Only a short post today, despite a long leg of the trip. Tonight is our first night in the rooftop tent this trip. We are on the Blackstone
Warburton Road about 60 km east of
Warburton, parked in a quarry off the road. It is sheltered, flat (necessary for a level tent and a good night’s sleep) and out of the way of any cars or people. Dinner is done – pasta sauce from the freezer heated on the gas stove, pasta and a sprinkle of parmesan cheese washed down with a cold beer. All good.
A lonely windmill on the Great Central Road just out od Laverton
On the Great Central Road
These kinds of cars are not for the outback
A long drive today, the 580+km from
Laverton to
Warburton on the
Great Central Road was fairly straightforward but we still needed to keep our wits
about us driving on gravel. The road is very
well graded and wide, a few corrugations here and there but a comfortable trip. To keep us focused we started a game of trying to identify the model of abandoned cars that are smashed, burnt, rusted (or all three) littered along the side of the road. By sunset tonight we had counted 154 dead cars. Holden is out in front with 42, followed closely by Ford with 40. A bit like watching
Bathurst. The leaders are followed by a range of Toyotas, Mitsubishis, Valiants, Jeeps and the outliers of a Mini, a Cadillac (yes a Cadillac, but it is now an advertising hording for a roadhouse) and a golf buggy. Over 50 of them we nominated as “unknown”, being too smashed, burnt, rusted (or all three) to easily identify.
A long and lonely road
Approaching a line of hills
Our camp in the quarry
The land up here is open and almost empty – very few “live” cars, we came across about 20 all up driving along the road. There was a road crew from
Laverton working about 50km out of Tjukayirla; a couple of graders, rollers and a water truck. The vegetation is sparse, lots of low spinifex and scrub with occasional trees in the valleys that manage to gather enough water. A few
well-spaced sand dunes roll across the landscape, and here and there rocky outcrops rise out of the flat land. In terms of wildlife we saw a kangaroo and a bunch of camels, the main life out here seeming to be birds – lots of crows and budgies, hawks and a few eagles – and flies. There are lots of flies.