Camel herding near Surveyor Generals Corner. The feral camels here in Australia are disease free and are sent overseas for export or slaughtered locally.
Surevyor Generals Corner...where WA/SA and NT meet. Not sure what happened to the SA marker.
You don't have to have a long neck...to be a goose
Digger wrote:
Surevyor Generals Corner...where WA/SA and NT meet. Not sure what happened to the SA marker.
It is about 150 metres to the East. Someone made a slight error with the surveying.
I know there are two plinths...the other plinth has no tablet on it. It was removed a few years ago. There are still two visitors books there. Strange set up.
You don't have to have a long neck...to be a goose
Typical sign at the Communities in outback WA and the APY Lands of SA...painted on the bonnet of a wrecked car; colourful but informative.
I thought I had a range of 900km with the big tank and two bladders. It works out I don't. I ran out 20km short of Marla in SA but thankfully Dren had 7 litres spare in a bladder which made the difference.
From here we slab it to Coober Pedy for two nights before heading for the Trans Cont Railway and the Rawlinna Muster.
So much to do; so little time.
Ok you desert camel chasers....its your Editor n Chief .... here. Shayne, your fairly articulate (closely followed by Dren) I expect two mabe three paragraphs regarding this trip, & of course a few classic pics.
EnC...out.
Coober Pedy....these Blowers were originally developed to extract gas out of the mines after controlled explosions and later adapted to remove the rubble as well.
Underground camping...living like the locals; underground to escape the heat.
You don't have to have a long neck...to be a goose
Below ground. Camping is in the alcoves...no tent required. The ground is pretty hard anyway and you would bend most pegs trying to get them in. The light is from shafts in the rock for light and ventilation. Rooms are also available.
I had to change a blown fuse under my seat...I figured I might as well do it in the cool of below ground instead of in the 30 degree heat. The others provided technical expertise.
From here we make our way to Kingoonya for fuel and then Tarcoola and beyond. Weather forecast predicts thunderstorms where we are going so it could get messy.
SPOT Link is here; http://share.findmespot.com/shared/face ... UCtYLNPufa
You don't have to have a long neck...to be a goose
Bozo wrote:Digger
Looks like the technical advice involved looking for a faulty chip.
Bozo
Now that you mention it, I just noticed the empty cans beside him and it looks like his eyelids are shut...I thought he was keeping an eye on me but it works out he was asleep.
You don't have to have a long neck...to be a goose
Steve, In a couple of weeks if you could, I want about one or three lines going through each of your so far this years adventures. "Reason to recall a few great memories" whilst out there chasing camels.
Tarcoola...they switched off the power and water a couple of years ago and the last inhabitant left a year later. Just a ghost town now on the Trans Cont Railway. The railway divides here to the north (Alice) or West.
One of the derailment sites along the railway. They remove the bogies but leave the rest.
You don't have to have a long neck...to be a goose
Another derailment site...this time a Sleeper carriage.
The Nullabor Plain alongside the railway line. Just a twin track with lots of limestone rocks...had a pinch flat on the front cause I was running low pressures from sand earlier in the day.
You don't have to have a long neck...to be a goose