My road trip from Perth to Adelaide was somewhat bizarre in that
three of us departed and only two arrived. There was no tragic
accident or out of control argument and no-one was murdered. It was
basically a lack of communication that led to weird misunderstanding.
It’s funny the way it goes sometimes...
The car belonged to Jamie and we wanted to enjoy the journey as much
as the destination. But our other travel buddy Lou was only focused
in Adelaide and seemed in a big hurry to get there. He was a nice
guy but wasn’t interested in the stark beauty of the southern
outback that we’d pass through along the way. He occupied the back
seat either sleeping or reading his book.
Typical scenery near Kalgoorlie |
After a long day on the arrived we arrived in the brash mining town
of Kalgoorlie-Boulder. It was dusk but I could sense Lou was
agitated when we decided to stay for the night. If it was up to him
we’d be driving in three shifts, day and night. I dared not
suggest that we play the world’s longest golf course on our way
east. The extraordinary Nullarbor Links stretches 1,362km south to
Norseman and all the way across to the town of Ceduna in South
Australia. The holes are scattered along the route and the only
water hazard is the risk of running out of it!
That would have been a lot of fun but no, it wasn’t going to be
that kind of trip. We were up early the next morning and on the road
to the crossroads township of Norseman. It was here we began the
long haul east across the mighty Nullabor Plain. This is one of the
iconic Australian road trips where you simply sit back, relax and
enjoy the big empty skies and long horizons. This truly is about the
journey as much as the destination.
A great Australian road trip: the Nullabor Plain |
Translated, the word ‘Nullarbor’ means treeless and that’s
exactly what the plain is. The mighty Eyre Highway runs parallel
with the Trans-Australia Railway line across the southern edge of the
Nullabor Plain. It includes Australia’s longest stretch of dead
straight road - 145km, the so called Ninety Mile Straight. The plain
is low shrubs and tussock grass for as far as the eye can see. It’s
as vast as the outback but greener and prettier. There are roadside
campsites every 250km but we pushed on to Border Town, so called for
obvious reasons.
The beginning of 'Ninety Mile Straight' |
The following day we’d set our watches forward 90 minutes and enter
South Australia. But Lou’s discontent over our lack of progress
grew to genuine anxiety and the reason emerged. Apparently he had to
be in Adelaide by the following afternoon for a flight to Sydney! I
don’t know what he was thinking not speaking up or travelling with
us at all. The 2,700km journey across the country is similar to
going from London to Moscow!
On the Western Australian state border |
Did he really imagine that it would only take a couple of days? We
were a little bewildered by his lack of planning and awareness.
Maybe he was too shy or embarrassed to speak up earlier and I felt
bad that we’d held him up. There were no hard feelings though. He
apologised for causing problems, left us some money for fuel and
jumped on a truck that night heading for Port Augusta. I wished him
luck and had my fingers crossed he’d make it.
No comments:
Post a Comment