck is generally regarded as unsafe in all but the best conditions as the Mildura site is prone to strong surge and currents that can easily carry a snorkeller crashing into the many parts of the twisted iron wreckage.
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  • Exmouth- Vlamingh Head Lighthouse

    5.–11. nov. 2024, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    From North West Coastal Highway you turn right onto Burkett Road and 167km to Exmouth- Ningaloo Caravan Park.

    Vlamingh Head Lighthouse is a lighthouse which is situated 17 km (11 mi) to the north of the settlement of Exmouth, Western Australia, overlooking Lighthouse Bay. The lighthouse is notable as being one of the few locations in Australia where both the sunrise and the sunset can be seen.Læs mere

  • Ningaloo Glass Bottom Boat PT 1 & 2

    7. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 31 °C

    The World Heritage listed Ningaloo Reef is Australia’s longest fringing barrier reef and one of the world’s most important biodiversity hotspots. Between Exmouth and Coral Bay, two Ningaloo Marine Parks run in parallel along the coast, working together to protect this natural treasure.

    The outer Ningaloo Marine Park (Commonwealth waters) is managed by the gruberment and helps protect the deeper, offshore waters while the inner Ningaloo Marine Park (State waters) helps protect the coastal waters and shallow reefs.

    The State marine park is managed by the Western Australian Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions. We work closely with our State colleagues to manage the two parks in harmony.

    The Baiyungu, Thalanyji and Yinikurtura People have responsibilities for sea country in the marine park.

    Ningaloo Marine Park (Commonwealth waters) covers 2, 435 square kilometres and is home to deep under-sea canyons, diverse colourful sponge gardens and rich fish communities.

    Humpback whales pass through the park on their annual migrations north and south and pygmy blue whales forage in the park’s productive waters, while loggerhead, green and hawksbill turtles are regular visitors.
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  • Ningaloo Glass Bottom Boat PT 3 & 4

    7. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

    The marine park covers an area of 2,435 km2 (940 sq mi) and is assigned IUCN category IV. It is one of the 13 parks managed under the North-west Marine Parks Network.

    Species and habitat
    Has a high abundance of Manta Rays within lagoons and outer reef areas.
    Foraging areas for vulnerable and migratory whale sharks.
    Foraging areas and adjacent to important nesting sites for marine turtles.
    Includes part of the migratory pathway of the protected humpback whale.

    Bioregions and ecology
    The reserve includes shallow shelf environments and provides protection for shelf and slope habitats, as well as pinnacle and terrace seafloor features. Examples of the seafloor habitats and communities of the Central Western Shelf Transition provincial bioregion.
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  • Jurabi Costal Park

    9. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 29 °C

    Jurabi Coastal Park is a protected area located in Western Australia, approximately 20 kilometers northwest of Exmouth. The park is known for its pristine beaches, crystal-clear waters, and diverse wildlife.

    The park is an important habitat for sea turtles, and visitors can observe mating and nesting turtles, as well as turtle hatchlings in their natural environment. The area is also home to a variety of reptiles, including Burton’s Snake-lizard, Western Fat-tailed Gecko, and Mulga Snake.
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  • Christmas Has Arrive At The Mystery Bus!

    11. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌙 27 °C

    Ok, who doesn’t like a bit of tinsel!
    So our home known as the mystery bus because we have no plan apart from keep going , we decided to make a little grotto of our own, no admission costs , Billy is the grotto elf , Paul with his white beard is Mr Christmas ( has been checked his not on the list!) and me well that makes me Miss Christmas and the closest I’ll be getting to a Miss Santa suit in 40 degrees will be two ball balls and a tinsel lined sarong!Læs mere

  • Sunset At Vlamingh Head Lighthouse

    15. november 2024, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 32 °C

    Vlamingh Head Lighthouse is a lighthouse which is situated 17 km (11 mi) to the north of the settlement of Exmouth, Western Australia, overlooking Lighthouse Bay. The lighthouse is notable as being one of the few locations in Australia where both the sunrise and the sunset can be seen.Læs mere

  • Whalebone Distillery

    18. november 2024, Australien ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

    Located in the remote town of Exmouth WA, the gateway to the Ningaloo Reef, Whalebone Brewing Company offers a quirky, rustic, laid-back vibe with a touch of nostalgia.

    Owned and operated by two local families with a love of craft beer who wanted to bring beer back to what it should be; a great, refreshing, true to style brew enjoyed with mates and family in an authentic setting under the stars.

    Complemented with delicious pizza showcasing local ingredients, a kids play area and great tunes by local and travelling musicians, Whalebone Brewery is the place you can kick off your boots (or thongs!) after a day of exploring the Ningaloo reef and range.

    With all beers brewed on-site and our own “Ningaloo Spirits” now distilled on-site too, we like to say that Whalebone is ‘The taste of Ningaloo’.
    I second that!
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  • Coral Bay

    20. november 2024, Australien ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    Coral Bay is a small settlement hugging the pristine azure ocean with its white sandy beaches, which hides an extra special secret. Just meters from the shoreline, you'll find the Ningaloo Reef. There aren't many places in the world where a fringed reef is literally steps away from the beach,Læs mere

  • Coral Bay Eco Tour Pt 1 ,Turtles

    23. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 28 °C

    Spent the day aboard the state-of-the-art eco tour vessel, Kurni-Ku, with its large upper deck viewing area.

    What an opportunity to snorkel most of the day in Coral Bay on the Ningaloo Reef.

    The morning was spent with two snorkelling adventures.
    We had the opportunity to snorkel on the magnificent Ningaloo coral reef, seeing hundreds of types of reef fish and exciting aquatic life such as the world’s only reef sharks cleaning station ,turtles, giant clams and octopus.

    The highlight of the day was to swim with one of the largest winged creatures that inhabit our ocean? The awe inspiring manta ray!

    Turtles-
    Six of the world’s seven sea turtle species – green, hawksbill, loggerhead, leatherback, flatback and olive ridley turtles, all endangered or vulnerable – visit the Coral Sea Marine Park.
    Green turtles nest on its beaches and hawksbill turtles feed on its reefs. Others keep moving through the ocean on their long migrations.

    3880 kilometres is the longest known green turtle migration through the Coral Sea, more than the entire width of Australia’s continent from Sydney to Perth.

    About 1 in 1000 sea turtle hatchlings survive to adulthood. Those that do survive have a lifespan of about 80 years.

    The exact temperature of the nest determines the sex of green turtle hatchlings: at or below 26°C, all males; at or above 29°C, all females; in between, some of both.

    Turtles have lived in the oceans for over 100 million years, since the time of dinosaurs. They are solitary creatures, travelling alone and rarely interacting. As cold-blooded reptiles, they can only survive in the tropics.

    Sea turtles spend most of their time underwater, but surface to breathe every 20 minutes or so. For longer dives lasting three hours or more, their heart rate slows radically to conserve oxygen.
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  • Coral Bay Eco Tour Pt 2 - Sharks

    23. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 32 °C

    Blacktip reef sharks-
    Blacktip reef sharks inhabiting the tropical coral reefs of the Indian and Pacific Oceans have extremely small home ranges and exhibit strong site fidelity, remaining within the same local area for up to several years at a time.

    Easily identified by the prominent black tips on its fins (especially on the first dorsal fin and its caudal fin). Its exposed first dorsal fin is a common sight in the region. Timid and skittish, the blacktip reef shark is difficult to approach and seldom poses a danger to humans unless roused by food. However, people wading through shallow water are at risk of having their legs mistakenly bitten. This shark is used for its meat, fins, and liver oil, but is not considered to be a commercially significant species.
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  • Coral Bay Eco Tour Pt 3- Manta Rays

    23. november 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 28 °C

    Manta Rays-
    Manta rays are one of the largest species of ray to inhabit the ocean and are truly amazing to encounter. Their pectoral fins have evolved into wide triangular ‘wings’, which they use to propel themselves smoothly through the open ocean. The species of manta ray that visits Coral Bay can have a wingspan of up to 4 metres.
    Swimming with manta rays is not dangerous as manta rays do not share the stingray’s trait of a barbed tail or ‘stinger’ and are harmless to humans.
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  • Carnarvon

    26.–28. nov. 2024, Australien ⋅ 🌬 29 °C

    Carnarvon is referred to as the 'food bowl' of Western Australia, producing 80% of the state's total fruit and vegetable crops and much of its seafood, with a thriving prawn, scallop, crab and fishing industry.

    A place that you can pick up supplies ,purchase fresh fish/oysters and the most important Billy’s sardines from the crab shack on the marina and drive round the fruit loop and visit the #InstaWorthy Cactus Garden along the way. There was one place you could get pet meat but after getting whiff from putting our head in the door we declined especially with a goat outside!?

    Paul got speaking to a local business man who explained that this use to be a thriving town before Covid, apparently during the lockdowns there was a increase of funerals and as we all know people were stopped from attending, this obviously didn’t go down very well with mature fishermen and hardworking farmers and the town became unruly , the bottle o got the blamed for this. The federal police visited the owner and insisted that he was making their job more difficult!? WTAF! More like they couldn’t control numbers of people who didn’t like the idea of being controlled and made them look like idiots, so because this continued this guy was targeted, fined for not voting even though he wasn’t registered but apparently the electoral role had registered his name for him? What ,so they could use his vote? This local man who is now taking the establishment to court for damages .
    During the unrest the media was instructed to report on this town and basically destroy the reputation.
    It’s strange because considering this town provides 80% of the food to the state. it’s like there’s nothing here? One young lad told us that the government won’t invest any  infrastructure and we also were told they have a large problem with domestic violence. Within the local school here they have a part were the kids can get food and a safe space, get some sleep if needed , now if that’s not f…ked ? The town is falling apart , the houses/business are boarded up, it’s like a town that has been forgotten or is this deliberate?Why else would such an important food supply be ignored?
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