Australian cowboys
Dog handler and his cattle herders.
The main hub of the town of Laura.
Aboriginal rock wall painting.
Magnetic termite mound.
Local Laura kids.
One of the beautiful roads through the region.
Black cookatoos.
A different type of termite mound.
Tuesday June 28th
I
got up this morning and wandered down to the little restaurant kiosk
by the harbour and had a bacon and egg breakfast. Then I phoned home
and talked to dad and mom.
After
that I had a talk with a man I met yesterday, Gavin Whiteman, who is
a teacher in the northern part of the state on the Cape York
Peninsula. The further north you go the more remote it gets and the
more aboriginals there are. Sort of like Canada except here it gets
hotter as you go north! He is an ex-vagabond world traveler who at 44
got married and now has a young son. He teaches in an aboriginal
state school. I asked him if I could contact him after the holidays
and get some information about the school and the students to share
with my Caulfield students, who are largely ignorant of aboriginal
issues. He agreed and I hope we can connect.
I
took one more tour of the town and took a couple of photos of the
inside of the Top Pub from last night. I had hoped to climb Mt. Cook
but it was drizzling and the summit was encased in cloud so I set off
south.
The
weather improved as I went and I enjoyed the countryside. About an
hour later I came across a group of cowboys herding cattle. There
were a couple of aboriginals and a white girl riding a riding helmet
who was out learning from her dad. There was also another cowboy with
dogs in cages in the back of a truck. I asked if I could take photos
and they consented. I talked to the dog cowboy and found out the dogs
are used to help round up the cattle. Two cages: one for good dogs
and one for dogs that 'don't listen'.
I
continued on my drive and came to another fork in the road (decisions
decisions!) and turned west on a 70 km drive to the town of Laura,
which is beside a national park which I had seen on Google Maps. I
found a very small community with a general store, a road house
petrol station, and a motel. I found out the park is off road only so
I decided not to go there. I also found a cultural museum describing
the history of the area from aboriginal times through the gold rush
in the area and then the settlers and ranchers of the stations
(Australian for ranch). I found it really interesting and watched a
video of the life of the aborigines that showed the rock and cave
paintings that are in the national park and some native dancing. I
bought a drink at the road house and talked to a motorcycle rider
(with the same haircut type as mine) who had stopped for a drink
about his travels through the outback.
Now
I had to make tracks as I wanted to get to Cairns before sunset. En
route I saw a large flock of black cookatoos but couldn't get close
enough to get good photos. I also saw thousands of termite mounds in
three different styles. One was built by the 'magnetic' termites as
they are known because they build a fan shaped structure that always
faces in an east-west direction to stop the colony from over heating.
The second are smaller and more cone shaped and the third are large
and shaped like large mounds. They seem to be three different types
of termites and the three types don't overlap and change in areas
from north to south.
The
trip was taking longer than I expected and I was beginning to think
that northern
Australian
kilometres were twice as long as southern ones. As I drove I read a
number of unusual names of mainly dry water beds: Double Barrel
Creek, Shortspoon Creek, Dead Dog Creek, Saltbag Creek, Capsize
Creek, Surprise Creek...
As
the sun was setting I arrived at Mareeba and realized I wouldn't make
it to Cairns (still 60ks away), so I got a room in a small
nondescript motel. The proprietor is another motorcycle rider who is
planning on riding through North America after he sells the motel, so
we had a chat about that. Finally, I went to Coles to get some
groceries for dinner and settle in for the night. I watched an
amazing show by David Attenborough on bioluminescence called Seeing In
The Dark (check it out!).
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