![Tracker to Wyndham]()
Tracker to Wyndham
Today we awoke early with the change in time zone and got the washing done etc and we headed off to
Wyndham a small port town known geographically as the ‘Top town of the West' Australia's northernmost town and the start/end point for the
Gibb River Road .
Wyndham has a diverse history of the cattle and mining industries, a small frontier town that typifies the true character of the
Kimberley region.
On our way just down the road from where we are staying are fields and fields of cotton.
![Cotton Field irrigated from Lake Argyle]()
Cotton Field irrigated from Lake Argyle
![Cotton]()
Cotton
On the edge of town as we were leaving we crossed
Ord River Diversion Dam and stopped at the
Lookout. It is a barrage located 6 km west of
Kununurra on the Victoria Highway. Completed in 1963, it features 20 massive radial gates that control
water released from
Lake Argyle. It feeds the region's irrigation channels.
![Diversion Dam]()
Diversion Dam
![Diversion Dam 2]()
Diversion Dam 2
As we were beginning our drive to Wiyndham these two magnificent
Brolgas (Antigone rubicunda), also famously known as the Australian Crane we on the roadside to say goodbye. They are incredibly majestic, tall birds (standing up to 1.4 meters) and are one of Australia's largest flying birds.
![Brolgas]()
Brolgas
Our first stop was at
The Grotto a small
waterhole in a
natural amphitheatre. Stairs carved into
the rock lead down to
the pool surrounded by lush vegetation. From a distance the stairs remind me of ancient Rome etc. At the base of 140 steep stone steps there is a very deep
water hole. They say
the pool is more than 100m deep, and it is so clear. The descent was a little daunting as the steps are narrow and there is no railing etc, we were very fortunate and had the whole place to ourselves for about 1/2 hour, you wouldn't want to meet a person coming the other way on the stairs.
![Steep Stone Stair Descent]()
Steep Stone Stair Descent
![Waterhole at the Bottom]()
Waterhole at the Bottom
![Sheer Cliff Walls]()
Sheer Cliff Walls
![Natural Ampitheatre at the Top]()
Natural Ampitheatre at the Top
![Looking down the valley from the top]()
Looking down the valley from the top
Lee Richardson
Lookout was our next stop and there was the most exquisite carved metal
sign. Maggies Valley was named after Maggie Nicholso who, in the late 1920s, was the first person to drive a vehicle (Chevrolet 4 Tabletop) into what is now known as 'Maggies Valley.'
![Maggies Valley]()
Maggies Valley
![Lee Richardson Lookout]()
Lee Richardson Lookout
![Lee Richardson Lookout 2]()
Lee Richardson Lookout 2
![Lee Richardson Lookout 3]()
Lee Richardson Lookout 3
![Lee Richardson Lookout 4]()
Lee Richardson Lookout 4
We called into the
Wyndham Courthouse Museum. It contains some fascinating memorabilia, journal records and photographic displays of
Wyndham since
European settlement in the 1880s. Built in 1954 it was originally the
police station.
!['Bismarck' the croc 70 years old weighing over 1 tonne]()
'Bismarck' the croc 70 years old weighing over 1 tonne
![Primeval Siltstone has 53 different colours]()
Primeval Siltstone has 53 different colours
![Primeval Siltstone has 53 different colours]()
Primeval Siltstone has 53 different colours
![Wandjina Figures]()
Wandjina Figures
![Glass Spear Heads]()
Glass Spear Heads
![Washing Machine Wyndham didn't have electricity until 1960]()
Washing Machine Wyndham didn't have electricity until 1960
![Boab Nut Carvings]()
Boab Nut Carvings
![Boab Nut Carvings 2]()
Boab Nut Carvings 2
![I love the cord in the middle to help a lady do up her zip]()
I love the cord in the middle to help a lady do up her zip
![All good tourist towns need a big thing this one a crocodile]()
All good tourist towns need a big thing this one a crocodile
![The 20-metre-long and 3-metre high concrete statue of a saltwater crocodile]()
The 20-metre-long and 3-metre high concrete statue of a saltwater crocodile
After lunch we drove up to the Five Rivers
Lookout and I believe it is the best
lookout I have ever seen just stunning. The
views overlooking the old port town of
Wyndham, inland along the
West Arm and out along Cambridge Gulf towards the Timor Sea and breath taking. The Five Rivers
Lookout is on the top of the Bastion Range you can see where five mighty
Kimberley rivers meet and flow into the ocean. Enjoy spectacular
views of the Ord, Forest, King, Durack and Pentecost Rivers where they combine and enter the Cambridge Gulf, surrounding mangrove swamps & mudflats.
![Five Rivers Lookout]()
Five Rivers Lookout
![Five Rivers Lookout 2]()
Five Rivers Lookout 2
![Five Rivers Lookout 3]()
Five Rivers Lookout 3
![Five Rivers Lookout 4]()
Five Rivers Lookout 4
![Five Rivers Lookout 5]()
Five Rivers Lookout 5
![Wyndham Town]()
Wyndham Town
Afghan
Cemetery with
graves from around the 1890's of Afghan camel drivers who were the backbone of transport between cattle stations and towns in the days before road trains. Many
tombstones, aligned to face Mecca, are quite large as the camel masters would have their lead animal buried with them for their final trek into the afterlife. The
cemetery contains the unmarked
graves of 11 Afghan Cameleers and their lead camels.
![Afghan Cemetery]()
Afghan Cemetery
To end the day we drove out along the
King River Road which follows the meandering
King River to an
Aboriginal rock art site.
Wyndham’s tidal flats are massive, sprawling mudflats along the Cambridge Gulf. Famous for their dramatic 8-meter tidal variations, the incoming
water creates stunning "tidal tree" patterns across the landscape.
![Tidal Mudflats]()
Tidal Mudflats
![Drive to the Rockart Site]()
Drive to the Rockart Site
![Drive to the Rockart Site 2]()
Drive to the Rockart Site 2
![Rockart]()
Rockart
![Rockart 2]()
Rockart 2
![Rockart 3]()
Rockart 3
![Rockart 4]()
Rockart 4
![Rockart 4]()
Rockart 4
![Rockart Site]()
Rockart Site
As I climbed high into the
cliff face to see the rockart I also found the most amazing fossilized ripple marks in many of the rocks.
![fossilized ripple marks]()
fossilized ripple marks
We drove home in the setting sun.