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Sunday, May 16, 2010

Eyre Bird Observatory, Western Australia


In 1841 Edward John Eyre, age 26, with his companion John Baxter and three Aborigine guides, was on his way to becoming the first white person to walk across Australia, linking the colonial settlements in the east with the Swan River (Perth) colony on the west coast. After nearly 2000 km of arid hostile terrain and near death on the Nullabor Plain, they found life-saving water at a place later to become known as Eyre’s Sand Patch, later shortened to just Eyre. The party recuperated at this spot for four weeks before continuing westward, although Baxter’s trip, and life, were cut short two days later when he was murdered by two deserting Aborigines (whom I’m guessing he treated very poorly).

The Eyre Bird Observatory

Due to the presence of water and proximity to the coast (for provisioning by ship), in 1877 a repeater station for the Inter-Colonial Telegraph Line was established at Eyre, linking western Australia to the world (from the east, the telegraph line went north to Darwin, then to Indonesia, then on to Great Britain, the epicenter of the 19th century western world). William Morris was no doubt simultaneously sketching, writing, blocking, weaving, and painting back in the old country. Twenty years later, in 1897, a new station building, now home to the Eyre Bird Observatory, was constructed.


The Eyre Telegraph Station operated for fifty years, until 1927, when it was superceded by an inland line along the new Trans Australian Railway. In 1977 the ruined telegraph station was restored as a bird sanctuary and museum. Since that time, 245 species of birds have been observed at the EBO including rare Malleefowl, honeyeaters, penguins, silvereyes, and albatrosses.

 William Graham, first telegraph station master, 1877-1901, raised ten children in the bush.  Morris's lost antipodal twin?

We tried to visit the EBO last July (winter) but rain had made the track impassable. This year we were in luck (not withstanding a minor collision with a tree)---as we drove in at 9:30 in the morning, we were greeted by the volunteer caretaker, Roger McCallum. Within ten minutes of talking to Roger it was clear he was a naturalist and observer of the first-order. We described kind of rocks we were looking for and he gave us stellar bush directions to places miles away from the observatory.

Roger and Cheryl McCallum, caretakers

About five hours later we returned to the station and met Cheryl, his wife and co-caretaker. After a guided tour of the museum, we all sat down on the veranda for afternoon tea (including delicious home-made cookies and fresh fruit). While we were the only visitors that day, the EBO does offer rustic accommodations for $AU90 (~$US80) per night which includes all three meals as well as morning and afternoon tea. I reckon that’s a pretty amazing price for this slice of paradise. EBO is definitely on my “must-return-to” list (did I mention the glorious beach nearby?) and a great place to send a tax-deductible contribution.

 What a great stove...an Aga has nothing on this beauty!

Pump/Stop/Flood

Drawn on the wall above the kitchen door.....there are water tanks in the ceiling that obviously have floats, one for the shower(s) and one for the taps.  The weights on string tell you when to turn on the pump to fill the tanks.

Major Mitchell cockatoos

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Roadhouses of the Nullabor Plain, Mundrabilla



Roadhouse arts and crafts....cute

also nice use of "local" material...


On wall of bar....everything that's ever happened in Mundrabilla?  "Like other locations in the Nullabor Plain area, the area consists of nothing more than a roadhouse, open 5:30am to midnight each day.  The roadhouse includes a small wildlife park with emus, camels, and an aviary." (This seems to have disappeared.)  "Pastoral activities continue in the area, and fragments of a meteorite (The Mundrabilla Mass discovered in 1966) spread over a 60 km range make it one of the largest meteorite sites in the world."


The most notable architectural feature of this room was the black "popcorn" ceiling which looked exactly like the asphalt highway...perfect for a roadhouse!

sunrise in Mundrabilla

(Please excuse the recent formatting issues....the internet, and my free time, is so limited it is a challenge just to get posts up.  Thanks for all the comments!   :-)

Friday, May 14, 2010

Roadhouses of the Nullabor Plain, Cocklebiddy



For the last week RW, MW and myself have been staying in roadhouses along the Eyre Highway, the only highway going east west across the south of Australia --- another highway goes across the top of the country (imagine the US with only two paved roads connecting the east and west coasts). The Eyre is so monotonous along the Nullabor a bend in the road is worthy of comment.  The roadhouses tend to be spaced about a hundred kilometers apart, relatively close by outback standards, and each consists of five key components:


The gas station (~$AU1.74/litre or roughly $US5.50/gal)



 The restaurant/bar/snack store ($AU6/beer or ~$US30 for a six-pack)

The motel (typically cinder block “lego-style” architecture)


The caravan park (a tree for shade if you are lucky)



And a very big parking lot for the road trains.

Each morning we leave the world of road-trains and “grey nomads” (retirees with caravans) and head off into bush on dirt tracks.  Most days we do not see another car or person until we come back to the highway at end of day.  The bush is incredibly beautiful with lots of skippies (roos), emu (is that plural?), snakes, lizards, wedge-tailed eagles, parrots, falcons, wild horses, one dingo, one red-back spider, and various other small creatures and birds.  Mostly it is just all beautifully remote…..and dusty….the shower at the end of the day feels great.

Each roadhouse typically offers one last amenity at the end of each day….an incredible sunset.



Thursday, May 13, 2010

Outback Walk, Baxter Cliffs, South Australia


ahead


behind

In a few weeks vast numbers of Right whales will arrive to the base of these cliffs in the Australian Bight from their summer home in Antarctica but last week all I saw were dolphins.  Rock-Whisperer, Map-Wizard, and myself are back in land of cell phones so posts should be more regular now---stay tuned for road-houses of the Nullabor!


Friday, May 7, 2010

Aboriginal Batik from Central Australia

These photos are from a gorgeous book, Across the Desert: Aboriginal Batik from Central Australia by Judith Ryan, that I bought last year in Melbourne.  If you have any interest in batik or aboriginal art it would be a beautiful addition to your library.

Artist from Utopia applying wax to silk with a canting.


Peggy Napurrurla Poulson, Warlpiri, Yarla Jukurrpa (Bush yam Dreaming) 1986 Batik on cotton

 
Tjunkaya Tapaya, Pitjantjatjara, Raiki wara 1994 batik on silk

Yipati Kuyata, Pitjantjatjara, Raiki wara, 1989, batik on silk organza

Imiyari (Yilpi) Adamson, Pitjantjatjara, Raiki wara, c. 1988, batik on silk

Emily Kam Kngwarray, Anmatyerr, Kam (Pencil yam seed), 1988, batik on silk

 Ada Bird Petyarr, Anmatyerr, Arnkerrth then Ngangkar (Mountain devil lizard and traditional healer), 1991, batik on silk 
 
Lena Skinner Ngal, Anmetyerr, Untitled 2007, batik on silk

Tjunkaya Tapaya, Pitjantjatjara, Raiki wara, 2007, batik on silk.

A Raiki is a "long cloth"

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Roadside Animals of Australia

Please stop here!

 Giant galah of Kimba

Rooey of Bordertown


Eucla's giant whale





Down Under......

Greetings from the land of roos, roadtrains, and roadkill. I’m writing this from Nundroo, a very very small town (roadhouse, caravan park, garage, gas station) on the eastern boundary of the Nullabor Plain, South Australia. Last Sunday an Airbus 380, the largest passenger airplane in the world carried us to Oz (aka Australia). We arrived Tuesday mid-day in Adelaide (Monday having mysteriously evaporated through the peculiarities of datelines). We is three geologists embarking on three weeks of field work trying to figure out how high sea level was (= how big the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets were) the last time the atmosphere had this much CO2 in it (about three million years ago).

approaching Melbourne...from the tail cam!

From the airport we picked up our beast of a 4WD, a Nissan Patrol, then headed to Adelaide Uni to pick up some gear that was shipped to us from various places. By 3pm we were headed north, seriously jet-lagged but happy to hit the road. It is now the evening of the next day and we’ve driven ~1000 km to the eastern edge of the Nullabor Plain. 

Next morning….don’t know when I’ll be able to get posts up---no cell phone or internet signal in last night’s town and we are heading into an even more remote area. But I’m getting great pics that I hope you enjoy as I eventually get them up.



Perfect example of the architectural vernacular of the outback.


And in case you are wondering what a road train is here is a “double” that had a bit of an accident.   I’m guessing the driver's dream of piloting a “triple rig” someday went out the window with his windshield!


Sunday, May 2, 2010

Minerva at the Library of Congress





Elihu Vedder's marble mosaic of Minerva of Peace, her armor laid aside, standing guard before the Main Reading Room and holding in her hand a scroll that lists the various disciplines of learning, science, and art.