That night we camped by some cliffs, and in the morning the cops showed up.
We climbed around on the cliffs a little that morning, spotted some kangaroos, then hit the dirt down to the most famous rock in Australia, Uluru.
When we got to the park that included Uluru, we learned that there is a canyon called King's Canyon nearby. so the first day was spent exploring this place. It was a very beautiful canyon, and took all day to explore. We wandered off the main trail and discovered a lovely reflecting pool hidden between the red cliff walls. Too cold to swim in, but nice to hang out by for a while.
That evening, we planned on getting gas and continuing on, but there was only one gas station every few hundred miles, and we were pretty low. We sh
I don't really know what the paranoia is about, but don't you take your life into your own hands every time you drive? And would you really rather it be in somebody elses? These desert people are all a little edgy.
The other gas station was closed too, so we just pulled o
Next day we picked up a hitch hiker and took him down the road to King's Canyon. He had just been at Uluru, and sugg
The traditional thing to do is to photograph Uluru at sunrise or sunset. Since we played in the canyon so long, we missed the sunset so we decided to place ourselves at a good location to see the sunrise on the rock. We foun
We got up before the sun and took about 50 pictures of the light changing color on Uluru. Then went to go get on top of it. The hike is pretty steep, and about 900 ft of vertical so a series of posts are installed with a chain running up the side of the rock. The rock is so rough though, that there's no chance of slipping so of course
In front of us were 300 college kids wearing flourescent green shirts. But directly in front of us was "Army Dad". Army dad had 4 daughters and was wearing some really fashionable camoflauge pants. He was holding on to the chain with both hands and jerking himself up the climb. every time one of his daughters decided she didn't need to use it
After spending the day exploring Uluru (What an awesome place) we continued our way South. Here's where we entered the real outback.
The landscape is completely flat.
There are no trees.
In fact, it's so flat that the wind sometimes blows and there's nothing to stop it. This makes all the rocks on the ground get pollished by the blowing sand. Every rock on the ground is shiny on one side. And the ground is covered with little pea-sized pebbles that have a baked-on black varnish. It's so flat that if you yell as loud as you can, your voice just gets ripped away from you. There is no echo whatsoever.
In the evening we decided to take a walk into this foreign landscape. I packed some fresh batteries, a light, and my GPS and set a waypoint at the location of the car. Then we set off into the darkness. After about 2.5 miles it was time to turn around. N
That sounded too easy, so we closed our eyes and spun around a few dozen times in each direction. Then tried to figure out how to get back. I pointed one direction, and Trevor pointed 90 degrees from that. So we "Cheated" and looked up at the half moon. With the moon overhead, the bright side is West (if the moon is waxing). So this gave us a rough estimate. I was 90 degrees off, and Trevor was off by 180 degrees! Zoiks. Thankfully, we had marked an arrow in the sand before we spun, so after 20 minutes of searching, we found the arrow. It was pretty close to the direction we deduced from the moon.
When we returned, we expected to run into the highway about a half a mile from the car. But the craziest part is that we ended up reaching the car exactly! We were so impressed that we were dead on. At this time we took out the GPS and reviewed our path. Of course, it squiggled all over the desert.
So today we're in Adelade. On the way here we stopped at a lake to go swimming. But when we reached the shore, the sand turned to salt. The water was barely deeper than my toes and we walked out about a half a mile. The crystal clear water rippled over the white crusty bottom.
Thanks for reading, I'll now rest my fingers:Eric.
5 comments:
sorry the computer messed up my last post and it looked garbled which is weird but whatever ;) just got done with trev's blog too. that was awesome, you are quite the storyteller...i especially liked how you talked about eating kangaroo and then posting a picture right next to that paragraph of the cute critter...nice touch. can't wait to read more. take care!!!
Too cold to swim? Eric, that doesn't sound like you!
Hopefully my passport shows up soon...then I can stop being envious.
Eddie squealed about the kangeroo photo. We check your and Trevor's blogs daily. We are living vicariously. Beautiful. I can't wait for the DVD slideshow when you have enough photos.
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