Three flights and two shuttles later in the same day we were
in Alice Springs. We are embarking on a toe-dipper of a trip to the red centre
of a very roomy country.
Our campervan for this 3 week trip is not nearly as well
appointed as our Chausson. I can’t get into the fridge without standing on my
head, space being so tight. Never mind, it has its own bathroom if you can fit
into it.
The West Macdonnell ranges deserved some attention and we
camped at National Park camps. The gorges didn’t exactly flow with water but
there were waterholes and the ghost gums overhanging them gave them their
iconic Aussie scenery stamp along with the big blue skies and red rocky
backdrop. Our fellow campers were very friendly even though we were emblazoned
with a Maui logo. Spinifex pigeons darted underneath our feet pecking at the
crumbs from our hors d’doeuvres.
We took a trip to “Glen Helen” resort to look at another gorge but the prospect of
having to swim the icy waters to get to the beauty spot stopped that idea in
its tracks. Glen Helen Resort looked as if it had enjoyed a previous life as a
POW camp.
We called back at Alice on our way to Uluru. A mere 440 km
away. We restocked the larder and showed ID at the wine shop, passing the
friendly policeman on door duty as we clinked our way back to the van with
lovely Aussie Shirazs stashed in our bags.
A bit of a drive but we were rewarded with the sight of a
purple monolith rising from the plains in the setting sun. We stopped to take
photos whilst enduring a fly-fight. The flies were winning, Stuart was doubled
over after swallowing one. They were on my glasses and trying to crawl in our ears.
Retreat back to the van and back up the
road to a campsite we passed 5km ago. No
flies! Phew! We researched our guidebook for the next day and discovered the
fly battle had been fought while we photographed “Fool-uru”. It was Mt Connor
doing a passable imitation of Uluru that was the battle-site.
Uluru itself was just like the pictures and postcards. Close up it was
quite magnificent and there was a serenity about it that the Aborigines must
treasure also. There was no rubble around the base, just a sheer pitted rock
rising from the graceful gums and greenery that surround it.
The scenery along the roads is ever changing but there is a
consistent theme of trees and vegetation specially adapted to life in a dry
climate. We traveled through stands of Mulga and desert oaks as well as past
wild flowers blooming in swathes amongst the spinifex.
The Olgas (Kata Tjata) are red rounded rock monoliths
standing shoulder to shoulder about 50km from Uluru. After an unexpected (for
me) tramp around their perimeter we headed 300km to Kings Canyon where another
tramp was planned. It was my turn to drive and I took care to return the waves
from fellow campers as I drove, these varied from sublime one finger lifts to something
that looked like ‘Heil Hitler’.
We stayed at Kings Canyon resort paying $40 to park on an
unpowered site surrounded by moon dust, but there is no overnighting in the
National Park. The entrance to the shower block has strong high wooden gates
and although we didn’t see dingos we saw their calling cards the next morning.
I had a shower during daylight hours just to be certain!
The trek around Kings Canyon was a lovely trip and not
difficult when fortified with Voltaren, glad I did it. Back in the van with
Stuart fussing about solar charging, waste disposal … some things don’t change ….
and on our way back through Alice up to Tennant Creek. Timing is crucial
though, the wine shops don’t open until 2pm and beer is ‘too expensive”.
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