Posts Tagged ‘4WD’

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A new year, a new Calendar.

December 31, 2011

I’ve been busy,

This time a little less riding, but I put together a few calenders.

Since the new year is just about here I figured they might come in useful, if you happen to own a wall you can hang them on.

Unlike me. I could swing one off my handlebars I guess.

I probably should’ve done it about a month ago, but I never think too far ahead.

There is one about my biketrip in Australia.

But if you don’t feel like having me or my bicycle on your wall, there is one about the Australian Outback as well. It just means you have to look up my friend Steve’s shorts the whole month of January.

There is one with images of people I’ve met along the way and one with impressions from the roads in Tibet, Central Asia and India.

Tonight I’ll be celebrating New Years Eve with a bunch of people who don’t find my choice of music embarrassing.

Yay,

or Yeehaa!, more like ;-)

Have a good one!

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Simpson Desert Sidetracked

September 6, 2011

“Why don’t you cross the desert with us?”

Said Shane as we were having breakfast at Mount Dare Station, South Australia’s most remote ‘hotel’.

I had arrived the day before and rode my bicycle in at the same time that two motorbikes pulled up. They took one look at me and said, “We thought we were doing it tough…” And bought me a beer :-)

6 more motorbikes and  two 4WD’s had arrived when we all sat down for dinner.

I told them how I had a flat the day before and had been sitting on the side of the road to wait for a car to pass because after fixing the leak I had discovered my little pump had broken.

100 miles from anywhere is not the ideal spot to find out…

But the first car I tried to flag down just sped past me which is against all outback laws… the second one though helped me out with a little air and a beer at the Springs. So all was good after all.

One of the motorbike guys jumped up and gave me his little pump. And a map of where I was going :-) (thanks & thanks!)

So here I was, the next morning, at the breakfast table with my bike packed up and ready to go and Shane asking if I would like to come accross the largest parallel sand dune desert in the world.

Sure, I thought. Why don’t I go into Australia’s fourth largest desert with two complete and utter strangers…?

Sounds like an excellent plan.

So an hour later I found myself back in the warm waters of the Dalhousie springs before heading into the scrub.

I’ll introduce you to my new travelmates.

Here’s Shane, 46, married to a Dutch lady and father of three. He’s a milkman in Makay. He goes outback regularly to get away from it all and takes with him a fridge full of ice-coffees (yum!)

Then there is Frank, 57′ owner of an earthmoving business in South Australia and very well equiped to travel this continent. Which is exactly what he has been doing for the last 4 weeks, going down the Anne Bardell hwy, Great Central road, Canning Stock Route up to Wolf Creek Crater, down the Tanami, stocked up in Alice Springs and happened to arrive at Mount Dare about an hour after I did…

It was only at our first camp that Shane and I discovered how well-equiped Frank really is.  Apart from carrying enough food and fuel to last about a month including 110 litres of water. He also had enough alcohol to last all of us a lifetime….

Shane had his Ice-coffees and a bunch of tins with all sorts of surprising content.

I have never eaten so well on a camping trip before…. or drank for that matter.

Not just the food was in good supply, just to be sure to be sure Frank has built himself a 4WD-track at home, where he purposely gets his vehicles bogged just to practise getting them out again.

Lucky we didn’t need these skills… much. But it was good to know they were on hand.

And then, there was me… Well. You know me.

With three oranges and my toothbrush I was extremely well prepared.

I jumped in the vehicle with Shane and we were away.

We entertained ourselves by looking at and naming different plant and animal species. Since both our knowledge of native Australian flora & fauna is lacking a little we didn’t get much further than:

‘”Pretty purple flowers” or :

Look, Yellow Bush!” or:

Little Yellow Flower” or:

A white Bush“, or:

Nice Tree!”

“big bird”

And, “Great View”…

And so we spent many happy km’s in Frank’s tracks while pointing out different things. I did manage to point out the spinifex…. This prickly bush is probably the number 1 reason I get flat tyres on this continent, and is everywhere.

And sometimes we saw something completely different. Like pole B270.

The track we were taking was called the ‘French Line’. Originally called ‘Line B’,  built by French Petroleum back in the 60′s to get seismic data out of the Simpson Desert to see if there might be oil. Pole B270 is one of the original permanent markers that indicates a seismic shot point. (I knew all that)

Every now and then we would stop along the tracks to have a break or something to eat.

With just 20 or 30 km/h on most of those track we weren’t actually going an awful lot faster then I would go on my bike. Although I probably would be pushing it a lot if I tried riding out here. But apparently there is an annual bike-race through the Simpson Desert… Now that would be fun!

In this desert, that’s 5 times the size of my whole country, just about everywhere is an excellent campspot. We would set up camp,

Get the fire going, cook up a storm,

And wait for the rats to attack.

Not just this one, but in their hundreds, if not thousands, they would come into our camp to nibble on anything they could find. Which usually happened to be Frank’s waterbottle, Frank’s clothesbag and Frank’s wires… They tried getting into my tent too. But miserably failed at that attempt.

Another visitor, and altogether a lot cuter, but doing at least the same damage was the spinifex hopping mouse. They do not like it when you accidently step on their tail though. They hop.

The very strange thing was, on our way back we saw almost no living rats, but a whole lot of dead ones and not one hopping mouse at all… It’s a mystery.

When crossing this desert the vehicles must put a little flag on the front of the bullbar. I have now realised that this is indeed very useful. On these single tracks of sand dunes you cant see oncoming traffic, but you do see the little flag bopping up occasionally.

As you get further east there is a whole lot of saltlakes to cross. They are a very pretty sight ‘specially when there’s water in them.

One of the sight’s to see along the track is “Poeppels Corner

This is the exact spot where The Northern Territory, Queensland and South Australia meet. Originally the corner point was located in the middle of the lake in the mid 1880′s when Augustus Poeppel dragged a Coolibah Marker post into the desert with a bunch of camels. But as it turned out his measure chain had extended by 2,5 cm due to wear and heat so the corner was relocated 274 meters east a few years later.

The original post is now in Adelaide, so I’ll have to go and see that one day.

But here I was at three states at once! (or in two states and one territory as I was quickly corrected…)

Before getting to Birdsville we had to make a 75km detour to cross Eyre Creek. With the amount of rain in the last year creeks are flowing and the birds flock in.

A beautiful sight to see.

Arriving in Birdsville and with Shane gone home, Frank and I happened to camp right next to my four old mates from Hamilton Station and the Dalhousie Springs.

(we go way back) They seemed surprised and slightly startled to see me pop up there (is she stalking us… ;-) But after a round of Hello’s and hugs we ended up having another lovely evening together where Banjo Paterson’s poem; Mulga Bill’s bicycle was recited to me. (see below for text)

They also gave us their museum tickets; they bought them with every intention to see the museum, but since it only opened at 3, went down to the pub first… and never made it to the museum.

So Frank and I walked down to the museum, but got side-tracked by that very same pub… and never made it to the museum…

Never made it back to the campground ’till early the next morning either. I can heartily advise you never to go for those 3dollar vodka-cans they have on offer at the birdsville hotel. I did happen to run into Dick Smith though…  And some great local characters.

You know you had a good night when you seem to know every one in town the next day, and they know you… by name.

After a night like that nothing is better then a curried camel-pie at the Birdsville Bakery…

With my bicycle waiting for me in Mount Dare we had to make a move and after getting a few supplies set out to cross the desert once again. But for a change of scenery we took a slightly different track as on the way up.

We passed “Big Red”, at 40 meters the desert highest sandune and after 6 trys made it right up it the 7th time. As Frank remarked, ” Flat tyres and horsepower will get you anywhere…”

The view from the top of Big Red was gorgeous with the amout of water around.

This time the main pasttime was singing along to the mp3-player and trying to spot camels. The best place to do this from is the roof of the car…

We did see some, but before I could take a picture they were over the dunes and out of sight. Can’t really blame them though: I would run too if I knew I might end up in a pie…

Or shot.

Each car around here has a two-way, so you can let each other know where about you are. It’s very useful when you say something like,” Single vehicle heading west from George’s corner on the French line.” It becomes much less useful and sometimes even slightly annoying when people say something like: “2 vehicles heading west“…  every 10 minutes! Or “vehicle cresting” (there’s 1100 crests!) …

After hundreds of sandy kilometres along hundreds of sand dunes we arrived at a spot where our map informed us there would be a “Lone Gum Tree“. The reason for this Gum Tree (Coolibah) to be on the map is that it’s very rare to find such a tree far away from any water-source. No one knows how this tree got here or how old it is… But I discovered that this tree is not lone at all. It has two little gum trees at it’s side. It’s also, most likely, the most visited lone tree in the desert… A good spot for a picnic though.

And I love those desert dunes. Even more so when Frank let me drive for a while :-)

We got a pretty good routine going with setting up camp, cooking and packing up. I had finally discovered that it’s so much nicer to sleep out in the open (on top of the vehicle against little critters) instead of using my tent.

But after 9 wonderful days and a diet of alcohol and meat I was ready to get back on my bicycle.

So thanks to Shane and thanks to Frank for taking me on this Simpson Desert Sidetrack, it was a hoot!!!

 

                    Mulga Bill’s Bicycle

‘Twas Mulga Bill, from Eaglehawk, that caught the cycling craze;
He turned away the good old horse that served him many days;
He dressed himself in cycling clothes, resplendent to be seen;
He hurried off to town and bought a shining new machine;
And as he wheeled it through the door, with air of lordly pride,
The grinning shop assistant said, `Excuse me, can you ride?

`See, here, young man,’ said Mulga Bill, `from Walgett to the sea,
From Conroy’s Gap to Castlereagh, there’s none can ride like me.
I’m good all round at everything, as everybody knows,
Although I’m not the one to talk — I HATE a man that blows.
But riding is my special gift, my chiefest, sole delight;
Just ask a wild duck can it swim, a wild cat can it fight.
There’s nothing clothed in hair or hide, or built of flesh or steel,
There’s nothing walks or jumps, or runs, on axle, hoof, or wheel,
But what I’ll sit, while hide will hold and girths and straps are tight:
I’ll ride this here two-wheeled concern right straight away at sight.’

‘Twas Mulga Bill, from Eaglehawk, that sought his own abode,
That perched above the Dead Man’s Creek, beside the mountain road.
He turned the cycle down the hill and mounted for the fray,
But ere he’d gone a dozen yards it bolted clean away.
It left the track, and through the trees, just like a silver streak,
It whistled down the awful slope, towards the Dead Man’s Creek.

It shaved a stump by half an inch, it dodged a big white-box:
The very wallaroos in fright went scrambling up the rocks,
The wombats hiding in their caves dug deeper underground,
As Mulga Bill, as white as chalk, sat tight to every bound.
It struck a stone and gave a spring that cleared a fallen tree,
It raced beside a precipice as close as close could be;
And then as Mulga Bill let out one last despairing shriek
It made a leap of twenty feet into the Dead Man’s Creek.

‘Twas Mulga Bill, from Eaglehawk, that slowly swam ashore:
He said, `I’ve had some narrer shaves and lively rides before;
I’ve rode a wild bull round a yard to win a five pound bet,
But this was the most awful ride that I’ve encountered yet.
I’ll give that two-wheeled outlaw best; it’s shaken all my nerve
To feel it whistle through the air and plunge and buck and swerve.
It’s safe at rest in Dead Man’s Creek, we’ll leave it lying still;
A horse’s back is good enough henceforth for Mulga Bill.’

                                                -Banjo Paterson-

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Digging Deep and Flying High

September 28, 2010
Being at work I get to have terribly little time to spend on my bicycle. That makes me sad. 

 I do though, get a good bit of time with my computer. And that makes me happy, because now I can show you this;  

  

And more will follow… :-)   

  

I look at the landscape here and think;” WOW, Look at that view!!!”  

The geo’s look at the same thing and wonder if there’s any mineralisation in that rocky outcrop…  

Or they come back from holidays with a rock. And the other gets all excited and wants half of it…  

Did I mention it is a rock…  ?

Some of them think I’ll be the same in a while. But for me a rock is a rock is a rock…  

although, I did find a pretty one today… ;-)   

I would not want to see the world through a Geologist eyes.  

And don’t think that will happen. I like the world the way I see it now.  

Pretty, and colourful, and full of exciting things to discover. Not just iron ore. Or gold. Or copper. I couldn’t care less.  

But it’s a job. And a good one at that :-)   

It’s beautiful out in the scrub. Probably my favourite place in Australia. I only wish I could take my tent out and sleep in the bush more often.  

My job involves lifting heavy bags, and counting uptill 302… that’s howmany meters deep a hole can get.  

I’ve spend a bit of time at the drill rig too, where it gets very noisy and very dusty, so you wear a mask that makes you look like an alien. And I siv. I siv whatever comes out of the ground for the Geo to stare at.  

OK. I might not be using a lot of brain… but, by the end of this, I’ll be able to keep cycling for years and years to come.  (And I’ll have some huge muscles in my arms… hehe ;-)

And that is what I like.  (the cycling-for-years-bit… ok, the muscles-bit too)

  What I also like is two new family members back in The Netherlands. That’s right! Two of my sisters had baby boys. I can’t wait till they learn to ride bicycles and I can take them on trips with me! So Gijs & Tieme, when you guys can read this… Lets go!  

At work we have no mobile phone coverage, it’s a good way of keeping your phone bill down. Another good way is losing your phone. What I just seem to have managed…  

 On my last  break I talked to a friend when I got back into network-area. He mentioned he was at Perth airport on his way to Sydney. Without thinking (as usual) I replied; “Oh fun! Can I come too?” “Sure”, he said. So four hours later I was aboard a plane on my way East. So strange to think had I stayed on my bike I would probably have arrived in Sydney around this time too… It would’ve taken a little longer then 4 hours though. I hope I still will…  

On the plane, a whole new experience, I realised I wasn’t gonna get any food, water or tv unless I paid. I never thought of keeping my wallet on me… About two hours into the flight I read the free magazine front to back and studied all the emergency procedures and tried looking over the shoulder of the girls in front of me to see what’s on the telly…  

Finally I turned to the guy sitting next to me and asked: “Is that a really good book you’re reading or would you maybe like to have a conversation… I’m really bored you see…”  

Good move, we chatted the rest of the flight and in no time at all the wheels hit the tarmac.  

Sydney here I am!!!!  

  

I couldn’t believe I was there. Mentally I’m not capable to travel as fast as I just physically did, so every now and then I had to look around, jump up and down and scream WHOOAAH, IM IN SYDNEY!  

And, although I thought it would be a big scary city, turns out Sydney is as ‘little’ as WA. First thing I noticed coming out the train station was a big sign saying ‘MENZIES’… Well, that’s our village back ‘home’. Although the building wearing the sign can probably hold hundred times our population (which is 80)…  

Next thing I walked into a shop, got chatting to the owner, turns out he knew the guy I was catching up with that very afternoon. I knew there where only 2 degrees of separation in WA, I didn’t know it counts for the whole of Australia…  

The guy was Leigh. We met in February in Albany at the Ulysses-meeting. And as a proud (ex) Sydney-citizen he couldn’t let this opportunity to show me his city pass.  

It was great!  

He showed me the less-obvious side, we walked up to Kings-Cross and lots of little back alley-ways where he knew an authentic little Thai-place, felt like I was back in Bangkok for a while, and the food was just as good!  

Then he showed me the first terrace-houses in Australia, build in 1845, he used to be the caretaker. But now he’s got a place up in the mountains. The old houses are still there though, conveniently located right next to a pub where they served pizza’s with crocodile on it.  

It was an excellent day.  

I had already walked around the obvious sights and was pleasantly surprised to see that the harbour really is rather pretty. I took the compulsory opera-house picture and found my way into a massive rugby-ball that was there, together with a bunch of dancing and singing Maori’s, to promote New Zealand. For now I’m still enjoying it here, but it’s next on the list…  

Of course I had to go and have a look at Bondi beach. Which I did. And after two days (nowhere near long enough) I flew back to Perth. Where I had a first aid course to attend to. Shame I never realised I had to finish a book with lots and lots of questions before attending the course. I found out around 2pm the day before… And it’s supposed to take about 8 hours. It did.  

It felt like being back at school where you had to stuff weeks work into half a day right before an exam… well, I did.  

It was good fun though, I learned that if I get bitten by a snake in the bush I’ll die. I kinda knew this.  

But now I’m sure. Lucky we always carry a satellite phone (so you can let some one know…).  

But not to worry! I’ve only seen one snake around work, and that one wasn’t even alive itself.  

I have seen lot’s of other funny and interesting creatures though.  

One of my jobs is emptying old bags at drill holes from long ago. All sorts you find doing that. My favourites are the multi-coloured centipedes, but lizards are nice too. Lots of spiders who don’t even worry me much any more. Except the big fat ones. I still don’t like them… I even found a scorpion one day. And then there’s the ants. But they don’t excite me much. And flies… They haven’t been too bad in the cold weather.  

But now it’s warming up and we had some rain you see more animals and the flowers are starting to come out too. I realise that where I’m cruising around in the big white car, one day in the future there might be nothing but a big huge hole in the ground…  

Ah well.  

“Such is life”  

  

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;-)   

  

  

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Sweat and Sand

February 16, 2010
If I thought cycling south of Mullewa was going to be easy because the distances are smaller and there’s more bitumen. I was wrong.
Or, maybe not really wrong…
But I look at a map and think;’ Oh! 4 wheel-drive only…Ah! mountain bike-track… interesting. Lets go there!’
After all, my bike has got ‘extreme’ written across the side… ;-)
It’s always a good feeling to get back on my bike after a big break… maybe that is why I stop so often ;-)

The first thing I did was head west, straight to the coast. It’s usually about 5 to 10 degrees cooler on the coast. It seemed a good plan since I couldn’t change my hands on the handlebars that day, they burned! It felt like riding my bike in the oven…

We just had a ‘cold spell’ up in Morewa, a nice change from the heat the last few weeks. It meant it was ‘only’ about 35 degrees. Indeed it did feel nice and cool after 46+degrees.

It was lovely to get back on the coast, the first time since Broome, 2200 km further North.

The only minor issue there is the wind, an extremely strong southerly that tried to blow me straight back where I came from. But it is a good bit cooler. And since I’m in no particular hurry I don’t mind just being able to go 8km/h. Really.

I could do better than that I thought, why not push my bike to Grey? A little settlement of beach shacks right on the coast south of Jurien Bay…

4 wheel drive-only. It said on the map. It didn’t take too long for me to realize why… Sand. Dunes.

Very pretty, don’t get me wrong, downright spectacular in places. Like at ‘the Pinnacles’ A natural phenomenon where rocks, or well ‘Pinnacles’ actually protrude straight out the dessert which gives the whole area a weird surreal but beautiful character. I loved it! Must be a hell of a camp spot…

But I moved on to Grey. Only about 10km down the road.

3 hours later I arrived.

By that time I was only a little worried about the 60-odd km’s to go before hitting the bitumen. No water points either.
I just strung up my hammock and worried about nothing while watching the sun set at this perfect beach under the delight of… ehm… pasta with tuna and cheese…. hey! It ALWAYS tastes good after a day of pushing through sand…
Plan B. Text Michael.
I knew he was heading to Perth one of these days to drop of some sawing machines and I was on the way to Perth. Sort of.
He had never taken this route before, and will never do so again.

He did drop me off at Heine & Gertuds place. A Dutch couple living in a lovely spot in the Swan-valley with the most beautiful lawn I’ve seen in Australia. So after I lazed on the lawn for a bit I made myself comfortable in the home full of funny little Dutchnesses.

From there I cruised down through Perth, an easy ride straight to town. Thanks to the great bicycle-road network a very relaxed ride with views of the city and no hassle from other traffic.

I was heading for Wellard, where Mike & Heather live. I met Mike on the Gibb-river-road when he cycled from Cairns to Broome. He’s originally from New-Zealand and when I arrived I found out it happened to be ‘Waitangi Day’ New-Zealands public holiday… Good timing as for the occasion Heather roasted a lamb and made a gorgeous Pavlova. Yum!

Now I was truly ready to get moving, had a good sleep and a wonderful feed, ready for a ride on my bicycle.

I’ve heard about this track called the ‘Munda Biddi’ it runs south from Perth. It’s different scenery again, after cycling through outback, farmland and city I now hit the hills and forest. Very different indeed.

As it turned out the Munda Biddi is a mountain bike track, but if you’re not in any major hurry and you don’t mind pushing through gravel, sand and climbing over fallen trees and rocks you’re fine on a touring-bike as well…

And on those small forest tracks with no traffic, listening to birds and watching Emu’s run around it’s really rather lovely. I even saw one big snake crossing the path right in front of me. The only thing I didn’t like too much is when spiders build their homes straight across the track and happily cycling along you’re suddenly with your face in the middle of a web. yuk

And the March-flies. They’re the most annoying buzzing-bastards I’ve come across. And they bite.

In the village of Dwellingup I sat down for a short break when I got chatting to a lady who turned out the principal of the primary school.

She asked me if I would talk to the kids and tell them a bit about my travels. So off we went, the bike straight into the classroom where I got asked many questions. And who knows, maybe in a couple of years those kids will all be cycling ’round the world. Wouldn’t that be great! :-)

Up in the hills you find dams with beautiful lakes and rivers, always good for a refreshing swim. I rolled into a campground at Logue Brook dam one afternoon where I got talking to a bunch of guys who work at the dams. They asked if I would like to come on a boat ride when they went water ski-ing :-) That’s brilliant fun! They showed me how to water-ski with one, two and even no skies at all! Offered me to try, but I kindda prefer my legs in one piece and was pretty sure they wouldn’t be if I tried that… I did enjoy a couple of cold beers and the BBQ they organized that evening.

So riding (pushing) further down the track I got to Collie, a small Mining-town where a man immediately invited me to come and stay at his place. Andy. Coincidence would have it that he was Michael’s cousin! He was eager to show me all of Collie’s beauty-spots, so we drove around (while the dog ran alongside the car) and in the process got eaten alive by March-flies. yay.

People kept telling me about this real nice place called ‘honeymoon-pool’ I figured it probably be the closest I get to a honeymoon so I cycled down there and found a very busy camp spot at a freezing cold little river… It was indeed a very nice spot. And a young couple with two kids invited me to camp at their spot. We even went on a Easter-egg hunt, the fact it wasn’t Easter didn’t spoil the fun. We enjoyed some wine and went fishing.

Coming down the hills out of the forest you get great views of the hills with small farms and wineries scattered across.

Just the other day I saw a bunch of people on a little side-track of the road. I was just looking for a place to pitch my tent so figured I’d go and see what was going on.

It was a meeting of the local volunteer-fire brigade. Very necessary in this part of the woods. There is so many bush fires it’s ridiculous. I had only just heard big part of the farm from my friends at Yarrie-station had gone up in flames…

After their meeting, in true Aussie style, they had a BBQ. If I would like to join :-D

Didn’t need to think about that too long, so we all sat around, while getting eaten by mozzies, midges, bull-ants and march flies but hey, who notices silly details like that when you’re in good company under the enjoyment of a cold beer and some sausages of the barbie… ?

One couple there invited me to stay in their house that night, a beautifully converted barn right on the Munda Biddi track. He even showed me some useful self-defence-technics so now I truly kick-ass ;-)

Back on the track I found it got a little bit easier since it was now following an old railway-line.

But I didn’t follow it for long.

I turned off on an other dirt-road leading me to Margaret River.

Here I met up with Dutch girl Anja. We met in Karinjini months ago and now she’s settled down at the seaside. I might stay around for a little while …

There’s new plans brewing. Will tell you all about them…

Next time.

-x-

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