I wrote a travel story
recently that saw me looking back to a trip that I took ten
years ago. Writing it was quite an interesting journey in itself –
funny how when you look back patterns reveal themselves. That's one
of the reasons I love writing. The story did not get chosen for the
project I sent it off to- so I thought I would post it here.
Slow Starter
Darwin
to Broome
On the first morning I
woke up in Darwin with human faeces in the hallway of my hotel. I am
someone who once returned the gift of a mystery flight because the
idea of going somewhere new, by myself made me uncomfortable. And
there I was, by myself in a very unpleasant hallway about to spend
two weeks on a 4WD bus travelling though the remote Kimberly
wilderness with a group of strangers.
Why, I asked myself, did you give up the comfort of your couch and your knitting to come here?
Why, I asked myself, did you give up the comfort of your couch and your knitting to come here?
Booking myself onto
this holiday had been a convoluted sort of process. With my first
almost full time job I had a little bit of disposable income, and
paid holiday time, but there was nobody to go on holiday with. A much
more well travelled cousin encouraged me to visit her in Thailand,
use her home as a base and look into some group travel as a way to
explore Asia. Reading trip itinerary's got me excited, but Asia
semi-alone seemed a little scary. Fear of the unknown held me back.
But the seed of the idea of group travel had been planted. Perhaps I
could see more of my own backyard? I switched from brochures about
Asia to brochures about small group travel closer to home, and a trip
caught my attention: travelling from Darwin to Broome, along the Gibb
River Road, camping, swimming in fresh water gorges, visiting El
Questro and the Bungle Bungles.
Now it turns out that
travel agents have this great skill – you make an enquiry, they
hold something – say a tour and some flights provisionally, and
then they tell you you have so many days to pay or you will loose the
booking- they give the reluctant, pondering traveller such as myself
a deadline and a fear of missing out. Which is I suppose how I went
from enquiring about availability and flights to being alone in a
fetid hallway.
That day we travelled
out of Darwin, and after a swim beneath sun drenched rocky
escarpments at Edith Falls and a long drive, we camped on lush grass
at Timber Creek under strange, majestic upside down looking boab
trees. On the second morning there was only kangaroo poo outside my
tent. Big improvement, but I missed being amongst my people.
In early photos from
the trip everyone is standing up very straight with their hands
tucked behind their backs or in their pockets. We are travelling
together, but we were not together. Those first days I dwelt on the
contrast of how much more comfortable I was on camping holidays with
friends or family. I was hyper aware of the little groups that
existed within our 'small group' – I was not part of any group.
There were two brothers travelling with their wives who spoke minimal
English and were easily thirty years older than me; other couples
travelling together, two friends who had come together, and an
assortment of other solo travellers like myself. I felt lonely
amongst this group of strangers.
My tent mate was a
British doctor,
the start of everyday was a struggle for us- as we were both equally poor at functioning without coffee
and the itinerary most days demanded we pack up our tent before breakfast. After breakfast we would be on the road again. The Northern Territory and Western Australia have properly Australian distances. We drove, and drove the next day, and the day after that and the day after that. We often drove through the hottest part of the day, arriving at our camp-site in time for a bit of an explore and a swim. Sometimes staying in one place for a night or two before moving on.
the start of everyday was a struggle for us- as we were both equally poor at functioning without coffee
and the itinerary most days demanded we pack up our tent before breakfast. After breakfast we would be on the road again. The Northern Territory and Western Australia have properly Australian distances. We drove, and drove the next day, and the day after that and the day after that. We often drove through the hottest part of the day, arriving at our camp-site in time for a bit of an explore and a swim. Sometimes staying in one place for a night or two before moving on.
I have done a couple
of road trips up and down the eastern coast of Australia with my
family. Between Melbourne and the Sunshine coast the landscape is
dotted with towns and cities. Between Darwin and Broome there are
remote indigenous communities, farms that get managed via helicopter
they are so huge, wild rivers, a few small towns and rough roads.
The most spectacular locations, within the wide open land of the
outback that is the Kimberly, can only be accessed via roads such as
the notorious Gibb River Road – and its smaller, rougher off
shoots.
Even in the dry
season, robust, high clearance 4WD vehicles are the only way to
attempt the journey if you want to see any of the countryside not
immediately adjacent to the Great Northern Highway. There are river
crossings, big remote distances without street signs or easy
landmarks and changeable conditions. The road can be closed
completely during the wet season, and vehicles even contemplating
travel in the wet must have a snorkel! The debris stranded high up in
the trees marked the height of the water in the wet season. As we
covered those big distances I realised how challenging it would be
for me, and my townie friends and family to ever embark on this type
of journey. Going with a driver who know the terrain, and with an
organised group – so someone else took care of all the preparations
– gear, food, water etc. was a perfect way to experience this wild
corner of outback Australia.
Every destination was
absolutely worth the chunk of driving that it took to get there. The
contrast of hot, hot days relieved by swimming opportunities in
spectacular locations like Bell Gorge was without a doubt a
highlight for me. On one of our hiking/swimming adventures we made a
non-vehicular deep river crossing. Some strong swimmers (myself
included) pushed inner tubes across, floating our boots, camera's
etc. to keep them dry. As I gained the far bank, with the kit safely
ashore I looked back to see that one of the men in our group was
loosing confidence. The water was slow moving, but dark, chest high
and the river bed was slippery bottomed. Within a moment one of the
tanned and barrel chested German brothers had taken his hand and
supported him for the rest of the crossing. The moment: these two
men, previously strangers to each other, holding hands as they
emerged from the river was not captured by my camera, but the memory
is one of my strongest from the trip.
There were great
reminders that the driving itself was part of the destination. When
we drove the 50km 4WD only track into the Bungle Bungles I sat up the
front with our guide.
In the truck I could feel every bump, taste the dust and see the blind corners coming – I truly felt like I was in the Kimberly.
The vast glory of the Bungle Bungles was a great reward for surviving that terrain without the air-conditioning and good suspension of the cabin. We hiked through dry river beds at the base of ancient canyons in temperatures above 40.C and picnicked in the shade of Cathedral Gorge. You can see the evolution of friendships in those Bungle Bungles pictures, we are all a little wilted, very exuberant and our arms are interlocking in the foreground of images capturing a fragment of that majestic Martian landscape of orange beehive domes thrusting up from the earth's crust.
In the truck I could feel every bump, taste the dust and see the blind corners coming – I truly felt like I was in the Kimberly.
The vast glory of the Bungle Bungles was a great reward for surviving that terrain without the air-conditioning and good suspension of the cabin. We hiked through dry river beds at the base of ancient canyons in temperatures above 40.C and picnicked in the shade of Cathedral Gorge. You can see the evolution of friendships in those Bungle Bungles pictures, we are all a little wilted, very exuberant and our arms are interlocking in the foreground of images capturing a fragment of that majestic Martian landscape of orange beehive domes thrusting up from the earth's crust.
And somewhere along
those hot dusty roads, and in between swimming, walking, sweating and
wildlife spotting I found I was not travelling with a group of
strangers anymore. Perhaps it was Pip and I laughing together
everyday in exasperation at our own continued inability to pack up
our tent; perhaps it was those helpers who came along and sorted out
our tent mess; perhaps it was conversations unfolding along dusty
walking trails, by camp-fires and over card games on long drives;
perhaps it was sharing snacks and beers at sunset over-looking the
Bungle Bungles, watching the colours change on those ancient
masterpieces in the cool of early evening. Somehow the alchemy of
heat, dust, shared exploration and discovery, bumpy roads, river
crossings, the minimal comforts of camping, spectacular locations;
combined with cold beer, starry evenings and being away from everyone
you know came to equal friendship. I don't recall exactly when the
cross over happened – but I do remember looking around at our group
scattered about the camp-site one evening and realising that these
were my people. I was not on the outside looking in anymore.
Bell Gorge, Western Australia 2007 |
On the last day I woke
up in a tent pitched with a view Roebuck Bay in Broome, Western
Australia. I was part of a group formed from people from all over the
world who had shared the adventure of travelling through the
Kimberly. I was soon to discover the main draw back of small group
travel - that hollow feeling you get when the trip is over and
everyone disperses back to their real lives.
But you carry those
memories with you. And if you are lucky – like me, you will keep
some of those friendships going. I caught up with one of my trip
mates for a beer a few weeks later in Melbourne – she had continued
on from Broome to Perth along the coast – and as I heard her
highlights I began planning for my next small group trip. It turned
out to be a road trip across America, but that is another story.
Many years later I
went to visit my old tent mate in her home in Devon. I spent an
idyllic few days walking forest and beach trails with Pip and her dog
Finn before heading to Scotland to go on another small group trip -
hiking in the highlands. I had been travelling in Africa, the Middle
East and Europe – doing some small group trips, a family visit with
my cousin in Egypt, (I never got around to visiting her in Thailand)
and some completely solo travel, again that is another story.
The
part that connects to my Kimberly trip, is where that Australian
girl, who was a slow starter to solo travel, but was converted by
spending two weeks driving through the outback with a group of
strangers, found herself on the other side of the world,
trekking through bogs, up and down rain pelted mountains, making more friends from around the world and falling in love with her tour guide.
trekking through bogs, up and down rain pelted mountains, making more friends from around the world and falling in love with her tour guide.
Four
years later I am still here in Scotland, married to the man who led
us up to the misty top of Ben Nevis. We have had plenty of adventures
together, some of the travel variety, and some involving the birth of
our two sons. Lately I have been reflecting that if I had never taken
the plunge, gotten out of my comfort zone and gone on that first
trip, perhaps I wouldn't be living the life that I am now. And oh
what a pity that would be.
Rover mum, Rafa and Finn, Cairngorms, Scotland late 2016 |
Thanks for sharing Sandy - really enjoyed the read. X
ReplyDeleteThanks for the insight into the changes in your journey - all important and of course leading to our personal connections on the other side of the world. Values shine through.
ReplyDelete