3rd October: Broken
Hill
Well, here we are in Broken Hill,
packed in like sardines in a tin! I can only find this one
park and there are hundreds of vans and camper trailers in here. We
are on a row which is two vans/trailers deep and our annex is
touching the camper trailer next door. We had to back around a tree
which bends over our site by a metre on the other side and there is
no room to walk down the side of vans if they have an annex. Squeezy!
A large group of rally drivers came in as we did. Fundraising, I
think!
I didn't mention that once again the caravan parks are surrounded by tall fences with gates that lock at night and dire warnings about thieves. Thjis place is no exception. The world has become a sad place! I googled Iron Knob and discovered that the mine is owned by BHP and is still working! Lots of ore trains in Port Augusta and on the wat here we passed a train loaded with heavy, low containers. I am curious about them too!
I didn't mention that once again the caravan parks are surrounded by tall fences with gates that lock at night and dire warnings about thieves. Thjis place is no exception. The world has become a sad place! I googled Iron Knob and discovered that the mine is owned by BHP and is still working! Lots of ore trains in Port Augusta and on the wat here we passed a train loaded with heavy, low containers. I am curious about them too!
The journey here was uneventful
through mostly saltbush country. We came via back roads to
Peterborough, a trail that many caravanners seem to take. The little
towns of Wilmington and Orroroo are very old with lovely stone
buildings. They were probably opened up when the pass through the
mountains was discovered by Horrocks in 1841. A windy, narrow pass,
it is lined with huge old gum trees and is rather attractive in an
austere way.
We stopped for coffee at Yunta which
is where my next door neighbour grew up in a spot called Panaramitee,
12 kms to the south. Glen texted her a photo and I tried to find
something with the name Yunta on it. They used to have stickers at
the BP station but since being taken over by an Indian Company,there
is nothing like that! But I bough a postcard although it doesn't
really show much of the countryside! It is rather arid barren country
but as there are a couple of sheep holding and loading yards along
the road, I suppose they graze sheep here. I didn't see any! Just
dead kangaroos, a few goats on the side of the road and three emus!
We stopped at the border for lunch at
Cockburn which boasts a caravan park with full amenties! Well, I
don't think anyone has stayed there for a very long time! But in the
weedy “park”, in the dried mud, stood two patches of flowering
purple croceus plants! Rather out of place! But I didn't take a
photo of that and I should have. It was so odd! As was the Hills
Hoist complete with washing on a hill beside a dry creek in the
middle of nowhere! I have to learn to take the time to stop and
photograph these oddities!!
We are spending our last rest day here
as the trip home has some big stretches of driving. Gail wants to
see a number of things but I am resisting running around too much as
the rest day is for her as much as anything! We will come back to
Broken Hill when we come to SA next year!
Your wonderful holiday is drawing to a close......your heads are pointed towards home. What a great time you have had. Looking forward to getting together when we all settle down. We leave Seattle tomorrow, by train. We have certainly achieved our ambition to do many train journeys while here. We have booked a "roomette" and get into San Francisco about 8.30 am Monday morning. The train travels a good deal of the way by the ocean, so we are looking forward to that. The pictures of the journey on the web are really lovely. Take care, and have a good rest before your final dash! :) B and D
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