(That straight line shouldn't be there!)
23rd August – 6th September 2011
After six days, we finally left the Diamantina NP and headed south 244 km through Davenport Downs, Palparara, Currawilla and Mooraberree to Toorijumpa Crossing. It was muster time and the huge cattle trucks were either loading or making their way along the track. Rounding up the cattle was being done using a helicopter and the boys and girls on their bikes. The dust created by the trucks could be seen from a long way off. We had a long chat with Dale, the head stockman for Davenport Downs and Currawilla Stations and Bobby, one of the boys on the bikes. Dale told us that they were taking 15,000 head out of the paddock we were standing in. Now that's a lot of rump steak! Their stock numbers at the time were 40,000 head spread out over 4 million acres and so far they had been on the job for 9 days.
Weeks before we would have been caught up in this
The cattle think they are going on a holiday
The muster was full on
The Robinson R22 refuelling
Every year the wet causes extensive damage to the roads
South to Betoota
Through comments made in our Diamantina Blog, ‘Gidgea Jack’ let us know that he was carting cattle through that area just a months after our visit – it’s a pity our paths didn’t cross. ‘Member - Dave B1 (QLD)’ let us know that we would have been welcome on the Davenport Downs property for a visit as he works there. Next time! Also, Ma ‘Ma & Pa’ through a member message let us know that her grandfather once managed
Diamantina Lakes and other properties. Don’t you just love this site!
Bobby, the Boundary Rider - Mooraberree Station
Distant jump ups
This was only one of many, many gates
Toorijumpa road crossing was dry but we could see that in the wet it would not taken much for this crossing to be closed. We camped right alongside the track at our waterfront site. We were not in anybody’s way – as there was no traffic at all. The most amazing thing about the creek was that its water was crystal clear. Quite unusual as everywhere else we went, the water was muddy. We took full advantage of this and over our 2 day stay, we washed everything. It was peaceful, quiet and the weather magnificent!
Toorijumpa crossing
The crystal clear waters of the creek
Betoota's temporary airstrip outside Mt Leonard Station 20100
A further 93 km south, travelling on the Currawilla/ Mooraberree Rd, we reached
Betoota.
Betoota is a small town situated on a gibber plain, 170 kilometres east of
Birdsville and 227 kilometres west of
Windorah. It is in the Diamantina Shire, in the Channel Country, in far south west Qld. Its
population is seasonal with its last permanent resident being Sigmund Remienko who died in 2004.
Betoota is the town that has been designated as Australia's smallest town. The only facilities in
Betoota are a racetrack and a dry weather
airstrip. This strip was flooded in 2010 so the council graded the road outside Mt Leonard and this was used as a temporary measure. When we came into
Betoota we thought it was rather strange to use the road as the town’s
airstrip we later heard the story. Visitors are drawn to the town during the annual
Simpson Desert Racing Carnival which is held in September.
The town was surveyed in 1887 with only three streets were ever named. The
Betoota Hotel was built in the late 1880s and is now the last remaining building in town. The building is constructed of
sandstone and has timber floors. The hotel operated until 1997 when its owner, Sigmund (Simon) Remienko, retired at 82 years of age. Originally from Poland, Sigmund worked as a
grader driver until he bought the
Betoota Hotel in 1957 and was
Betoota's sole resident until ill health forced him to move. He was an outback legend!
The old Betoota Hotel
Rear of the Betoota Hotel
Betoota Races, here we come!
Our first night at Betoota Race Track
The Betoota Cup and other prizes
History revealed that in 1885, the Queensland Government opened a customs post to collect a toll for stock travelling the stock route with
Betoota once a Cobb & Co change station.
We passed through
Betoota back in August 2008.This time we were there to attend the annual
Betoota Races, part of the
Simpson Desert Race Carnival circuit, to be held on Saturday 27th August. This is a country race meeting, priding itself on being family oriented. We arrived on Thursday, being one of the first campers to arrive. The weekend started with a dance on Friday night and the races held the next day. With most of the locals from surrounding properties not arriving till race day, this was a low key event but full of fun. For a one day event a lot of time and money had been poured in. The Diamantina Shire Council had spent the week grading the race track and the road between
Betoota and
Birdsville. The ablutions blocks had been opened and were being cleaned. These facilities are only used for 3 weekends in the year! Being such a small race meeting the campers were able to walk around the stables and talk to the owners and trainers. We were on site to see the horses being showered, taken for their morning or evening walks and see them training out on the track. As you can imagine, country tracks like these contain a lot of stones and although the graders and rollers had worked for a week the stones were still poking out of the ground. One of the trainers organised for volunteers to do the emu walk ie walk, bend over and pick up a stone, walk, bend over and pick up a stone. Half way round the track we all realised it was a futile activity – the horses in the first race would have the track back to the condition it was in a week ago.
Well, it was something different and occupied quite a few people for a long time.
It was special to be so close to the horses
The horses were exercised in the early morning
One of the stables
Fashion on the field
And the winner of the Betoota Cup is .........
There was plenty of room for more campers
We placed a bet (or more like it made a donation to the bookie) in every race and had a good time. The small country race meeting - a must do.
On Sunday morning everyone moved out and
Betoota once again became quiet.
We moved onto
Birdsville, 169 km further west and after a drink in the
Birdsville Hotel we went back out of town about ½ km and camped by a creek. Described as the
Melbourne Cup of the outback,
Birdsville gets set to hold its annual race meeting one week after
Betoota. The program features horses from all over Australia competing for the coveted
Birdsville Cup. Prize money is worth the effort.
http://www.birdsvilleraces.com/Races2008/RaceProgramIt was time to head for Birdsville to see if we could pick a winner there
The graders were hard at it preparing the road into Birdsville
Three days before the races things were pretty quite
The Birdsvill Pub is a must at any time of the year
Our campsite at Pelican Point
Pelican Point - a small exclusive site
Fred Brophy set up his boxing tent
Let the games begin
I forget what they called it but it was fun
The Diamantina council had spent a lot of money in recent years running water pipes from the town out several km for all the campers. Unlike
Betoota with around 400 people in attendance,
Birdsville’s
population swells to
well over 4,000. At intervals along the road were banks of porta loos that were emptied daily and on the two race days buses ferried visitors to the course, about 4 km out of town. The bus fare was a gold coin donation and the proceeds went to the Royal Flying Doctor, I think.
We arrived on Thursday but had no trouble filling in the time till the weekend. We were there to see Fred Brophy set up his famous boxing tent as
well as all the food and souvenir vendors. Fred Brophy is the last boxing tent showman in the world and he's become a legend at events around the outback. Fred's a fourth generation showman; his dad was a side-show operator and his mum - a trapeze artist. His current project is the writing of a book about his life and then it'll be retirement for Fred and the end of an era.
Over the next 2 days thousands of people arrived and the camping ground filled to overflowing. By Friday morning all the bar stools, tables and chairs, glasses and bottled drinks were all gone from the hotel – it was cans only from this time on. Of an evening Noel Brophey coaxed members of the crowd into this tent to box with his boys and 1 girl and of course, the pub was raging. On Friday and Saturday nights entertainment with strobe lighting was provided in the beer garden. Cans littered the street outside the pub and the police just turned a blind eye and you flung your can high into the air to fall to the ground with the rest. It is a tradition! Chicka flew into
Birdsville several times back in the 70’s and 80’s and told me how beer cans were ankle deep outside the pub. Now, when all are asleep, the council workers are hard at it cleaning the streets for the next day. He thought it was not quite the same! Also, when he used to fly in there would be around 200 small planes flying in for the event. Now, it is a much, much smaller group.
Birsville Races are a must do but for me, just once will suffice.
The campground was overflowing
Not as many small planes fly in these days
Banks of porta loos were positioned right along the road
Chicka had been at the Birdsville races 3 times previous but this was my first time
The Birdsville Cup - And the winner is .........
All day the buses ferried people to and from the track
One by one they joined in for the boxing event
And this was at 8pm
Lets have another drink, we're not driving home.
On Monday the thousands of tourists were pulling out heading north, perhaps to
Bedourie for the last race meeting in the
Simpson Desert Race Meeting calendar, south down the
Birdsville Track, west to Big Red and the
Simpson Desert crossing or east through the vast NSW or Qld outback. Our path took us to
Little Red then Big Red, the highest of the
Simpson Desert’s 1,100 sand dunes. This time it was not our intention to cross
the desert as it was back in 2004 but to firstly see how
well the truck would climb the dune and then to
camp on top as we did before.
As the crow flies the first dune is very close to
Birdsville and it would have been a quick, easy run to Big Red. However the enormous amount of rain encountered in these parts over the past several years has put a large lake in the traveller’s path making a 50 km diversion necessary. At the
road closed sign traffic was sent south to the
SA border, east across a much lower section of the dune then north to
Little Red. It was late in the day and Chicka preferred to attack Big Red first thing in the morning so, as you would, we climbed up on top of
Little Red and camped for the evening. We were alone and it was magical. All except for the mice! I thought they would be down in the swales not on top of the dunes but I was wrong once again.
Now this is one mean machine
At $5,000 to turn the key we were grateful that we didn't need the service
About 7.00am we drove west off
Little Red then north to BIG RED! The air and the sand was cool and Hugo 1 (the truck), with his super single tyres deflated , just drove up the
hill without any hesitation. If you know Chicka at all, you would know he doesn’t rush into anything. Big Red was no exception - he selected 2nd/low and just idled all the way to the top. It was the greatest feeling! We did a little drive around the top and then positioned ourselves on the western edge of the dune where we could watch the day’s entertainment. The next car up to the top said, ‘How did you get up here?
It is just so funny watching all the different techniques in trying to reach the top. I just love the ones who go back a couple of hundred meters then charge like a bull only to dig into the sand when they lose momentum and try to change gear. Most don’t give up, they just keep trying and trying till they finally conquer. Back in 2008 our first attempt ended in the 80 Series digging in. Of course all the experts on top of the dune were calling out advice on UHF. Chicka realised that, although our tyre pressures had been down for
the desert crossing they had built up pressure on the hot sand and now had to be deflated even more. The second attempt, as they say, was a ‘piece of cake’.
Big Red via the 50 km detour
Camped on Little Red watching the sunset
On top of Big Red - the highest dune in the Simpson Desert
The mice were very active during the night
Wow! What a sunset!
What a magic finish to our time on Big Red
We camped on Big Red under the stars with 2 other cars and thousands of mice!
In the morning we returned to
Birdsville to get a few provisions before heading off on our next adventure –
Innamincka via the
Cordillo Downs Road then south along the SA fenceline to
Silverton for the Exploroz 2011 gathering.