After just on sixteen months on the road Kings Canyon ticked off the last box on my `places to visit` list. My next destination was home - Yarrawonga, Victoria - just 2306 kilometers south east. I embarked on that journey on Monday September 21. I was in no hurry. In fact in many ways, while I was looking forward to going home, I was a bit uncertain about how I would cope with normal day to day living. I love being alone on the road, living in the moment, being free, no obligations, few responsibilities and no expectations or pressures from other people. It`s a very, very indulgent way to live. But I have a beautiful home and garden to look after, friends and family I`m dying to see and, if I want to, I can always hit the road again at any time and most certainly will anyway to avoid the next southern winter. At least the harsh Covid restrictions of the past few months have been eased in regional Victoria (not so for Melbourne still in severe Stage 4 lockdown), and we can now cross the Murray to play golf and enjoy the more relaxed Club lifestyle in NSW.
Erldunda Roadhouse where I had stayed on the way to Uluru seemed like the logical overnighter to start with. It was just on 250 kilometers down the road, put me on the Stuart highway and I had enjoyed being there last time. I paid my $15 for an unpowered site and picked a nice spot on the grass. Before sunset James and I made our way to the viewing platform up between the camel and emu enclosures and with wine in hand enjoyed watching the outback sun drop below the horizon. Beautiful as always!
It was not a restful night, however. The van battery (which is 9 years old) was on its last legs and I was trying to eek out its life till the end of my trip. Unfortunately it decided to emit its very annoying persistent low warning beep in the wee hours. Bugger! The lead would not reach the nearest power point so I had to shift sites in the middle of the night. I would need to be more careful with the use of lights and the water pump if it was to survive the last seven days of travel.
Marla was my destination next day. It`s a tiny town and roadhouse just 250 km down on the Stuart highway crossing the border from NT into South Australia. It was a beautiful day and an easy, straight, flat drive. I was quite relaxed listening to an audio book, quite loudly I must admit to be able to hear above the road noise, when a car pulled in front of me and a bloke waved me down. In the rear camera I saw a second car with a bloke in it pull up behind. Mmmm......in the middle of bloody nowhere and I have no idea why these guys have pulled me over. The bloke in front got out and I must admit to a flood of relief when a lady gets out of the passenger side. `You better have a look at your tyre`, he says. I get out and fuck me.....one of my tyres is absolutely shredded! I can`t believe I didn`t feel or hear a thing.
Thank goodness Rod, Trev and Nicky came to my rescue. The boys took charge, jacked up the van and put the spare on. I was so appreciative. Fortunately there wasn`t too much damage apart from the tyre itself and the fairing around the wheel well. Even the rim was ok as the rear tyre had held it off the road....very happy I have a dual axle van. It could have been a very different story otherwise.
I drove the rest of the way to Marla with the audio system off and paying a lot more attention to what was going on with the car and van. With no spare tyre I took it quite slowly and when I arrived at Marla Roadhouse late in the afternoon I made a beeline for the bar and ordered bubbles. Next morning I drove around to the local mechanical workshop and the lovely man there fitted a new tyre for a very reasonable $230.
I hit the road pretty early next day as I was going to Coober Pedy and wanted time to explore the interesting opal mining town. It has a bit of a reputation as a pretty rough place so while I was hoping to freecamp rather than pay for a caravan park, I would only do so if there were other travelers camped there as well. As it turned out there were heaps of others set up on the rough dirt of the Old Timers Mine RV area. I found myself a spot and pulled in, leaving the van hitched. I then hit the town on foot.
Coober Pedy is certainly a unique town. It`s famous not only for its opal but also for its fascinating underground lifestyle. Many of the homes, hotels, churches and restaurants are tunneled into hillsides and are almost invisible on first inspection. Its population of 3,500 is made up of 47 different nationalities who have come to strike it lucky since opal was first discovered in 1915. The first miners called it the Stuart Range Opal Fields, but it was renamed Coober Pedy in 1920, the name being derived from the local indigenous Anangu words meaning `white man in a hole`. The area is quite moon-like with shafts and mullock heaps dotted as far as they eye can see. It`s a very messy, space with disused, rusty old mining equipment and car wrecks scattered all over the place.
I ended up staying two nights, not only because there was lots I wanted to see, but also because the forecast winds on the Friday were southerly at 50kmph. Not the sort of headwind you want to be towing a two and a half ton van into. James and I spent that cool, windy day driving around the town visiting many of the tourist attractions including:
An underground house:
Underground churches:
An underground hotel:
And the golf course:
While camped at Coober Pedy I got to know some of the other nomads. I recognized one couple, Jeff and Jackie, from the sunset viewing platform at Kings Canyon. We got talking about where we were headed to and their next destination was Lake Hart. They`d been there a couple of weeks earlier and said it was a great spot overlooking the empty saltpan. It was a good option for me so we agreed to meet up there. It proved to be a great decision, not only because it was a terrific freecamp but also as the recent rains had filled the lake up. It was stunning!
Once I left Lake Hart I started to experience get-home-itis. I decided instead of taking a further four nights on the road I would do a few more k`s each day and arrive Wednesday. I freecamped at Bowman Park just outside of Crystal Brook, Red Cliffs Golf Club near Mildura and finally at Reedy Lake north of Kerang. I had just enough wood with me to have a fire each night which was great as it was bloody cold and with my van battery fading quickly I needed to stay outside and minimize use of power. And it was lovely to sit with James by the fire and make the most of the final remnants of my nomadic lifestyle.
I arrived home at Yarrawonga, Victoria about 1.30pm on Wednesday September 30th. I had been on the road for sixteen months and seven days and had driven just over fifty thousand kilometers. My experience had been unbelievable and a journey filled with many challenges, tribulations, heartaches and joys. I had pushed myself beyond my fears and felt proud that I had successfully gone solo around OZ.
SEPTEMBER 2020 COVID-19 STATISTICS & SITUATION
1/3/20
Global Infections: 86,604 Australian Infections: 25
Global Deaths: 2977 Australian Deaths: 0
1/4/20
Global Infections: 871,371 Australian Infections: 4763
Global Deaths: 42,107 Australian Deaths: 20
1/5/20
Global Infections: 3,322,966 Australian Infections: 6766
Global Deaths: 234,408 Australian Deaths: 93
1/6/20
Global Infections: 6,259,224 Australian Infections: 7,195
Global Deaths: 373,691 Australian Deaths: 103
1/7/20
Global Infections: 10,795,162 Australian Infections: 7,920
Global Deaths: 518,058 Australian Deaths: 104
1/8/20
Global Infections: 17,745,673 Australian Infections: 16,905
Global Deaths: 682,197 Australian Deaths: 197
1/9/20
Global Infections: 25,892,091 Australian Infections: 25,819
Global Deaths: 860,323 Australian Deaths: 657
1/10/20
Global Infections: 34,150,555 Australian Infections: 27,078
Global Deaths: 1.018,212 Australian Deaths: 886
Covid-19 is out of control across the entire globe with true infection and death rates undoubtedly much higher than reported as poorer countries with massive populations do not have the capability to test and identify.
Most Australian states are Covid free or close to it. Victoria is still fighting to get numbers down and has gone from 700 odd cases a day down to under 20. That has come at a huge cost with Greater Melbourne still in stage 4 lockdown and everyone suffering terribly from months of confinement to their homes. The economic fallout is disastrous.
Regional Victoria, where I live, still has restrictions but we can dine out, meet in small groups and travel regionally. Every Victorian has to wear a mask while in public. Victorians are banned from all other states with the exception of communities within 50km of the NSW border - they can cross over but go no further than 50km. Western Australia and Tasmania`s borders are closed to the rest of Australia.