Friday 16 September 2022

Off to See the Wizard - Denham to Kalbarri

Time to continue heading south.
We saw an emu on the road.  We have seen more over here than anywhere else on our trip.
We pulled over to have some morning tea and there were some more wildflowers.  The further south we go, the more we see.
It came as a bit of a shock as we rounded a corner and saw paddocks of wheat!  This is the first of this sort of crop we have seen since we don’t know when.  Probably, since South Australia.  No photo, but there were also sheep.  We haven’t seen any since New South Wales.
We crossed the Murchison River, which will feature over the next couple of days.
And arrived in Kalbarri, our home for the next three nights.  We had been driving into a headwind for most of the day, so it was good to arrive.

Back in 1997, we rode “Sophia” the Moto Guzzi, towing her little trailer full of camping gear, to Western Australia.  We camped at Geraldton and took a day trip to Kalbarri, so this is as far north as I have previously been.  My memories are of a  really pretty little town, so I was keen to come back and have another look.
After we settled in, we went for a bit of a drive around town.  We started to notice quite a few buildings having work done on them and then more that looked rather damaged.  Then I remembered that a cyclone had crossed the coast here a couple of years ago.  Mr Google helped me out.  It was Cyclone Seroja in April 2021.  This is the same cyclone that damaged the One Mile Jetty at Carnarvon and the boardwalk on the way out to Shark Bay.  At the time 70% of the town’s buildings were damaged and 40% destroyed.  No wonder it is taking so long to get things repaired.  That is a lot of damage.  
We went to a couple of lookouts just south of town.  The wind was pretty strong, so the surf was up.  That’s right, I said “Surf”!!!  We haven’t seen any of that since we left home.  It has all been very calm waters due to the coral reef.  There was surf out on the horizon at Coral Bay, but not at the beach.
It seems to me (but that is just my opinion) that Shark Bay is the delineation of north and south.  The reefs are pretty much gone and the weather is definitely cooling down.  We are also getting those south westerly winds that the area is famous for.  Let’s face it, there’s nothing to slow them down for a very long way across the Indian Ocean.
One of the lookouts has a memorial to the shipwreck “Zuytdorp” in 1712, well before Australia was “discovered” by Captain Cook.  It was a ship from the Dutch East India Company sailing to Batavia (now Indonesia) carrying 200 crew and passengers and rich cargo, including 248,000 silver coins.  It was unknown what had happened to the ship until 1927 when a couple of fellows doing some fencing discovered the wreck.  It is believed there were survivors, as it was close enough to land and there was evidence of a huge fire being lit.  Some coins, and other artefacts, found near water soaks suggest they may have been assisted by the local aborigines, as they would not have survived otherwise.  It will never be known.  The wreck site is a bit north of Kalbarri and has been made a reserve with restricted access.
Closer to town there was a yacht looking out of place.
When Mick spoke to a local, it appears that the yacht, which is steel hulled, was blown ashore only a few days before our arrival.  It must have been that storm that blew through Denham that we experienced.  He was running low on fuel and decided to come in here.  The channel into the river is rather treacherous.  We sat and watched it and there are waves coming from all directions and the channel is very narrow.  It would have been nigh on impossible for a yacht in a wild storm.  They don’t know how they can salvage it from where it is on the rocks.  It may become a permanent fixture.

So that was our day.


8 comments:

Jocelyn is Canadian Needle Nana said...

Another lovely post, Janice. I think I enjoy them so much as we are not travelling anymore and I miss it. Captain Cook also "discovered" a lot of Canada including Newfoundland and Labrador and gave names to many places which are repeated in Australia. Amazing surf there and how sad that so much damage was done...we see these things on tv and then forget about the aftermath and years of rebuilding that follow. It must have been scary for those folks in the yacht.

loulee said...

Looks like a wild spot to be in during a storm.
Yep, that yacht is definitely in the wrong place.

Jeanette said...

Thanks for the memories Janice. We had driven up to Kalbarri from Geraldton for Christmas day back in 1974 & i remember we had the radio on listening to the news about the cyclone hitting Darwin.

Jenny said...

Do the emus get out of the way of cars, or do they keep running ahead along the road, as our silly sheep do here? I'm always interested in the wonderful variety of town signs which are waiting to be discovered. Some of them are lovely indeed.

cityquilter grace said...

oh a post of the finestkind...plenty of water AND an emu...how wonderful! this english major is nearly out of adjectives to describe the wonderfulness of these posts...

Fiona said...

another fun road trip... I love the artistic town signs...

Hugz

kiwikid said...

Hope the emu was fast out of the way! The surf is certainly pounding in on that beach there. The flowers are beautiful, that was some damage the cyclone did. Hope the yacht is salvaged.

jude's page said...

beautiful photos of the surf on the beach