Australia is a land of incredible
opportunity, even though many of its citizens are supposedly ‘doing it tough’
(please read ‘Europe: a land of debt and austerity’). Incredibly, much of this is
allegedly built on that vast expanse of supposed nothingness that accounts for
90% of the land and an insatiable appetite for digging up its rocks. Western
Australia has been particularly self-satisfied to have found itself with a big
pile of rocks (mine mine mine!), though its role as condescending supreme
saviour of the country surely cannot last forever. The rocks will run out at
some point, and all that will be left is a big hole in the ground filled with
water for mega rich Chinese businessmen to float around in while the rest of us,
lacking any kind of intelligence, skill or expertise other than digging up
rocks, serve them cane toad skewers for hors d’oeuvres.
It seems I have been missing out
on this 90% of land and, before it gets torn to rubble, I was very pleased to
have an incredible opportunity to touch its edge. It came by way of Adelaide,
and a non-mining work related trip (yes, there are other industries!). While
brief, Adelaide itself affirmed itself as pleasant and agreeable – nothing
more, nothing less – and blessed with a fine beachside suburb facing west. A place where you can watch the sunset, but
sadly not get a post-work kebab from the souvlaki brothers at 10pm on a
Thursday evening, because it has transformed into a ghost town. Who says
Canberra has all the fun?
Nevertheless, the next day kicked
off with a hearty hotel buffet breakfast and enough fuel to take me north,
towards Port Augusta and running parallel with the southern flanks of the
Flinders Ranges. A stop for belated lunch – local ham, local cheese, not so
local Coke Zero – at Mount Remarkable was not especially remarkable, but it
signalled a transition point from fertile, country South Australia to the much
fabled outback. Now the roads were straight and flat, the pastures barren and
rocky, the colours reddening and skies enlarging. The small town of Hawker
provided an outpost of four wheel drives and onward provisions for expeditions
into the dust, and, for me, a merciful ice cream to take me the last,
increasingly beautiful kilometres to Wilpena.
Wilpena is little more than a
campground and small resort sitting alongside the Flinders Ranges National Park
visitor centre. But the entertainment here is really the many trails that start
from this point, effectively at your front door, and venture into and around
Wilpena Pound. It was along one of these trails that I tiptoed in first light
the following morning, a three kilometre climb of some 400 metres or so to the
randomly named Mount Ohlssen-Bagge.
The sun emerged as I scrambled
over one of the two more tortuous parts of the trail, but its glow immediately
sparked renewed vigour in my legs, and a dramatic landscape waking up in a haze
of red. It wasn’t quite a champagne breakfast at the top, but the apple and
hotel cookie, was hardly a letdown given the grand landscape in which it was
chomped down.
After such a heart pumping start to the day, the journey down was a relief – I always like it when gravity is on your side – though a trifle annoying as the steps do go on and on and on. And there at the end of the trail was my room, and a cup of tea and a shower before heading out for walk number two. This one actually required a little drive, to Arkaroo Rock, but the walk was a perfect wind down, agreeably warm, pleasantly shaded, set at the foot of the rugged ranges illuminated by the eastern sun. Mid way round were some Aboriginal cave paintings, though nearby were also some more recent schoolboy penis drawings, of which authenticity I cannot be certain.
Starting the day so early meant
that with two walks down it was only just lunchtime. This was the lazier part
of the day, a Wilpena Pound Burger at the resort almost matching the size of
its namesake. It was something I had to
walk off, albeit fairly sedately, and walk number three met that criteria just
perfectly. This followed a generous, wide and flat trail into the Pound,
following the course of a semi-dry creek, lined with incredible River Red Gums
and occasional billabongs. At its end, an old homestead, now long abandoned,
unable to survive on the cycle of droughts and flooding storms. Further
lookouts nearby offered a chance to take in the scale of Wilpena Pound, which
is essentially a ring of mountainous ranges, enclosing a somewhat lusher, more
fertile expanse. It gives the appearance
of a natural crater, formed on the sea bed billions of years ago. Let’s hope
it’s never pillaged for rocks to sell.
Ambling back to base there
remained an hour or so of light to enjoy and of course the culmination of the
day as the sun set. Further opportunity to enjoy the warm, reddening light as
the sun says its goodbyes for a little while, kissing the rolling folds and
crevices of the land goodnight until dawn. Rapidly giving up its warmth, but
uniting a random assortment of grey nomads, backpackers and me to share wine
and crackers and create our own warmth.
I can see how this land can get
under your skin, how it can captivate in its elemental simplicity of earth and
air. How it endures, despite frantic efforts to dig it up. How it is unchanged
since long before some people daubed ochre on its caves, and even longer before
Bazza declared his love for Noelene in a chalky etch next to a penis. How its
sweeps and curves affect and reflect the light, changing every minute,
alternating from a softening glow to the full force of a spotlight. How it
stretches on and on and on, into a nothingness that is anything but empty. And
how it compels you to rise early for the second morning in a row, to watch this
land unfold before you, emerge into shadows and light, and carry on just being.
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