We
headed inland the next morning for the Outback. When we arrived in the edge of
it, people were very excited. No, not to see us, but because it rained the
night before. Their first significant rain in three years.
As
we parked in a small village, we were amazed by the car next to us. It was a
very long, very old station wagon. It had gas cans hanging all over it, filled
with bedding and supplies, clotheslines stretching across it. The tag said,
“Outback Australia.” We thought at first we were in a movie set. Anyway, we
just had to wait until the owner got back, and get a look at him. When he
arrived, he looked the part. Trips are just more interesting, with Barbara and
her Dunnahoe nerve. We soon knew his life history. He was European, and he
first came to the Outback years ago. He got on the dole, and lived on it,
wandering about. He had come to this village, hoping to be able to get
government money closer to civilization. He could not, so the last we saw of
him, he had filled up his gas tank, all of his jugs, and was heading out toward
Alice Springs, where there was almost no grass or trees, where the living was
easy, on the dole. Australia has virtually no homeless. Anyone could get on the
dole. And, we were told, if homeless people acted crazy, they were treated like
they were, and put away.
We
headed on south, along the edge of the hard outback, to Charleyville. Along the
way, we saw lots of Emus, goats, many birds and kangaroos, and bottle trees.
Shaped like a bottle.
The
school district there, we found out, was the size of Texas. With thirty
some-odd students. School was conducted by radio.
We
passed by a telephone booth, very rare in the outback. Then we went back and
tried to call the kids. Luckily, Barbara caught both of them at the same place,
and everyone was happy. My happiness faded as I felt a big something crawling
on my face. It was a very big spider. I brushed it off. Now, I know our
poisonous American spiders, but I don't know Australian spiders. I did know
they had some that would kill you dead as a doornail. I noticed the phone booth
we were in was full of spiderwebs. I told Barbara to hang up, we had to get out
of there. Neither she nor the kids would hear of it, we had never talked with both of our kids at the
same time before. Finally I just dragged
her out. She was mad, but settled down when I told her about the spider.
I
counted 103 Kangaroo bodies in a ten kilometer stretch, lying along the road.
As I said before, they just felt obligated to jump out in front of a car, and
most people who lived there had bars on the front of their car to prevent
damage. Also, Australia, where so many different animals live, had no buzzards
or other carrion eaters. Plus, that part of Australia was extremely dry. The
bodies just pile up and stay there forever, it seemed.
We arrived at an Aboriginal Arts Center. We
had never seen an Aboriginal before. An old, old man was working on his art
piece, and Barb just naturally befriended him,
Talking his ear off. He was patient with us for awhile, a nice old man.
Finally, though, he just got up and disappeared.
Heading on south, we began to meet Road Trains. There were big trucks
pulling 3, 4, or more big trailers, usually filled with cattle, some
double-deckers. The farther they were into the Outback, the more trailers they
were allowed to pull. The first time I met one on the road, weaving back and
forth like a snake, I started looking for a good place to leave the road. There
was none. In some places, we traveled 100 kilometers without meeting anyone.
We
passed a yard sale. Barbara just never can pass one up in another country, she
just has to see what their old stuff looks like. When we walked around the
corner of the house, a big animal made a run at Barbara. She bolted for the
car. Finally, the lady convinced her it was a pet. It was an Alpaca, like a
Llama. It just loved to lay its head on Barbara's shoulder, and make a
contented, purring sound. Barbara bought a small, delicate teapot with roses on
it, and actually made it back home with it. I bought a weird thing that, I
found out later, is a Chinese Hindu Idol or God or something, I'm not sure
what. Back home, I pulled it out to show
a friend who had just been a missionary in China, and she ran away screaming. I
don't know what all the fuss is about, it has been a totally well behaved weird
thing in my closet for years now. We went on, but stopped quickly when a large
lizard with a head on each end crawled out into the road in front of us.
Looking more closely, one head proved to be fake. I guess the fake head is used
to convince predators it's boldly facing it while actually running away. Not a
bad idea.
We
had trouble finding lodging that night. Seems it was Labor Day in Australia,
and everything was packed up. We finally found a bar with a huge room filled
with beds upstairs, so we had it to ourselves. They had beds in there for 20 or
so. They advertised free “sizzlers” with a room or bed rental. Well, this was
their “super bowl” night, and the fans in the bar were already drunk and rowdy.
I didn't even want to go into the bar, I've never been much on Honky Tonks.
But, Barbara was not about to miss out on our sizzler, (hot dog) so we went in.
We sat in a back corner. I could see right off that the drunks were hanging on
every play on the TV, and we would have to stand between them and the TV to get
our sizzlers. I was ready to go hungry, and I was beginning to see that the “
Dunnahoe nerve” was beginning to turn on me. Barb just marched up there,
blocked the drunks off, and demanded our sizzlers. I just hung back, and tried
to look like I wasn't with her. Someday, that “Dunnahoe nerve” is going to be
the death of me!
The
next day, as we moved on south, (I thought my life was about to go south on me
last night.) and the country was beautiful. Green hills, full of sheep. Purple
flowers covered many fields, as far as you could see. We drove past a gas
station with lots of people standing around a huge ram. Barb jumped out to get
a picture. The huge ram made a run at her. Once again, she bolted for the car.
There's some things that “Dunnahoe nerve” just don't cover. Turned out, just
another pet.
We
drove through the beautiful Blue Mountains, skirted the edge of Sydney, and
headed on south. A Sheep Station
advertised home stays, so we went for it. Early the next morning, the sheep
rancher said he was rounding up all the sheep to “mark the lambs.” Well, that
involves cutting a piece of skin off just below the tail, so that its bodily
functions would not mat up there, and attract flies that laid dangerous worms.
His daughter, 12 or so, hated that day, but she had to help. They needed the whole family. Barbara took her aside and
gave her the old “I was a farm girl too, and sometimes, you just do what you gotta
do” talk. Of course, marking lambs is different from chopping cotton. Those
weeds didn't scream when you cut parts off.. But, it did help. I was put in the
back of the pickup with the dogs, Barb in the cab with the humans. He just
drove around the flock, giving a special whistle for each dog and each task
assigned to him, and in short order the sheep were all penned. One of the dogs
was very independent. He never acted on the first whistle, it took two to get
him into action. But he was so good once he was in action, the sheep man
tolerated him making his statement.
The
Station had a huge water tank on one corner of each building, and every drop of
water they used was rainwater from those tanks. Well water was salty. It did
not rain very often.
Next
we came to Canberra, the Capitol. Sydney and Melbourne both wished to be the
Capitol City, and Canberra was created
as the Capitol, close to halfway in between, as a compromise. It was relatively
new, and was perfectly laid out for its purpose.
Next
we climbed into the Snowy Mountains. The skiing season had just closed, and we
pretty well had it to ourselves. Moving
on, we stopped at a Duckbill Platypus reserve, and although we hid in the
bushes and watched the river a long time, we never saw one.
Kangaroo were still plentiful, and we began to see roadsigns that said,
“Danger – Wombat crossing.” What the heck is a wombat? Well, we finally found
out. They are mammals, maybe the size of a small hog, but they were very dense
and heavy. Built like a concrete block. Run over one, and you could tear up the
bottom of your car.
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