Northern Wanderings

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It’s been 4 consecutive years of spending winter in the north west and I don’t think the love affair is over yet. As we head back with 6 days left of this trip I am struck by how much is left to see and how many places I would love to return to.

We hit the road two weeks back and this time made for Kalbarri as a first port of call, a town neither of has been to for many years. Being that little bit off the beaten track means you have to ‘want’ to go there.

We stayed in Anchorage caravan park for 4 nights and enjoyed the time there. Kalbarri is pretty spectacular and Danelle had an 8km coastal walk one afternoon, right through the western cliffs. The swell was down and Jakes point wasn’t breaking – not that I was complaining… I gather its a little heavier than I like to ride these days.

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I imagine we will go back there again as we didn’t get to check out the gorges. For some reason they had chosen the first week of the school holidays to do road maintenance on the one road into them. Odd… and pretty dumb if you ask me. Either way it was nice to start the break with a cruisy few days where the weather was kind albeit pretty cold at night. (And the Kalbarri bakery does a pretty good job too.)

It was nice to unwind, although I wasn’t feeling that wound up. For the two weeks previous work had dried up so I was as chilled as I get.

From Kalbarri we left early Wed am and headed for Exmouth – it’s out fourth consecutive year we have made this a holiday location, which probably says something. We did the 9 hour drive from Kalbarri and arrived only to discover we weren’t booked in at the caravan park – not sure if it was my stuff up or theirs – but either way we spent the first night on the town oval and paid $62 for the privilege… That’s what you can charge when the town is full… Again the weather was kind with mid 20 degree days each day we were there and some good swell to make it even better. We had some time with friends and some time alone – a good mix.

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I think Exmouth’s Dunes Beach is one of my all time faves. Warm water and mellow waves make for a lot of fun. The crowd factor can get a bit insane, and ‘drop ins’ happen a little too often at the main peak, but if you sit further south the crew are a bit more relaxed and easy going. I could have stayed much longer just for the surf.

That said, I’m not sure we will do many more caravan park holidays in the school break. If you want peace and quiet then these are not the go at all. (And I realised I wanted/needed this more than I anticipated) Having been woken by a crying baby 4 mornings out of 7, and with lots of kids everywhere in the park we were very ready to move on when the final day came.

From Exmouth the car wanted to head north to Broome and the warmer climes – after 4 years of Broome holidays it seemed wrong to head south… We could have got there but the long drive home and a critical deadline (a wedding the day after) was leaving us both very uninspired. So instead we headed a whole 120ks south to Giralia station for what was going to be a night or two. We were seeking some peace and solitude and this place looked great. We got set up well away from the main camp and it was all about ‘the serenity’ until a group of 3 grey nomad vans arrived and set up right next to us – and then proceeded to run their generator non-stop. The tranquility was beautiful until these guys arrived… Seriously – who runs a generator all day long?… Grrr

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Giralia is a good spot for one-two nights and at $24 for all of us we thought it was a good deal. The station turn their own power on at night and there is bore water to use for cleaning. There are hot showers and a camp kitchen all included.

We had a very quiet night and didn’t wake to any babies crying, but at 8.00am on day 2 the nomad generator had been kicked into gear and was banging away. We drove down to the beach for the morning (good if you fish – not so good to swim in) and decided that if the generator was still going when we got back we would pack up. At 11.30 it was still throbbing away and we weren’t up for sitting next to it all day so we packed up and hit the road.

While there we were offered a free purebred red cloud kelpie puppy. The station owners had one left from the litter and told us we could have it if we wanted it.

You know how cute puppies are?… Well this one was beautiful and the parents also looked the goods. Ellie wanted it badly… Sam wanted it… And I think Danelle and I were both feeling a tug, but the fact that our property has no fences would mean it was going to be a very expensive puppy – not to mention the question of how we would get it home over the rest of the holiday. As we were about to leave Danelle and I were close to saying ‘lets just do it and figure it out on the run’, but a visit from the caretaker ended the idea as someone else had already taken it. Ellie was devastated and we were both sad and relieved. The thought of spending a week with a new puppy in a camper was not something I was looking forward to, and then coming home to knock up a fence – where I know the materials alone would be $2-3k also wasn’t appealing. So for now we will remain dog-less although our resolve has been weakened…

From Giralia we headed further south into a blustery headwind getting a whole 4.5ks per liter as the Patrol literally drank the diesel. I’m still not sure if there is something wrong there or if its just weight, aerodynamics or a heavy right foot. We ended up deciding to drive into Quobba and spend a night or two there – hoping for peace and quiet yet again…

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As we arrived we discovered the sites at the Blowholes were $5.50/site/night while Quobba station was $42.00/night for the four of us. The decision was made fairly quickly and we put up the camper in the midst of a strong and icy south easterly. The wind was so cold that I couldn’t generate enough heat to cook on the outside stove. This is a pretty cool place though – with great beaches, spectacular scenery and some pretty decent space to set up. And it is quiet… Yes…

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Convincing our daughter that unpowered sites without showers are a good option is getting increasingly difficult. Once we are there she toughens up, but the princess gene is starting to develop and if it were just down to Ellie we would be ‘camping’ in the Hyatt in the middle of any capital city with wireless and room service.

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While in Quobba we took a drive up to Red Bluff, just 60ks north and a pretty easy trip. We sat on 80kph most of the way and never needed to go into 4wd. We could have got the camper up there quite easily but decided not to this time.

I had heard about this place for many many years but have never been, so it was good to finally get there. It is as beautiful as everyone says and the beaches and bluff are stunning.

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There was no one in the water (surfing) when we got there. We walked out to the point to check it out and I’m guessing it was because it was a very low tide, because there were some big sets charging thru, but breaking only metres from the reef. Either that or they were all scared like me…

Either way I think the bluff is a young blokes wave. If I were 20-30 years younger I’d love to give it a crack – it is a super fast charging left hander… But now… While it dents the ego I think I have to admit that it is not for 49 year olds on sun-browned mals.

While travelling I finally managed to finish ‘Home’ by Marilyne Robinson, an excellent novel but not an easy read if you like things to keep moving. It is well written and has many wonderful moments, but it’s not for the impatient or easily distracted. This was my fourth attempt and I had to work to stay with it. Now I’m re-reading Shantaram, one of my favourites. I have never been to India but I reckon this feels like what I imagine it to be like. A great story with many redemptive moments and intriguing twists.

From Blowholes we headed south today for Carnarvon and a night in a caravan park to shower and clean up a bit. It’s a one night stop as Francois Peron national park is the next spot on the radar. Next to us is a family one week into their round Oz adventure so we spent some time chatting to them and I have to say it stirred me to do it again… Next year we have an Ireland adventure planned to celebrate my 50th but I could be tempted to swap it for 4 or 5 months on the road – and I think the budget would be about the same!

One of the challenges of holidaying while running your own business is taking phone calls and being able to switch on and off at will. I’m getting pretty good at it now, but it’s taken a while. With no work for 5 weeks now I kinda need to hit the ground running when we get home. Today there were 6 voicemails and some pretty good looking jobs are lined up which means I should be able to roll in and get cracking.

Anyway that’s the journey so far…

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Sandy Cape Camping

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We set off on Monday for a short midweek break. The last few months have been pretty busy and we have missed just hitting the road in the camper and kicking back. My mate Stu and family were taking this week off so we agreed to spend some time together and decided on Sandy Cape as the destination.

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Sandy Cape is a great little campsite right by the beach at the end of a 7km dirt road just 10 Ks north of Jurien Bay. We have driven past here many times without even knowing it exists so it was with great enthusiasm that we began the journey.

The beauty of it is its proximity to the city and the relatively short drive up Indian Ocean drive to get there. We all felt like it was a breeze of a drive and that’s a great way to start.

The drive in to the campsite is along a dirt track but it is pretty corrugated so be ready for that. It’s not a big deal but it does give the bones a bit of a rattle.

camp The cost is $15/night for 2 adults and kids – cheap as chips. The campsites are large, well spread out and close to the beach. The bay itself is beautiful and because of its orientation even the sea breeze doesn’t chop it up. We took a quick drive around to the south side and saw some surf potential, but that was about the only surf we saw in the area.

stinkyThere are composting toilets and even a bit of water there for washing hands and feet. Sam found them a bit stinky and literally wore his dive mask in there but honestly its pretty good…

We spent 3 nights and concluded that is probably enough. We did some 4wding, checked out the local towns, hung at the beach, read and relaxed.

The only down side was the wind. It is a part of the coast famous for being windy and we had to contend with some pretty blustery conditions over the last few days. After a pretty ugly night on Wednesday we decided to head south on Thursday. We were trying to escape wind and finished up at our place… Stu and family are camped outside and we are just chilling with them.

Sandy Cape is a great spot for 2 or 3 nights and at the price and proximity to the city you can’t go wrong. Just try and avoid a super windy week as it does get annoying after a while!

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If you stop in at Jurien Bay then you can have some fun jumping off the jetty and get a great coffee at the Jetty Café, but sadly the bakery produced some of the worst pies and pasties we have ever come across. Imagine thick hard pastry smeared with some kind of meat flavoured substance… ech…

We gave the old Cruiser it’s first real workout coming here and it passed pretty well. I’m still a little apprehensive about her as she is an old car and its going to take a while to fugure her out… But I’m slowly developing trust in her reliability. Her ‘ability’ is no issue – but I don’t want to get stuck in the middle of nowhere with her. There is the possibility of a Tassie trip at the end of the year so between now and then we will be seeing the Cruiser can be trusted with the responsibility…

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So if you’re looking for a pretty cool camp spot close to home you should consider Sandy Cape. There is fishing, swimming, diving and maybe even surfing on the right day.

 

On Wittenoom

I’ve found Wittenoom a real curiosity since going there last week. So tonight Danelle and I spent an hour or two googling and reading stories, looking at pictures and watching a video that gives insights into the lives of the 7 people still living there.

I won’t throw all the links down here but you might like to watch this great little video that is a doco on the lives of the remaining residents. What’s interesting and rather tragic is that (according to the video) the 7 who live (the video shows 8, but ‘Les’ has since died) there don’t actually get on with one another.

Wittenoom from Caro Macdonald on Vimeo.

I guess you’ve got to have some kind of quirky, hermit like tendencies to live in a spot like that, but how bizarre to live with 6 other people and not engage…

Its a well made video and highlights some of the oddities about the place as well as a little history. There is also a great collection of images here where I have taken the two images above from.

More Than ‘A Holiday’

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You could just call it ‘holidays’ but that would be missing the significance of what we do when we take a break from the routine and head off as a family.

If its just about catching your breath / R&R then I reckon we can lose out on the opportunity to create fantastic memories and to better define who we are as a family.

It has occasionally been asked of me if I am preparing adequately for retirement, if we are ‘looking to the future responsibly’ and other questions of the like because we enjoy taking holidays and make them a priority. It’s true I could probably save $10-15k every year in lost earnings and money spent when we take holidays, but I am of the opinion that our lives are much much richer for the time we take out together than they are for the financial bottom line.

Of course it’s not am either/or equation but when I consider the fun we have and the connections we make in the time we spend away from home each year I’d never trade it for another bit of the mortgage paid off.

As I look back on my own family holidays as a kid I remember them with great fondness and I hope our kids do the same – times when you get to do some things that will possibly be life long memories. I remember surfing at Ocean beach in Denmark as one of those great holiday events – and I would pester my parents to take me there every day (and twice if we’d been once!) I remember our UK holidays pre Oz – as cold and wet as they were…

I don’t remember many families after the age of 15 – perhaps because I no longer wanted to go on them and did my own thing. I’m aware we have a small window with our kids to create memories and shape their attitudes towards life so I’m hopeful that the type of holidays we take, the frequency with which we go and the stuff we do on them, helps them to have great memories, but also shapes them into better people.

I write this in Broome, a place that has become a favourite for us (despite what the knockers say), while we are camping and enjoying being outdoors and doing it rougher and while we are meeting people and exploring, yet also taking moments to spend lavishly and have fun we wouldn’t often have in everyday life. The pic above is my first attempt at SUP (stand up paddle boarding) harder than it looks!

Creating Special Places

I have always had a great love for Ocean Beach in Denmark. To be honest it’s not the worlds greatest surf break and while it is a beautiful place, it’s no more special than many beaches out there. But it was a place where I had great fun as a kid and hence it has left an imprint on me as a favourite.

Even now as an adult I still venture down there each time we are in Denmark in the hope that it will be breaking like it was in the late 70s. Truth is it was probably very ordinary, but I had such great fun there that it lives larger than that in my memory. In my ‘memory’ I was a brilliant surfer on sensational waves, when in reality I was a scared kid hanging on the inside who happened to score some decent rides when all the real surfers were waiting for proper waves!

I imagine Cable Beach will be our kids ‘Ocean Beach’ as we have had some great times here in the last two years and I imagine we will do it again a few more times before they are teenagers.

On this visit Sam got into bodyboarding. Now that statement needs some qualifying… We hired a body board each day and he took it 10m into the water and caught the whitewater to shore. I tried to nudge him further out but he wasn’t having any of it. In his mind – and in his words – he is now a bodyboarder… I’d like to see him venture out a little before getting too self congratulatory but at the same time it’s nice to see his confidence grow. Maybe next year will be his year for catching some unbroken waves…

There isn’t a heap else about Broome that we really get into other than Cable beach, but I’d say it will have left a mark on our kids and every time they think of it, they will have fond memories.

LPGeeeeeee!

Living in the city there is much to like about LPG. It turns a fuel hungry beast like my GQ Patrol into a reasonably economical car. But once you hit the road things change especially in the north of WA.

In the city petrol is approximately 2.5 times the price of LPG whereas up here is is a much smaller difference. Think 99c/l for LPG in Port Hedland and $1.50 for petrol.

And that’s assuming you can get gas! We are currently on the road from Hedland to Broome and had a planned stop at Sandfire to refill on LPG being right on empty… only to discover the one and only LPG pump in Sandfire had died.

It is 250km to Roebuck and we get about 266km to a tank of petrol. With Jerry cans $55.00 just to buy we thought we would take a gamble and drive carefully. Hopefully with Mrs Backyard driving rather than my lead foot, we will get to Roebuck without any embarrassing stops.

It’s hard to champion LPG when this sort of stuff happens. Until it becomes more prevalent as a fuel I imagine we will always be running the gauntlet on these longer stretches… or we could just get the whole Jerry can thing happening a little more efficiently…

Normally we ring ahead to check on availability but with the crappy mobile service in the NW we were out of range before you could fart and that option evaporated.

Let’s hope we make it…

(Update – ok Mrs BYM managed to get to Roebuck with over a quarter of a tank left. What a legend!)

Off to Broome

Tomorrow we leave Hedland for Broome and I am really looking forward to it.

On our trip last year Broome was one of our favorite spots. The warm weather and stunning Cable Beach were enough to convince us to stay 10 days, the longest time we spent in any one place.

We heard last week that all caravan parks are fully booked, but then one of our old ‘youth group kids’ – now an adult friend and a teacher up there told us we could use her place while she is away.

Score!

So we will likely stay there till Friday and make the most of it. It will be nice to have power again and to be able to crank up the coffee machine! I actually had a fantastic flat white at Muffin Break in South Hedland today (what a surprise) but I’m ready to have my own brew happening again.

We will leave Broome as school holidays end and wend our way back down the coast staying warm for as long as possible.

I’m guessing we will stop at a couple of rivers for free camping, spend some time in Exmouth, Warroora Station and maybe Kalbarri if we get time. But I’m guessing we will be pushing it.

Whatever the case we are well wound down and back in the swing of traveling. The challenge will be coming home again!

Jasmine Valley Eco Resort

A few years back Owen Beck was living in Butler and we would catch up regularly for dinner and in the process became good mates.

He has since got married, moved to Cambodia (left the suburbs…) and set up a fantastic eco-resort called that both offers accommodation for travellers and employment and hope for locals.

Ow tells some pretty tragic stories of how tough life is for those who live in that part of the world. The things they have to do just to survive aren’t what any of us would hope for. So by developing this resort Owen is providing a way out of the poverty cycle and a future for many who would otherwise face a hopeless future.

While they have managed to get the resort up and running and had some great responses to their hospitality (see on trip advisor) they are now entering the quiet season and looking to attract more visitors thru discounts and some contra deals.

Owen wrote to me:

“What we want to do is offer 50% off room prices (which range from $19 to $49 per night, making it $9.50 to $24.50) for bookings before December. If it encourages some folks to come for holidays that would be great! Also, if anyone has kitchen or restaurant skills they can offer to share, we could do a room for time swap. Does that sound reasonable? Air fares are down to $500AUD a lot of the time, so it makes for a pretty cheap holiday in a very beautiful, friendly country.”

So if you’d like to explore more then check out their website and maybe set yourself up for a cool adventure!

69 Erections and Other Trivia From 6 Months on The Road

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In the last 6 months we have put the camper up exactly 69 times, and we’re pretty damn good at it now! What began as a fumbling laborious process has now become a second nature type of routine, however I won’t miss it when we head home tomorrow. Life as a snail has its limitations!

As we head home tomorrow I thought I’d throw up some trivia from the last 6 months of traveling:

Travelled – 24985km from Perth clockwise back to Perth

Total Cost – $19849.00

Weekly Cost – $763.00 We were on $720.00 average for a long time, until we hit WA and had to stay in expensive caravan parks and do car repairs! Blech…

Total Fuel Cost – $4832.00

Photos Taken – 4653

Best Item Brought – coffee machine – apart from saving a small fortune we had great coffee all around Oz (as did plenty of people who bumped into us!)

Best Caravan Park – Pambula Beach was sensational, but close runners up would be Middleton Beach in Albany and Beachlands in Busso.

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Palm Springs

Best Free Camp Site – Its a dead heat between Longreach Water in NT, a little place just 12km west of Elliot, and Palm Springs, 45km out of Halls Creek. I reckon a lot depends on the mood you are in when you visit a place and in both of these places we were feeling good. I reckon Johanna in Vic would be a great camp, but for us it was cold, wet and wild the day we were there.

Best Value Caravan Park – Mission Beach Council park where we stayed on a powered site for $18.00/night or Seaforth Campground where it was $15.00/night or $77.00/week. They were both in Qld and we have found that the banana benders are great on cheap places to stay.

Worst Caravan Parks – Minnipin and Eucla. We stayed at Eucla, but just laughed at Minnipin. Be sure to avoid when you travel.The other surprise in this category was Lighthouse Caravan Park in Exmouth.

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Michael at Kuranda Coffee Republic

Best Coffee Kuranda Coffee Republic wins by a country mile. Brilliant! (To be fair I refuse to have coffee in cafes these days unless I know it gonna be good so there wasn’t much competition)

Best Book Read – The Barbarian Way by Erwin McManus followed by The Life of Michael Petersen, were both brilliant reads.

Weirdest Moment – Meeting Jackson at Palm Springs

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Barry helps Ellie feed the birds

Coolest People We Met – now this is really hard because we met so many brilliant people, but we both found ourselves really impressed by the little community of grey nomads who have made Seaforth their annual pilgrimage. They welcomed us and our kids with open arms and were a fantastic bunch of people.

Best Buy – Its a big toss up between the $1.00 trackies I got from the Warilla op shop, (I think I have wore them for about the next two months non stop) and the portaloo we picked up in Mission Beach. I will confess to being wrong on the need for this item. As much as the girls needed it more than the boys, on cold wet nights it is nice not to have to walk outside to find a tree!

Best surf – This is a tough one as the best waves were undoubtedly at Lennox Head, but Pambula beach was the most fun. Great waves, no crowds and I was in better shape by then too. The pic on the header is from the day we left. Magic!

Saddest Place– Nimbin – I wrote about our afternoon in Nimbin and the pain we saw in what is apparently utopia

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Ellie Gets Her Prize

Biggest Buzz – When Ellie won her prize from Bindi Irwin – a very happy little girl!

Wildest Weather – Our night in Poochera was pretty full on with wind and rain and we baled on windy Cape le Grand, but otherwise we did pretty well.

Ongoing Frustration – kids needing to wee while driving… we need a better system…

Funniest moment – You might have to ask me… but lets just say it involves Enid Blyton and some of her character’s names…

Favourite State – NSW (yep – surprised me too!)

Favourite Place – Pambula ticked all the boxes in the ‘could we live here?’ test, even down to the ‘too small for a McDonalds’ requirement. We hope to do a country stint one day so who knows…

Dumbest Mistake – thinking a week in an apartment in Surfers Paradise would be an enjoyable break… It felt more like we were trapped 18 floors up in a noisy cell with a dodgy bed and nowhere for the kids to play.

Van for Next Time – We might just go again in the Eagle as there isn’t much we could fault about it, but we are attracted to the Jayco Expandas, with bunks for the kids and a shower onboard to make free camping a little easier. Its also 3 times the price…

Car For Next Time – not sure, but one with rear air con, better rear seat leg room and better economy. I’m thinking maybe a Prado turbo diesel.

Biggest Learning – it doesn’t cost as much as you think. We will be looking to do it again in a few years time.

Worst Drivers – Qld… sorry 🙂

Best Memory – so many, but the early part of the trip where we were leaving Perth behind and driving into the Pilbara was definitely up there.

Worst Roads – Qld! We renamed the Barclay Highway, the Barclay Track because it was so bumpy and crazy.

Thanks to those who have shared the road both physically and virtually. We have enjoyed the company of many good friends both on the blog and in person.

Now its back to real life…

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Not any more!