7th July, 2008.
The crazed tumble of dunes between the Calverts and the Canning follow no linear order at all forming circles, eights and u-shapes like some crazy gods sand pit. The track was heavily corrugated in some areas which I don’t remember from last year. The track is easier to negotiate heading west to the Canning than it is in the opposing direction.
This video taken by Gaby shows us traversing between and across the sand dunes of the
Little Sandy Desert. We are travelling west between the Calvert Ranges and the
Canning Stock Route and our eventual destination of Durba springs. The track is heavily corrugated, narrow and winding. The western faces of the dunes are much softer than those of the east making our going easier than vehicles travelling the other way. It's a long way from anywhere and you must be constantly vigilant for oncoming vehicles and roadside obstructions. In this vid, we have had radio contact with an oncoming group of vehicles who have pulled over in the lee of a dune to let us pass.
The final video is a quick sweep around Durba Springs, that magnificent
gorge where weary travellers on the Canning take a break. It's late afternoon so the red of
the gorge walls is not as vivid as it should be but it gives you an idea as to why it's a firm favorite.
Durba's main pool
Our camp in the magnificent Durba Spring
Those camel loving Canadians recuperating!
Go to the BLOG entry for
7th July, 2008 and see some of the amazing pretroglyphs of the Calvert Ranges ancient aboriginal art sites.