The Whining Windmill behaved very well overnight. I did hear it a couple of times but nowhere near as eerily as it had sounded earlier in the
evening.
There was however the pitter patter of rain throughout the early
morning. Having just awoken for the early morning ablutions it's not terribly
wet underfoot yet and it was only a sprinkle, but it will add an extra degree
of difficulty for the pack up this morning. Having said that it's one of those
mesmerising sounds akin to rain on corrugated iron roof.
Sun is due to rise in a little over half an hour so an attempt
for some more shuteye is calling.
Up to a light rain which had wet things nicely but was nowhere
near as heavy as it sounded from the tent. I dried out the stove top and got
the kettle boiling for the pot of tea and thermos, then begin the process of
breaky and pack up.
The rain eased off and we all got packed and did the communal washing up before choofing off past the windmill with Innamincka on our mind, rain is forecast and we want to be somewhere in case we get stuck for a day or two. The plan is to meet Mary, Phil and Kate at Innamincka tonight, Steve got in touch before we left this morning and we've guessed they are half an hour behind us all day.
Whining windmill |
and again |
Stef was obviously a little bored and took off on a side track, hoping to cut into our convoy. |
Foiled - he had to give way to us as we passed by on the main track. |
We stopped for fuel at Tibooburra, then onto Cameron Corner
(entered QLD for a wee break at the Cameron Corner Store) for lunch after
crossing the dog fence and leaving NSW and entering South Australia, where our
youngest team member forgot all about gate protocol.
Tibooburra had a pretty cool entry to town. |
The animal cut outs were very good. |
Stef getting a dink. |
The gate, that we were waiting to shut, once the others had passed through. |
Border crossing. |
Lined up for lunch at Cameron Corner, fixing our stuck fridge slide, turns out a piece of wood had jammed it..an easy fix. |
With many kms to get under the belt we were pushing along at a
pace that was easy for the cars and a tad more challenging for the 'Fat Arse'
van.
With Front vehicles using radios to communicate particular road
conditions and places to take caution, one sand hill had Meg a tad stumped for
descriptive words - it was "a bit …messed up" on the left side, so
stay right. We were not left wondering for too long exactly what messed up
meant. It was pot holey and filled with light sand which meant rough and worth
avoiding. Since the use of the term "messed up" it's been used to
describe a few things around camp.
A stop at a gum tree at Merti Merti turn off for a discussion
about which track to take , hereafter known as the Merti Merti Discussion tree.
Our track took us through the oil fields with many many 'oil
nodders' with names like Moe, Affogato, Bugito, Jenna - to name a few.
Quite a few rough bits and corrugations along the way today.
Also saw bikes up trees, lots of critters including emus, roos, goats,
cattle, horses, eagles, (all of which I failed to get pics of.) I actually
unearthed the camera today and have a few snaps after lazily relying on phone
pics (both mine and others) to date.
Arrived at Innamincka just on dark, about 5.30ish. As we pulled
in there was very sketchy phone service, enough for a text from the bank and
one shortly after from Mary. They were now about 15 minutes behind us, so by
the time we toiletted and plotted our plan their lights were pulling into town.
The plans were as follows. Booked into pub for tea in about an
hour. Head over to town common or coach parking and set up camp then walk back
for tea.
It was starting to rain as we picked our way between a lot of
other camps to find space beside a bloke named Hendry that Steve knows with the
same van as his.
Our not yet very muddy, wet campsite at Innamincka town common. |
We wandered over about 1/2 a kilometre like browns cows. Sarah
drove Carmel and the Willshire Morgans drove too- they were ready for a shower
after a long day in the car. There is a public ablutions block at Innamincka
with good showers $2 for 3 minutes.
Tea was nice, the place was very busy, lots hiding from the
weather and also many bound for the Big Red Bash.
Walked back to camp about 8.15 - it feels like midnight - we are
now on SA time again so 8.15 is REALLY 8.45.
Time to peg the tent out a bit more, sort out my bed - which gets folded up holistic bolus and
plonked in the bed in Dads van - this is an upgrade from packing and rolling
everything up every morning and the reverse each night.
Some phaffing around to get organised for a shower in the
morning and then into bed to write the last of the blog.
Great to have everyone together now and hopefully we can really
chill into the trip. Depending on weather and rainfall around here and towards
Coongie, we MAY find ourselves stranded due to road conditions or we MAY head
off for a couple of days at Coongie. Only time and weather conditions will
tell.
Goodnight, sleep tight.
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