Carnegie, Lorna Glen, Narndee and
Home
Very few other travellers stayed at the Carnegie
station camping area while we were there but two vehicles drove in one late
afternoon – Lyle and Owen, two guys from the Department of Parks and Wildlife,
accompanied by a guy named Neil Hamilton whom we were informed is the guru of
Western Australian birds. They were doing a patrol up into the Gibson Desert
looking for sandalwood poachers but were also hopeful to make a sighting of the
famed night parrot, widely held to be extinct but like John Farnham, refusing
to lie down. We hit it off around the campfire that night – we knew quite a few
mutual acquaintances from when I used to work around fire and emergency people,
and Maurs wanted to pick Neil’s brain about the local birdlife. They suggested
that we visit another station on our way back called Lorna Glen. It was only about
40 kilometres off the main road and yep, you guessed it, the road is fine, and
yep, you guessed it, we found ourselves back on a stretch of badly rutted road
and us filling in large holes with rocks in order to negotiate a passage to Lorna
Glen.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9da5u3M7BYZLcg0O7Q_Cijp4OWrYRJh4wZPNFs1xIptHoE4aWhiPBlpiwx5W7x30eJsgz2FKnEnw6GuG_cKy_ZYJb-uqXhpsOrzN3_xDnX_HhYATJAtw1EE6ow2UnQyt7CNbBDjQhmAw/s320/IMG_9733.JPG) |
Lunch down by the billabong |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUVfn4CcV_fe0hJSUdY2mtSNwpNHwr7_Bl0N0Ez9MV9CwGR5Z1-hl1r_Ux-jS2HMs_lyoD38ex5_WA6YRbQqV2_oOYFV4foOjpSzpPgh0gEDnoas203joJF15JKJBeXzEWkxeERJDukSA/s320/Lorna+Glen.JPG) |
That way to Lorna Glen |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh9my_dauwngAytdUOI5P4lXsPqT8IOFk0Gg-MPv88l1fIjoInZyAbHemQbsHyRJcUIKOfGEx1ykQYUlatcSVuC_0H_ATa_zJjDV3G_A6NCKSV3Xoteq-H6zAEGnOYJH9MpRExZmNYdpdI/s320/More+ruts.JPG) |
More ruts Fawltey! |
I
guess we were old hands by now and we rolled into this really well maintained
station area to be met by the caretakers, a Sydney couple who make the massive trip
with their caravan every year to look after this remote and isolated station in
the middle of nowhere for five months (it is a migration pattern that would
puzzle David Attenborough - as it should because these people weren’t quite
sure why they do it themselves). They told us that the station had just been
acquired by Native Title and it wasn’t clear what the new land owners (or
perhaps, original land owners) intended to do. The Parks and Wildlife
Department have built a large enclosure on the station (I’m talking kilometres
of perimeter fencing, all electrified) and cleared it of feral predators in an
attempt to establish a healthy Bilby community. Our bird guru friend Neal has a
theory that Bilbys and the Night Parrot share the same environment so he was
hoping that the parrot would also get a leg up within the sanctuary. It seems
the Night Parrot prefers to nest on the ground rather than in a tree like most
other birds (don’t judge!) and so is vulnerable to anything and everything with
a penchant for poultry (you can see that extinction is a risk when a species
favours this lifestyle).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjKWEsVsx3bVhv2gaS7zP4nRuWOhAfFVWXGMpaR9VEWhu6q9xT-3R_6HPM7LGw3h0DsAWERYskukshiLoLixxri4SxeZGjL7tmqyzh5ae68Jmh6wA77aLik9SOQ1tvvbfVibZ8I0jfNqDg/s320/night-parrot.gif) |
Night Parrots (illustration only) |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipICI9z1gLddslwmjKdltydfmkvkATuUZaxMG3llif4XfW3Bpk3deWe9wfytzvV3zpfBc_SCeBEb7PFrx6KZlsLnccCRo0c8E6KhZJQJzXSh4bE7tldd92DpOBeW8KX6L5O2XfzjsblnU/s1600/th.jpg) |
Bilby - cute huh? |
Anyway, David the caretaker said that he was going around
the fence line that day to check for any breaks. Apparently the electric fence
deters cattle who bump into it and get the message that they aren’t welcome but
a camel will walk into the fence, get the shock, think “this is unpleasant, I’d
better keep going forward!” and bust right through it. We do grow some very
big, strong camels out there.
The camp area at Lorna Glen was good – a bit of firewood
around and a water supply – what else would anyone need? There was also a
shower and a flushing toilet about 100 metres away and this was appreciated
too. After 22 days since leaving Kalgoorlie, Kevin and Shirley had finally
exhausted their booze supply and we were nursing a little overproof Rum and
some Scotch, so the campfire conviviality was reduced to cups of tea and a
final nightcap to warm us against the cold desert night. The caretakers had
told us of a few things to see and we set off to a place called Turtle Rock
Pool. The station tracks were all well maintained and the directions precise.
We didn’t see any turtles (or tortoises for that matter) and we didn’t notice a
rock that looked like a turtle, but it was definitely a pool of water and a day
out.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhK1hbmO2F_1uUYj7CnMfQTq-8lja2nM2V6KGCC1yuibRWUw5fBGBytG5r8RJ1L0WRfX84fHLV-wNusMgANLTi2Gkbi7AhXMSsrgRPcSyE9JCtpUDGxZZOVd-r1Axcbihmf2eR7dT4mrmI/s320/Turtle+Rock.JPG) |
Turtle Rock Pool in all its glory |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKrTrqQ0tM1z_sD0Yhv97_23gdRKgrFMHBsw3UA8v0zMnJkCvbk4gRUds19b5WqRddRDqxALGfIUoE1xI9BEMDRKNCrK7tt0XNMOV_ha66RtnpOdoiua2ppshZY9HRC7EQquY9g_jO99c/s320/Picnic+at+Turtle+Rock.JPG) |
Picnic at Turtle Rock |
We departed Lorna Glen. The road going out the front way was
actually very good – 40 kilometres to the Granite Peak Road and another 70 to
link up to the Gunbarrel Highway and another 35 to Wiluna. We stopped to pick
up a swag that had obviously fallen off a vehicle, figuring that we would hand
it in to the local police in Wiluna. No such thing. The local copper didn’t
want to know about lost property so we left it at the general store in the
hands of the young Japanese back-packer at the checkout. I figured that the
chances of the owner actually getting the swag back were miniscule, and
naturally I was quite wrong. We got word later (Kev had left his contact number
with the store) that a grateful guy asked whether anyone had handed in a swag
and was rewarded with a reunion with his beloved bedding.
Wiluna, besides having one of the finest graders
in the world such that the main tracks are very driveable, doesn’t have much
else. The pub has closed so there’s no beer (much to Kev’s dismay), but the
local café was good and the people really friendly. While we were having lunch a group of local
indigenous folk came in, mostly kids, and they went through the place like a
tornado – all laughing and running and yelling – it was good to see kids having
fun. However we were on a quest. Meekatharra was 184 kilometres away and it was
the closest place with beer.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQ3CrPn7wVWJrbSBtCN2JrdBLGXkCTOhomMRdI5xHlxPFRm2kSYZ6o_LSnAbbNd2f8hSm0nAjLXoabasWG474FveTKqcsX_Op18fgq0B3i95yxw9DtWN15S5HstT5IfZGl45LK5EkZWq0/s320/Wiluna+Pub.JPG) |
The Wiluna Pub. No beer. No admission! |
The road was good – a few strips of bitumen the rest good
gravel. We checked in to the caravan park for $25 a night, had a shower and
headed straight to the Commercial Hotel. Yes! Cold beer followed by some
welcome pub food. We met a few fellow travellers in the pub who had hauled
their caravans up the bitumen (a lot of them from South Australia) and we got
talking to a couple about their trip which they said they repeated every year
from Adelaide to Broome. The lady mentioned how she always prepared a heap of
frozen meals so they didn’t have to spend money on the way up and I thought
well that really helps the viability of our outback communities.
We were all pretty tired after a relatively long day and we
hit the hay around 8.15 pm. Did I mention that there was a 24 hour truck fuelling
station just over the road? Truck traffic plies the Great Northern Highway
relentlessly, servicing the industry and mining sectors further north in the
Pilbara. Trucks stopped to fill up so frequently that we didn’t even notice it
after a while and even slept in until 7 am, however if you are a light sleeper
and are considering a stopover at Meeka I’d weigh up other options one of which
we found to be a place called Peace Gorge located about 3 kilometres out of
town, as quiet as can be and quite pretty to boot. You would need to be
self-sufficient to stay there though – no water or any facility, but we have certainly
noted the area for future trips.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifgXtG_dl9P8y0CbR7ebTsqlPdx-WlRp37Fb-mR571VLMeshTKHjyq5i9cd_D7uDNXWvnfeR1hiZ8oO1ZKWyonflAK5KOgkvUMJQNPnCokxdKIiG2Qy1WNWAS2kXBvr1Mgjol7qi9Q6NA/s320/Peace+Gorge.JPG) |
Peace Gorge near Meekatharra |
Breakfast the next morning turned out to be a surprise
birthday party thrown by Kevin and Shirley for Maurs as this was our last day
together before we split, we going south and they going northwest. Kev and
Shirley were the best of travelling companions in these remote areas and we
have several more camping trips planned with them in the years ahead. All good
things end and we said our goodbyes and set sail for Mount Magnet, about 195
kilometres south. The trip south was positively dull. We were now cruising down
the Great Northern Highway and the only thing worth reporting was us having to
pull off the highway for a few minutes to allow a massive over width truck
carrying another massive overly wide vehicle to proceed north. We were very
familiar with Mount Magnet having stayed there the year before and we booked in
for two nights at the caravan park to reprovision, plan our track home and
investigate staying at a station for a few days for a little R&R after our
arduous, um ….. holiday.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjl3ppW5AgkQM_MULuq7y-BUwX5VVz_wN2UUo1iTWH0UjVus5h0SiFViv5jFOjRgwZVMU9McFIZlCuxa97dk-9XdH0P-P-oLCK28rEDLKM2uoqIcYwNuAA1KxPuBTx2aYVv7bXohkU9-tQ/s320/Birthday.JPG) |
Maureen's surprise party |
Narndee
station is just north of Paynes Find and about 40 kilometres off the highway on
a well maintained gravel road. They have a large area set aside for campers,
and being the only campers, we had our choice of campsite. That situation remained
for the rest of the week and apart from a daily visit from Rob the station
owner, we were alone. Facilities were minimal but adequate. There was a small
shower block powered by a wood fired donkey heater that afforded plenty of hot
water so long as you collected the wood and lit the fire, a flushing toilet,
and a fireplace made out of an old gas cylinder. This provided both warmth on
some really chilly nights and a great cooking area for our camp oven and
kettles.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjfyFDkwvP9jRlcfBMp2kus3wVwMyp0bkcQv_rPB0mxhn78-sZx04O5lxempPW0nnQ3N3EIvHb0kTckJgYOU_7l2hFiFPaWr0d6mjrlfGoczPsJ1wmZei4Wx35watab3-2W6JN5T_2btFs/s320/Narndee+camp.JPG) |
Narndee campsite |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiyUlCuXZ0GQRL5xnkM4ZdN-Zxez7IzDwRIKPSOWJB6fxYkhK7X6z4fRdbKODP4f5ygI1Ri3-L2QUdD98MjOaQxEFegVKjhW5h676Fsamz9TdgtHRL_O77ZtOe0HvFJ1rP6Ers_gbcr6bY/s320/Night+Fire.JPG) |
Cookin' in the pig |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhihhJRLA-sXy3YmR9IbKHz37SehseywwSq2x4LCYK8tbii2tSgM-98Gsd0YJZRy9FTJzc4PSk18lGgSd-bbyIsrKlOELZrO8_ZiIE3PfqJ1PqRraUrQRmVvfGE28vN6JUtGhyphenhyphenOT2ipC4Y/s320/Narndee+Mill.JPG) |
Narndee sunset |
I don’t know if you would include these items
in the facilities but we had a live-in dog (Bella) and cat (Rebel) who seemed
to like our company. There was a sprinkling of different animals around the
homestead, and these would wander through from time to time; a couple of
retired racehorses, a Shetland pony who thought that he was the boss, two pigs
, a calf, and a crazy goat who was convinced that he was the boss.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQKK-bbiSIp4ZuFTkcmVq6kG6_NTpg07h_9T0QLryM8-ECuUrBHzbh4Gc45GIW25Gad4RBNRUvFbd_r9cJtimbwkvOgifQqwsUK4_TvNfoAL5PxviaWiPKtyQfia00bl89qbFRnxNzM8U/s320/Boss+Shetland.JPG) |
I'm the boss! |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgLuB2ylMGt9WahKU2Pldi1wMIpBov5_4_QAz1Naoli5IId4RwUhzfw_rfn62eR7yhRtcXx-JatYMxxTkUF2Y9pfeWPkQ2NtcfWwFk2FLvtALNhC6Gh1-q2Tqc8jUUmuAJ_2AUyRT45DJg/s320/Crazy+Goat.JPG) |
No, I'm the boss! |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgp0rjvH8h8b__K_Mc5LLrElBLO2xVHbZE9PajBPVouUaVa2wyGKCaJ5iCln3RdZA9WdrlVLr18i4rTgIYHtthId9uF8ioBTQTRFbJDFNypDU2MOW7SN5Oon0mPsgrdDYm90bKXcB_Kfpg/s320/Horses.JPG) |
We're thoroughbreds, we don't listen |
We spent the time here relaxing and honing up our camp oven
skills with Maurs cooking a variety of casseroles using our dehydrated
vegetable stock and some (much prized) mutton and lamb shanks that we got from
the Mount Magnet Butcher Shop. We discovered that the local area has some
quirky history. We went out to an abandoned station (Boodanoo) to see where in
the 1920s the owner was shot through the head while standing in the open
talking to his wife. The bullet came from a high-powered .303 rifle used by a
roo shooter to kill a kangaroo but after despatching the roo the bullet had
ricocheted off a rock and struck the hapless station owner. The extraordinary
part of all this was that the shooter was two miles away at the time and had no
idea that the stray bullet had gone so awry until sometime later. Neither man
was known for his good fortune.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipR07mYq3-HsgaJct7ka-b6R1fyNZQXiJu9DzmEbxQviO2fDHIiXKNavnOqm-PE7rqN9y_1uOo9FirebMFe0qI17LxaHKa3wvIL7fZuWFLkptsui0pEXv9OS1cmfi0GBwlIwMmF_rshPQ/s320/Boodanoo.JPG) |
Boodanoo Station remains |
The other odd piece of history has been termed The Murders in the Murchison and
involves a reasonably well known author, Arthur Upfield (creator of the
Australian detective character Boney). This all happened in 1929. Upfield was
searching for a method to infallibly dispose of a body for a book he was
writing and a friend opined a foolproof solution. Another man, Snowy Rowles, a
pleasant, handsome young fellow was a party to the conversation. The idea was
to incinerate the corpse along with a large animal (likely a kangaroo in those
parts) in a very hot fire, crush the bones, and remove any foreign materials
from the ashes, such that no one could detect a human presence. A short time
later Snowy left with two other men to find work around the area and later returned
alone, driving the other man’s vehicle which he claimed to have bought off him.
He mentioned that the other two had continued on looking for work (I think you
know where this might be going). Another gent went off with Snowy and again
Snowy returned alone. Even in remote areas like this people start to be missed
and a search for these gents began after a while. Eventually the police came
across a suspicious and recent fireplace. Sifting through the ashes they found
a wedding ring – that was eventually uniquely identifiable as belonging to the
last victim of Snowy’s excesses. I gather that Snowy either forgot the recipe
or got lazy and neglected to sift out the foreign material. Upfield shared his
misgivings with the authorities, a little taken aback that life was copying
art. Further bad luck befell Snowy when a detective sent to make the arrest
recognised him as an escaped prisoner from the Geraldton area a few years
before. It didn’t turn out so well for Snowy (oh, and that wasn’t his real name
either) and he met his fate at the gallows in Fremantle in 1932. Other than
that, it keeps pretty quiet around the Murchison.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_dV30TVk0OPpxyTv8hm5kzycvZ9AM0AmP3hiYFs9GOsuHiL1se9M2YmPaX6HsZnYoS3QxdDxnw7_2i1UuKKuIn0fp93cGCO7q1pJQSYAMEhcBSFCOo86rvshyZYjIYcU6cBitiC5N740/s320/Rock+Pool+Narndee.JPG) |
Rock Pool, Narndee |
So after lazy days of moping around the camp soaking up the
sunlight, cooking meals in the camp oven and generally keeping the home fires
burning it was time to hitch up and leg it back to Perth ahead of a fresh brace
of rain coming in from the Indian Ocean. It was a big trip (over 3,000
kilometres all up) and I reflected that I, a city slicker in a small 4WD
hauling a camper had driven two famous and demanding roads. It wouldn’t have
happened without Maureen’s keenness to do it or Kev and Shirley’s company, and
looking back at it, it was a great trip through exciting and unique country.
But I think next time I’d do it in a slightly bigger vehicle. Well gotta go. Alaska
is calling and I still need to write up our hiking/driving holiday in the UK
last year (let alone our journey through India). Ciao to all who have read
along with us. I hope you have enjoyed the blog.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQO_Iqx5ExyhyphenhyphenFttEJ2MOA1jaN4ne8i3HiTSC9XgCmVeDA93py0PntX5zpWsj8Kp93MZtXRAQoTBBvVyAQ7fQVNpmkuzc7e1MvEoxPSS3ZnCeS4uHuU3RyMDs9ZMem6ElRXXyGHzo5_0Q/s320/Map.JPG) |
Where we went |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidp9CbLf3zdGLbLJNwUrZ8NUzEO9Rdheue4CmzOLqfA9rfQ0sI0KUUyKnNLSA5F1yxE8NvrcJ578aL4ZpEawCQdo0ZCC1jQKqX9avFGhTaPuMzMWU7w1UQ1EC8O_jUPPgicchnamDrIEg/s320/IMG_9395.JPG) |
It's goodbye from us.... |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg7FtlWdJR4SNoyefn0Mh6snZD7L3ATDBVBj2bu-yuYsk5rEypAgDW8J6QP2DZBrDWR7bwWNKOiDyrXd4rkpcyCZWPKl9T5yhEThbZ-Htfj1tFdXCURZe6NM0lC4Si2kiI2VNGJgnjpnQg/s320/IMG_9420.JPG) |
and it's goodbye from her...until next time |