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Australia
Top to Bottom
By Sandra Scott
The Top End of the Down Under city of Darwin is
Australia’s tropical destination. Take a few days to enjoy the city’s
laid-back ambiance with strolls along the esplanade, stop at the old
Telegraph building to learn about the area. Each day at high tide the fish
come to feed at AquaScene. For decades milk fish, catfish, and mullets show
up for a free feed. Out in the water an occasional manta ray competes for
attention by showing off its white belly.
Most people use Darwin as a stopping point before
heading off on “safari” into the area featured in the movie “Crocodile
Dundee” - Litchfield and Kakadu National Parks. The area is a vast expanse
of treed grassland cut by tumbling streams. Our Safari guide, Jonathan
Mogridge, a Steve Irwin-type, picked us up and off we went on an Odyssey
Safari making our first stop in Litchfield National Park. One stop was at a
field of very impressive termite mounds. Some are like cathedrals, others
are called magnetic and look like tombstones. There are so many it looks
like a cemetery.
Then it was off to
Florence Falls and a refreshing dip in the plunge pool. We viewed Tolmer
Falls from above as swimming is not allowed because the caves are home to
some very special and rare bats. On to beautiful Wengi Falls, which are
actually one small and one large falls where swimming is not allowed for a
variety of reasons. The water currents are dangerous when the water is high,
and the salties, the dangerous crocs, sometimes make it that far up river.
What if Crocodile Dundee wasn’t around to make a dramatic rescue? It isn’t
worth the risk
After a refreshing
soak in one of the pools at Buley Rockhole, we head along Stewart Highway
with a stop at Adelaide Inn in Adelaide River to see “Charlie” the water
buffalo mesmerized by Crocodile Dundee in the movie of the same name. He has
passed on and is now stuffed and stands proudly on the bar. Our final stop
for the day was Pine Creek, an old Gold Mining town.
In Kakadu, a World Heritage National Park the size of
New Jersey, a boat takes visitors up the Yellow River, which during the Wet
(December to March) is in flood stage so it is more like an inland lake.
The scenery is beautiful but there nary a croc to be seen as they spread out
over the flood plains during the Wet. However, visitors can stay inside a
croc – the Gagasju Hotel in Jabiru, built in the shape of an 800-foot long
crocodile.
Nearby at Nourlangie Rock, a cave shelter, used for
20,000 years up until the 1960s, there is plenty of cave art. It is really
quite impressive. Viewing the rock art in the cave visitors will develop an
appreciation for the Aboriginal culture that is over 60,000 years old.
The land is Savannah – a lot of grass and trees. The
amazing thing is the animals seem to be few and far between. Sightings of
dingoes, frilled lizards, wallabies and some really colorful birds are
likely, however.
From the Top End it is
a three-hour flight south to the Red Center of Australia. The monolithic
Ayers Rock, Uluru to the Aborigines, is one of Australia’s icons. The
Songline Tour starts O’dark thirty in an upscale all-terrain vehicle bounds
over the dirt road to a rise in the land. While the stars fade the guide
cooks “damper” (wonderful tasting bread) over an open fire. While it is
cooking the he relates Aboriginal stories, sketching in the sand to make a
point. After the sun rises the reds of Uluru become brighter. A drive around
Uluru follows as we look for scars in the rock that are part of the
Storylines.
Hurried tourists often overlook
another nearby sacred site - The Olgas, or Kata Tjuta, huge rounded pillars
of red rock. It is an easy hike along the Windy Gorge Trail. An evening
tour includes sipping champagne while watching the setting sun change the
color of Kata Tjuta from brilliant red to dusky gray.
The Spirit Ancestors, during Dreamtime, created Kakadu,
Uluru, and Kata Tjuta. They formed all the earth’s features and when the
world was finished the Spirit Ancestors turned themselves into rocks,
billibongs (pools), and other natural features. Consequently, Uluru is more
than a big rock, it is sacred and contains Storylines that are intricate
explanations of geology, mores, and history, plus provide a sense of
continuity with the past. The Aboriginal rock paintings are like blackboards
where the Songlines were taught, some date back thousands years. To climb
the sacred Uluru is to go against the wishes of the Aboriginals.
After leaving Ayers Rock, a three-hour bus trip with a
change of buses at a dusty spot along the way, brings one to King’s Canyon
in time to watch the setting sun turn the mountain range a brilliant red.
The cabins have Jacuzzis with picture windows looking out on the rocky
outcroppings. There is time for a morning hike to “The Garden of Eden,” a
spectacular, narrow gorge with 300-foot walls before heading back to Alice
Springs to catch the legendary Ghan train.
From the Red Center of
Australia the legendary Ghan train travels arrow straight south for 20 hours
though the barren and desolate Outback to Adelaide. The Ghan is named for
the Afghani-led camel trains that pioneered transport to the Outback. In
Adelaide spend a delightful day touring the city and the seaside resort of
Glenelg with a volunteer from the Adelaide Greeter program. It is a free
program and a great way to end a trip from the top of Australia to the
south.
Information
For more information check
www.voyages.com.au,
www.ecotours.com.au, or
www.odysaf.com.au (prices on these websites are quoted in Australian
dollars).
Also, check
www.nttc.com.au and
www.australia.com or call (800) 369 6863.
For the Adelaide Greeter program, check
www.adelaidegreeters.asn.au
Photos by Sandra Scott
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