South of Sydney to Brisbane

Decorative train station

Decorative train station

So, where was I? Ah, yes – Down at Ves’s.

Well, I had a great chill-out and then an early start on the Tuesday morning. Mike drove me through to the train station where I paid the princely sum of $22 (£10) for a ticket from there all the way to Maitland. The journey required four trains and a total time of around six hours.

Had I turned up on the day at a train station in the UK to do a journey of the same length I’d have expected to pay more than ten times that price. Will someone kindly explain why our trains are so expensive? They run on the same technology and so forth as the Aussie ones.

I stopped off in Sydney for lunch, ending up with a chicken schnitzel sandwich from a random stall in the nearby Asian mall. It was OK for $8 and one of the cheaper lunch options I could find.

The train I took up to Hamilton (which went through Cardiff… that’s two UK countries they’ve ripped off) was jam-packed with OAPs. It turns out it’s Seniors’ Week in Sydney and there’d be some kind of performance for them. As a result, there wasn’t a seat to spare on the double-decker train especially with a lot of schoolchildren getting on partway up. I stood for around three-quarters of the journey, and I’m glad to say there were very few non-OAPs in the seats.

Finally, I got to Maitland where Marge and her daughter picked me up. I was originally planning to stay with another friend, but she had come with with a bad dose of ‘flu and didn’t want to pass it on. Get well soon, Carol!

More nice painting

More nice painting

Marge and Rod volunteered (or were volunteered when Ves rang them) to fill the breach for which I’m very grateful. Again, I just chilled out – I’m doing a lot of this at the moment – and tried to fix their PC. Sadly, I didn’t have enough spare parts, but at least we know what needs done.

In the morning, Marge drove me to the freeway where I held up my shiny new Brisbane sign and waited.

And waited.

Until two ladies in a ute picked me up and drove me about 30km. Every little helps, I suppose. My next lift was better, taking me further up to the Big Rock diner. I remembered passing by this place a couple of years back when I was hitching to Byron Bay from Sydney. It was built by two guys who used to star in a TV series, but who fell out afterwards. I just used it to buy an overpriced Coke and a Mars Bar then stuck my thumb out again.

My third lift – a salesman called Patrick – took me quite a distance up to a small township called Kew where I had a decent lunch from the 24 hour garage (“Far Kew” – www.farkew.com.au). Really good steak pies!

I waited well over an hour for my next lift, a chap who’d had a bad day trying to get some work in Newcastle. He took me as far as Kempsey where at least I knew I could get some food. By now it was two hours before sunset and I was pretty much resigning myself to grabbing some dinner at sundown and finding a place to camp.

Then… the lucky lift.

Not a flabby ex-wrestler

Not a flabby ex-wrestler

Just as the sun was starting to disappear, a huge truck pulled up and the driver informed me that he was just getting a KFC and then heading all the way to Brisbane. Joy! Now, I’m paranoid so I’m not going to mention his company or name as he would get into trouble if someone found out he’d picked up a hitcher. Needless to say I was incredibly grateful and we made it to the Brisbane CBD at around 1am (remembering that the clocks go back an hour at the Queensland border as they don’t do Daylight Savings).

He dropped me near his work, swapped his truck for a car and drove me to the Roma Street train station where I sat and waited a couple of hours for the first train to the station near Belinda and Albert’s. Which, once I was on board, I fell asleep on. And missed my stop.

Thankfully, they live near the end of the line so I only had to backtrack two stations. I staggered into the McD’s near them and used the free wi-fi there for a couple of hours until B&A woke up. Nice to know – every single McD’s in Australia is now wired for free wi-fi. Now, why won’t the UK follow suit? Don’t worry – that’s rhetorical. I don’t really have any hope that they ever will.

So now I’m sat in B&A’s front room with daytime TV on the screen and itchy eyes.

I think I’m off for a lie down.

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Catch-up

I’m still here, folks! As I said, though, I’ve not been doing much in the way of touristy things, instead spending the time chilling out, catching up with friends, reading and working on the 1000 Miles site. The full route plan is now available!

I have got out and away from the laptop! I took a walk around the Brisbane Forest Park last week, and this morning got a bus out to Mount Coot-Tha for a wander. As with every walking trail I’ve found in Oz and in Lonely Planet, the “estimated times” should be taken with a pinch of salt. The ones today apparently should have taken me about 2 1/2 hours. I was round the lot of them in less than one hour…

Some lovely scenery at both parks, though. Birdsong, rustling trees, the occasional large lizard and precisely no snakes despite the warnings posted up.

Other than that, I’ve had dinner out, gone clubbing, had dinner in with friends, finished two books, caught up with Elaine for lunch (and again tomorrow), ordered more business cards (which are being delivered to Perth as the company screwed up and didn’t get them done in time) and booked a ticket for Slayer in Perth. Whoop!

Not a lot planned tomorrow aside from the aforementioned lunch, and a couple of hours in Borders reading through their Lonely Planet guides to Europe.

More once I get to Adelaide!

And Brisbane. Again.

The main problem with hotels, motels and hostels is check-out often being less than four hours after you make it to bed… Fortunately I’ve kind of got used to lack of sleep the last few days due to the partying on Byron Bay, so I wasn’t as bad as I could have been.

Amber and James – two more people I met at the party – very kindly offered to drop me off at Belinda and Albert’s up in Brisbane. It turns out they live barely 5 minutes’ drive away. We spent a good couple of hours watching creep films (Hostel – ick) and Family Guy before they took me round Coles for some groceries and delivering me to my accommodation.

Belinda and Albert are away this week so I’m on my own, effectively house-sitting for them. I don’t have much planned this week and I’ve really seen Brisbane already, so there won’t be much in the way of updates for a short while. Mostly I’ll be catching up with friends and relatives including Elaine, Skye and Mike (from Blue Dragon, Nikki, Jodie…

Gold Coast paaaaarty

I booked a trip around Kangaroo Island (near Adelaide) through Adventure Travel Bugs for which I received unlimited free internet. I made full use of it for three hours catching up with some of you lot!

After a quick lunch courtesy of some donated bread – I’d dumped what was left of my loaf in the “free food” bin and someone took it all – I wrote up a new hitching sign and started walking towards the highway. A fifteen minute wait and I was picked up by an all-American surf dude called Osea who’d had to pop back down to Bris from Surfer’s Paradise to pick up some stuff he’d left behind.

Seeing as he had time to kill, he even went as far as driving me around 15km north of where he was staying to drop me off somewhere easier for me to be picked up by the folks I was meeting. This was above and beyond so resulted in me picking up the tab for a Hungry Jack’s. Not bad overall, though – Sydney to Brisbane (taking into account tomorrow’s ride) for $6.35.

A short wile later, Donna – yet another Aussie resident (she’s really a Kiwi who’s snuck in somehow) I met online – picked me up and drove me to the motel our group were staying in. Beer was drunk, more people arrived and we made our way out for dinner and a night clubbing. I gained an hour as well. This is bizarre when you’ve travelled north, not west, but Queensland doesn’t have daylight savings like the rest of Oz (WA is “trialling” it for three years).

Waltzing Matilda and friends

 Breakfast was a simple spread of tea and toast, though at the unearthly hour of 6am. Today’s aim was to make it through 750km of ancient inland sea. Only now it’s a little drier. It began to strike me as we travelled how many creeks and rivers we drove over which were completely bone dry. I wonder what this part of the world looks like when it does rain. Most of the road is gravel, but some sections have been tarmacced as they’re apparently impassable when it’s wet otherwise.

There are no sheep in these areas either, which dashes that Australian stereotype. Dingoes are present in the Outback and they don’t just kill for food. Like foxes, they do it for the fun of it and sheep are just too easy a target for them. We did spot some emus and a handful of kangaroos and wallabies legging it out of the way of our coach. What they survive on out there is beyond me.

We stopped to use the bush toilet after a couple of hours. There was quite a breeze, but it was silent. No whistling or anything. It was all very surreal. Even the tumbleweed seemed to have been set to “mute”. An hour or so later, we pulled into Winton for the bus to refuel. Being a tiny town in the middle of nowhere, and it being Sunday, everywhere was shut. Thankfully, one person had kept their cafe open, so we sat around there mainly as it was airconditioned. And had cheap ice lollies.

Winton is credited as being the home of Waltzing Matilda, the Australian national song – not the national anthem. In 2000, a poll was taken to decide which song should be made the anthem. The vote was incredibly close, and the government settled on Advance Australia Fair over Waltzing Matilda as a song about the suicide of an unemployed thief wasn’t really the kind of image they wanted attached to their country at official engagements. You can kind of see their point.

 There is actually a Waltzing Matilda Museum in Winton, but as with everywhere bar our little refrigerated oasis it was closed. The burglar alarm certainly worked well, though, as two Asian girls on the coach discovered when they leaned too close to one of the windows to have a look inside. I’ll spare you an annotated reading of the song (there must be a bazillion on Google – go look), but will explain the title. A “Matilda” is a bed mat, which is carried rolled up and slung over the shoulder. It hangs around the hips and as the carrier walks, it bounces off the hips as if it’s dancing – or waltzing – with them. So essentially, to “waltz (with) matilda” is to walk with one of these bedrolls.

An airline was formed in Winton many years ago. Originally called Queensland And Northern Territories Air Service, it’s more commonly known as QUANTAS these days. And the town once held the world record for the longest road train pull. This is essentially what it sounds like. A powerful truck pulling a load of trailers along the road. Winton set the record with 34 trailers being towed along the main street, but the record has been smashed since then. The current holder is apparently somewhere in the US and the train was over 1.5km long.

The water in the town also stinks of sulphur, much like Rotorua in New Zealand. So if you ever visit, don’t drink the tap water! The toilet smelled worse after I flushed it.

As we set off towards our lunch destination, Laurie put a film on the DVD player – Rabbit Proof Fence. This is a true story of three Aboriginal children who were taken from their mothers early last century. They were all half-caste, the result of white workers having their way with Aboriginal women and then moving on to the next job, wherever that may be. The “plan” by the government at the time was to “breed” the colour out of them. From half-caste to quarter to octal… by which time the ethnic features would no longer show up. And apparently this was doing them a favour. Astoundingly, this practise continued up until 1970. Thousands upon thousands of children were forcibly taken from their families over the decades leading up to then. The Rabbit Proof Fence of the title was a real structure built to run from north coast to south coast (1500 km) east of Perth – a failed attempt to keep rabbits away from crops, but still the largest fence ever built.

 We stopped for lunch at Kerris Brook Station. In the UK, we have farms. The US has ranches. Aussies have stations. This one is pretty much empty. Despite having 50,000 acres to play with, it’s been so dry for the last four or five years that the owners have de-stocked as they simply couldn’t keep the sheep or cattle going. Instead, the owners charge tour companies to come onto their land and see some of the natural structures. They’re lucky enough to have some amazing ones, in particular the Three Sisters – three sandstone mountains next to each other. New South Wales has a similarly-named range, but Queensland’s has been confirmed as older. Around the area – in fact around the whole Outback – are Bloodwood trees. These have white bark and the Aborigines use them for fishing in a rather bizarre way. If the leaves are crushed and dropped into a pool, they deoxygenate the water causing the fish to rise to the surface.

All stations carry a range of antivenin and so forth to aid in medical emergencies. The Flying Doctor can pretty much guarantee getting anywhere in the outback within ninety minutes, but that can be too long in some cases. To avoid confusion, all these potions are labelled numerically. Every station has the same ones with the same numbers on each bottle. They describe what’s bitten someone to the doctor by radio, and their given a bottle number and an amount to inject.

Our lunch was a BBQ that we set up inside a tin shed which used to be used for housing and sheering sheep. The heat was well over 40 degrees, and the wind was like standing in front of a huge hand dryer. The flies were everywhere. Food was good, though.

After munching mouthfuls of flies, we packed back up and settled into our seats until we arrived for a short stop at the Middleton Hotel. There used to be eight of these hotels in a chain running along the old stagecoach route. This is the oldest and the only surviving one. It’s family run by some lovely people who have two very friendly dogs, one of which recently had a load of puppies. Oh, and they have camels. Sadly, they’d gone for a wander and I could only just make out their humps and heads far away at the edge of the property. They are used to pull a stagecoach, and compete in the annual Boulia camel race in the nearby town. I’m sure I read somewhere that Oz has more camels than Egypt.

 Next door to the hotel is a phone box. It looks utterly our of place and is the first solar powered phone box I’ve ever seen. I wish I’d had a phone card just so that I could have tried it!

The owners waved us good bye (with a bullwhip – scary people) and we made the last stint to Wirrilyerna (“flat land”) station, just outside of Boulia. This station is 100,000 acres and has a huge variety of animals living there, most of them treated more like pets than livestock.

I opted to sleep outside under the stars, so making use of my $25 sleeping bag. It was $15 to rent one for the trip, and another $15 for the Alice to Darwin tour, so it was cheaper to buy one. Camp beds were set up, so we popped mattresses on them and left our bags in dorms. Only one of the beds was knocked over by a cow during dinner.

We shared dinner with two wonderfully playful dogs and a beer-drinking kangaroo called Mary. Mary’s gorgeous. An orphan when her mother was killed by dingoes, the farm found her and brought her in. She’s incredibly friendly, though a little timid, and will pose for photos with you, drinks beer out of her own mug and will even let you pop a finger into her pouch. That was a weird experience – the pouch isn’t immediately visible and when you remove your finger it just seems to get “swallowed” by her fur. It’s amazingly warm inside, though. You can see why baby kangaroos choose to spend so long in there.

We ate and drank around the campfire until after 11pm. The skies out here are amazingly clear. I simply didn’t know that many stars existed. It’s not just that the constellations are in different places back home, it’s just too hard to spot them among the huge number of “new” stars that are obscured by pollution in the northern hemisphere.

The generator is normally turned off at 10:30, but for the benefit of those in dorms was left on overnight to power the aircon. It was a warm night, and one of the girls headed indoors around midnight as it was too warm outside. I fell asleep half out of my sleeping bag, and woke in the morning curled up inside it. I guess the temperature dropped sometime overnight. I do recall waking at some point in the night and seeing a shooting star. I made a wish… but I know deep inside that this particular wish will never come true. Still, you have to have hope. Posted by Picasa