Views along 75 Mile Beach.
The pounding surf beneath Indian Head.
The Pinnacles.
The wreckage of the SS Maheno.
Eli Creek and ...
some Aussie Aussie guy cooling off with a beer.
Thursday
Janary 5th
Gurri
is the aboriginal name for Fraser Island and means paradise.
We
were up by 6:30 for the included breakfast before boarding the bus
for the drive further along 75 Mile Beach to its northern end and one
of three volcanic outcrops that provided the anchor for the drifting
sand that eventually created the island. This outcrop is called
Indian Head. We took a short half hour hike to the crest of the hill
and were rewarded with spectacular views of the beaches to the north
and south of it. From the top we could see Eagle rays swimming in the
water below. Keith said that it was a good vantage point to see
sharks and whales too at the right season.
This
was the northern most point we were going to. Now we turned around
and visited a couple of things on the way back. We stopped at the
wreckage of the SS Maheno, a luxury liner from the olden days that
was commissioned for military use during both wars and then auctioned
off to a Japanese company who had it towed. But unfortunately during
a storm the line had to be cut and it drifted onto the sandy island
of Fraser. They tried to tow it off again but it was permanently
mired here. Most of the decks of the ship are buried in the sand and
only the superstructure is visible above.
Then
we stopped at the Pinnacles which are sandstone structures that are
eroding in much the same way as the Badlands. The muti-coloured sand
is a result of mineral deposits. In fact before Fraser Island became
a World Heritage Site the sand was mined here for the ores in it and
the island was intensively logged.
Our
last stop was at Eli Creek for another 'swim'. There were lots of
other tourists here and most had brought flotation tubes or air
mattresses with them to float down the creek. There was a boardwalk
that lead a couple of hundred metres into the forest where you could
put them into the water and float down to the beach again. The water
was again crystal clear and pure. However, the water was only about
knee to waist deep and instead of swimming I waded down the creek to
cool off.
After
that we began our drive back down 75 Mile Beach to the car ferry and
then back to Inskip Peninsula and the drive back to Noosa Heads where
I picked up my car and drove back to the Sunshine Coast.
I
spent the last of the evening talking to Val and Phil about the trip and then headed off to
bed.
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