Kalumburu Aboriginal Community

Its a pretty rough and dusty 200k drive north of Drysdale River Station where you will find the Aboriginal community of Kalumburu, its strange to drive into a town with new buildings and tarred roads when you know your in one of the most remote parts of the country.

welcome to kalumburu-rKalumburu on the banks of the King Edward river is the most northern settlement in Western Australia, the first white people to arrive in Kalumburu was 1901 when the first mission was established a bit further north at Pago. Pago is now just ruins since the mission was relocated to its current location in the 1930s, a move that took five years with donkeys and carts. The locals gave the visitors a hostile reception but things settled down with a shotgun being fired before many locals walking in from the bush to see what was going on and joined in the community.

Kimberley is loaded with stone, large stone which was used to build a monastery that still looks as good today as in 1930s. In 1942 Kalumburu became a frontline RAAF base for World War II when the military took over the mission.

From the info supplied by the Kalumburu Aboriginal Corporation

“In the same year (1942) members of the community led by Father Thomas Gil played a major role in the rescue of the 130 survivors from the bombing of the state ship Koolama near the mouth of the King George River.” 

“On 27 September 1943 Kalumburu sustained a major assault by Japanese bombers, wreaking havoc and costing six lives including Mission Superior, Father Gil.”

We pulled into the mission store next to the monastery looking to purchase our permit that allows us to be in the aboriginal reserve, other than the lady behind the counter we were the only white people in sight, our skin colour is very dark right now but not quite that of the locals. The mission store lady told us we would need to purchase our permit from the main store next to the centrelink office. Signs all over town remind everyone that Kalumburu is a dry town NO ALCHOL, good for the locals health but we have 10+ cartons between us so not great for us. We drove around the corner and found the place with 50 or 60 locals sitting around doing little in the heat.

After paying for our permit and buying some expensive supplies we headed north to McGowan Island a beach owned but he KAC where you can camp right on the beach, no power, no phone, no internet, no TV and no hot water (it had toilets), its a great place for a holiday. Robert greeted us (if thats what you could call it) he was a tad gruff but we got to choose the best site down on the beach so we were happy. We set up camp and went for a walk along the beach to look for crocs, sharks and oysters on the low tide.

IMG_4060-rWe had a great week at Kalumburu fishing, resting and living in the wild, I even made a spear and went hunting with it, we tossed some fish frames that we got from Frank Albanese from Traralgon in the water to atract fish to spear. We waited patiently for far to long but no fish arrived… until four sharks turned up looking for a feed, 2 sharks were harmless and tried to suck on the fish (we didn’t try to spear them) but a couple of tiger sharks  turned up and moved in. Jim speared one of  the fish frames out of the water and tied it to a rope before tossing it back in. We didn’t have fishing gear on us to handle a 3 meter tiger shark so the rope seemed a good idea at the time.

Before long the fish frame rope sitting only a few meters in front of us took off quickly in the sharks mouth, I could see the surprise in Jims eyes at how quick it went so I grabbed the rope to help, no chance and a bad choice the tiger shark ran around 10 meters in quick time and my hand had no chance of holding it, all I got was a burn mark on my fingers. The shark spat the bait soon after and took off but gee it was great to feel its amazing force for a few seconds.

IMG_3990-rA couple of days into our trip we went 7ks north to Honeymoon Bay the only other place you can camp at Kalumburu and hunting for wood for our nightly fire. Honeymoon Bay had a good beach but a poor camp ground so we were happy in our choice back at McGowan Island. On the return trip we collected enough wood for the rest of the week and had a beer to mark the spot, yeah I did say the place allows no alcohol but thats not for everyone is it? We enjoyed more than a carton between the four of us over a couple of hours and it turned out to be a very fun and funny afternoon with Jim and Maxine. The only time we paused was when a vehicle approached us on the dusty track so we hid the evidence and told them we were looking for wood, then continued on drinking when they left, we did see a few of them later that night and knew what we were up to and found it very funny.

On the track back from Honeymoon Bay before we stopped for a beer (I mean collect firewood) on a bend and a dip a large sign says “LIFT’EM FOOT” blonde moment #1455 happened…

It was obvious to the boys in the car (and maybe the other blonde) that “lift’em foot” was aboriginal for “slow down” But Shelly had to ask and and instantly got it before laughing her way through BM #1455.

liftem foot-r

Fishing at McGowans was great on the first day and ok on the second but after that it was no good, maybe because of all the sharks and the resident croc? But we got plenty of fish given to us by the people with boats who had plenty to share.

IMG_3992-rWe met plenty of interesting people at McGowan Island Lindsay and Marg from Shepparton were funny, I helped her with her computer whilst Lindsay set up his satellite tv and generator  before watching every minute of every game for the weekend. Frank Albanese and his wife had traveled much of WA and still only in there early 20s. Mick an older guy from Queensland had a van and boat set up on the beach and he went fishing every day, thats seems normal but Mick had recently had a stroke and his family had tried to put him in a nursing home so he packed up and left for the Kimberley where he’s living a great life in paradise. Mick struggled to get around with any great pass but could manage anything we could, he was cutting wood with one hand and dragging his esky over to his boat before pushing it off and away he went. Another Tasmanian we referred to as Dad because he was of similar appearance to Jim just lots older (turns out he wasn’t much older just looked it) Dad and Mum (Dads wife) joined us a couple of nights around the fire and shared a few stories mum was always enjoying herself NOT, she didn’t smile much as she coughed her way through a packet of smokes.

We spent six nights and could have stayed for six months up the Kimberley’s north, Shelly asked Robert the guy who ran the place for his job but he laughed and told her he’d been here for 29 years and would be here for 20 more. We watched Robert in action one day when he had a heap of locals out staying with him. He tossed his cast net into the water and pulled it out with at least 50 live baits then he and his mates jumped in the boat and went a few hundred meters off our beach, we could hear heaps of noise coming from the boat before they returned with a boat load of fish one was a meter long and half a meter wide that must have weighed in at 30 kilo, we enjoyed some of that mulloway for dinner that night.

Most of the guys who went fishing went far far away, well out of sight of the beach but the local aboriginal dropped anchor just of the beach and cleaned up.

On our way out of town we found the plane wreck from WW2 it was broken into many pieces and the engine was ripped apart but it wasn’t rusting away or anything it didn’t look so bad other than it was ripped in to a  few pieces.

What an amazing place it was sad to leave, we are heading back down the dusty and bumpy track for Mitchel Falls.

HV8 & DR6

Since changing our minds and turning around we have put some of our gear and the scooter in a Kununurra storage shed then loaded up with enough supplies for two weeks in the wild, plenty of water, cryovaced meat, veggies & XXXX Gold. We left Kununurra for a second time on Friday morning (2nd August) and headed back to the Gibb River Road and the amazing Cockburn Range. The wide surfaced road disappeared just past El Questro Station and our trip down the Gibb was beginning, rough and dusty but we managed to do 80ks an hour on some parts.

We stopped many times to take in the view of the Cockburn Range, the range is huge and looks similar to Monument Valley in the western films with tall sandstone peaks rising up out of the ground only this one is many kilometres across and hundreds around. Fires have been burning in area for a couple of weeks so it wasn’t as clear as could have been but the smoke helped make the sunsets better, we crossed the Pentecost river and turned into Home Valley Cattle Station.

pent river-r

Home Valley (HV8) is a working cattle station with a training facility for the locals and owned by the local Aboriginal people  http://www.homevelley.com with so many people out here travelling around they have converted part of the station into a camp ground with powered sites, toilets and showers (hot) it also has a resort style pool by the large bar dinning area known as the Dusty Bar thats decked out with plenty saddles and other cattle station working tools. We checked in for two nights and spent the rest of the day exploring the station and collecting fire wood.

Jim and Maxine arrive much later than us to join us for dinner before we all headed to the Dusty Bar for the evenings entertainment, Melbourne band The Giants where touring the top half and tonight were on the Home Valley stage playing to loads of old people, locals and us, The Giants were actually pretty good so we had a few beers and enjoyed the night. Jim spotted a guy in the crowd and pointed him out to me, Allan Garner was up dancing to The Giants he was a one man wolf pack. If your not sure who he is check out the picture I got with him and you will sure know him then. We left The Giants and Allan and headed home to get the fire and some music going we had a great night by the fire until near 2am.

We were up early the next morning and went into the bar area to take advantage of the internet on offer, it was the slowest ever and took 20 minutes to put the footy tips on, we gave up on this but did notice Allan getting around the bar area and had a laugh. Shelly grabbed some information on the walking trails and we headed off to one of the local gorges. The gorge wasn’t hard to find wasn’t anything great compared those we had seen but the walk was ok, we did find Allan sitting on a rock and had a chat for 20 minutes, it turns out Allan’s name is Stu and he up from Broome for two weeks to play music at Home Valley each night. Originally from Melbourne Allan (Stu) told us some stories and we couldn’t help but laugh at how much he was like the real Allan.

The walk out nearly killed me (or the late night) so I spent the afternoon snoozing in the tent before we all sat around watching Shelly cook us Indian for dinner complete with Nahn Bread, after such a big night the night before we didn’t go to hard before shutting the night down early, we even missed going to see Allan play in the Dusty Bar.

DR6

Drysdale Station was 250ks away and our destination today, only 200ks along the Gibb then a left turn and head 50ks north up the Kalumburu Road to Drysdale Station (DR6) another working cattle station on 4000 square kilometres, not as pretty as Home Valley but ok with powered sites and hot showers. Shelly and I hit the bar to make sure the beer was ok before our friends arrived they were slower than us and towing a caravan. In the corner of the beer garden was a large fire place that they light up at night so people can get together and have a chat, we joined in once it was dark and had a chat to a few people, one old couple from the east coast (as he put it) were stuck up old farts and they took off quickly.

IMG_3921-rWe had few drinks around the bar fire before having a feed and few more by our fire before calling it a night before our trip north tomorrow to Kalumburu and McGowan Island. A couple of guys that Jim and I got talking to were headed to Kalumburu like us only they would be staying in the town and building houses for the locals. Both lived in Kununurra one of them a the truck driver and mechanic on the trip, the other a Kiwi guy was the chippy and would be staying for a month. The Kiwi told us stories about living in Cape York a place the Jim and Maxine had visited a few times and about McGowan Island where were headed 25ks north of the town out on the beach.

 

 

 

Kununurra

We drove south out of Derby past the Gibb River Road turn off heading on the much easier Savannah Way and its tarred roads, the Gibb is a dirt cattle route that runs for 600ks between Derby and Kununurra and has only been about since the 70s, Savannah Way is a couple of hundred ks longer but much faster driving on its black top that offers plenty of comfort for us and our scooter hanging off the back of our Toyota. We had talked about doing the Gibb but decided against it for speed and comfort reasons, we are heading for the Darwin Cup on August 5. Who wants to camp on working cattle stations anyway.

After fuelling up at the Willare Roadhouse we had a long days drive east through Fitzroy Crossing and Halls Creek both small towns offering little, just short of Halls Creek we found the turn off to Wolf Creek its famous for a few reason, the first being its the beginning or end of the Tanami Track that runs down through the centre of Australia the second reason most will know as they watched the movie and the third and best is the meteorite crater, a large hole in the earth that’s a kilometre across. We had planned to see the crater but didn’t venture far down the Tanami to protect the cargo from the rough roads.

After 600ks of driving and still 200 short of Kununurra we spent the night at Turkey Creek Aboriginal Community where we had a feed a hot shower and a sleep before we drove deep into the Kimberley and the best view we had seen since leaving, this 200k stretch was just road and rock small rocks big rocks and large mountains made this drive spectacular.

Kununurra is a pretty town on the banks of the Ord river with a hydro power station across it that we drove over to enter the town. We chose a caravan park on the river before leaving them after some bad service and crap site allocation. We checked out the other parks and chose the Ivanhoe Caravan Park which was possibly the best I have seen on this trip, we booked in for two nights and checked the place out. The next day we drove out to the top of the Gibb river road and went to El Questro cattle station thats making a killing from the tourists who visit, the Gibb is surfaced to the front gate of El Questro the is a bumpy 16ks into the station that has plenty of gorges and springs to check out. We went to Zebeede hot springs, its a small slow running water fall that runs through around 30 meters of rock pools and palm trees, the great thing about this place was the water is naturally heated to 32c, we spent half an hour relaxing in the bath.

From Zebedee Springs we went to Emma Gorge that they said will take over an hour to walk into, we cover the journey in 40 minutes to find a large COLD pool with water falling from the amazing Cockburn Range and plenty to look at and enjoy. Emma Gorge was very good as far as gorges go but it will be hard to top those we seen at Karajini.

We arrive home to find new neighbours had moved in beside us and behind but no one was about. Old Bob was the first to arrive fresh out of Gulavers Tavern he told us and we could tell he’d had a few. Bob from Rockingham was driving around WA in a brand new Winabago by himself he was a nice old guy who told a few stories. Our other neighbours arrived back from happy hour at a near by caravan with a few others and we got talking, Jim & Maxine are from Hobart and have traveled Australia as much as anyone we have meet on the road. Jim was on long service leave from his job at Telstra and was heading for the Gibb River Road and Kalumburu.

We packed up the next morning as we kept talking to Jim & Maxine before saying goodbye and heading for Darwin, we had to make a couple of stops for supplies prior to departing Kununurra and I couldnt stop thinking that we should be heading down the Gibb River road (back towards Derby and Broome) I mention it to Shelly and she said no we will be back some day and can do it then, my mind went back to the Darwin Cup for 20 seconds before the Gibb started calling me again.

We should not bother with the Darwin Cup and do the Gibb with Jim & Maxine

“Yeah…. but we can do it another time, lets just go to Darwin”

Nah, lets go and talk to them and see if they want company

Our planned trip to Darwin and the Darwin Cup is over… we are heading for the Gibb River Road and Kalumburu  Aboriginal Reserve for a couple of weeks, no power, no phone service and no internet, check you all in couple of weeks.

*The guy running the camp at Kalumburu has very slow internet via a microwave link.

** No picture because internet to slow to upload (will add later)

Shell’s Derby

After leaving Broome we headed 220ks north to Derby, the first town in the Kimberly, and my place of birth, it also has the highest tidal variation in Australia reaching 11 to12 meters to see this best we headed out to the jetty, you can literally see the tide flowing in. I remember a few times when I was young going out boating and miss the tide and get stuck on a sandbank waiting for the tide to come back in.

Derby’s a small town of about 5000 people, a lot of the population are FIFO to the Islands where they’re mining Iron Ore, there’s a couple of tourist attractions to look at so we got on our scooter and headed out to visit the boab tree prison, its believed to be about 1500 years old. Boabs are hard to tell how old they are because as they get old they become hollow so you cant count their growth ring, this one is 14.7 meters round and is hollow in the middle which allowed it to be used as a prison.

We visited the hospital where I was born all those years ago and where I spent the night after getting flown in from Cockatoo Island when my beautiful sister Sam knocked my two front teeth out for borrowing her tea pot (I didn’t have front teeth for at least a year) I remember waking up in a room full of little aboriginal children with me the only white one, a little scary for a six year old.

We found the old swimming pool where we used to go to the inter school sports with kids from all over the Kimberly the main thing I wanted to do in Derby was find a way to get out to Cockatoo Island so after ringing every air line to try to find someone to actually land on the island and not just fly over it I had to settle for a 2 hour flight over the Buccaneer Archipelago which was pretty amazing. We met at the Derby airport (which is a lot smaller than I remember) at 7.30am for our pre flight check and to put on our life jackets just in case we crashed over the ocean, we took off at 7.45 and headed north to the horizontal falls, the huge tides in the area create the phenomenon known as the horizontal waterfalls its happens when the massive amount of water rushes through the two small gaps in the high cliffs to form the horizontal waterfalls, I remember going there by boat when I was young but I don’t think I really appreciated the magnificence of it all, its amazing the amount of water rushing out of the two bays, there was a few boat cruises down on the water (dad I thought of you while flying over them).

After circling a few times we headed out to Montgomery Reef which is about 420 square ks its best to see it at low tide where you can see the water rushing off the reef the water makes mini waterfalls all over the edge of the reef there’s a cannel that runs though the middle of the reef and there were about 5 cruise boats cruising along, I remember boating around out here and being the only boat for miles now there seems to be charter boats everywhere.

After the reef we headed for Koolan Island as we approached I couldn’t believe how much they had mined the whole top of the island is gone the town ship is no longer there it’s a bit sad really to think back and remember what was, that’s progress as they say. I remember catching the barge over from Cockatoo and having our sports day, we used to live there too but I was to young to remember that. Not far off in the distance we could see another Island and as we approached I hate to say it but I had a tear in my eye its been over thirty years since I was on Cockatoo Island but I remember it

like yesterday we approached from the airport side and flew down past the shiploader the hole in the ground is now huge, we flew over the township I could see the house we used to live in , the fence they put up on the beach to keep the sharks out is no longer there.

We flew around to the back beach and saw the other house we lived in on the cliff, I could see the pool Bondy (Alan Bond) put in at the club when he brought the Island to turn it into a tourist resort, its sad to see its now a ghost town but I’m very glad that we were some of the few who got to experience growing up in such an amazing place the memories will be with me forever.

After waving good bye to one of the best childhoods a kid could ask for we turned around and started heading back we flew over Irvine Island which they tell me might start mining as well, we flew past Strickland bay a place I remember fondly and Sam still has a scare on her finger from Ernie the Eel, past cone bay which now has a huge barramundi farm in it, you can see huge circles just floating in the water these are the sea cages for the barramundi, they produce 1800 tonnes of barramundi per year, we flew past islands we used to camp on as a kid, memories of dad waking us up at 3 or 4 in the morning to catch the out going tide, of being thrown overboard to swim to shore just watch out for the sharks.

Flying back into Derby we flew over the new prison it’s a big square with a few buildings and a great big football oval in the middle this is where Chris is playing footy today he’s playing for the Broome Pearler’s the old boys and their playing against the prisoners I think its just a low security prison lets hope so anyway

All in all it has been a grate trip down memory lane i’m so glad I had the chance to come back and I think next time we might do one of those Kimberly Cruises

Next stop Fitzroy Crossing…  now watch this video