Where We Store Stuff in our Oka

We need to know where we’ve put things which are not used on a regular basis, like spares and tools, so I keep a list.
Also see this post for photos of other storage areas we’ve created around our Oka.


Black Hole Box
(This is above the cabin inside our raised roof. It’s dark in there, hence the name)

            Awning
            Engine spares (light weight) in plastic box
                        Belts
                        Fuel filter
                        Gloves
                        Hoses
                        Oil filter
                        Radiator repair stuff
                        Safety glasses
                        Thermostat and gaskets (2)
                        Water pump gasket
                        Welding glass
            Jumper leads (canvas bag)
            Kettle (dirty black campfire kettle)
            Screen room (pop up 2m x 2m x 2m insect proof tent)
            Snorkel and flippers

Front PVC Pole Pipe
(This is a 120mm diameter x 2m PVC pipe with screw caps mounted just behind the top of the front bullbar)

            Antenna poles (to extend the NextG Antenna height)
            Awning poles
            Earth stake
            Lengths of tube and strips of aluminium and timber
            Sand Flag pole (mounts on front bullbar in sand dune country. Also useful for hoisting a wire antenna 4m into the air)

Rear Compartment
(The rear compartment is inside the rear hatch, on the floor, but behind a bulkhead so things can’t fly forwards in a sudden stop. It’s used for heavier tools, equipments and spares)

            4 inch vice
            Air drill and grinding disks
            Heavy tools in cardboard box
                        Breaker bar
                        Clamps
                        Grease and grease gun (in sealed bag)
                        Hammer
                        Large files
                        Large screw drivers
                        Large spanners

                        Jack handle

                        Rubber hammer

                        Tyre levers

                        Wheel brace
            Hose clips
            Jerry cans for fuel, 1 or 2 when required
            Plastic box of spray chemicals
                        Brake cleaner
                        IPA
                        Silicone grease
                        WD40
            R pins
            Silicon, glue, gasket goo and Loctite
            Snatch strap and Equalisation strap (Winch/Tow Strap and Bow Shackles in external side box)
            Sockets (heavy) and torque wrench
            Spare nuts, bolts, washers and screws
            Square steel container (a 10 L campfire oil drum) containing:
                        Brake fluid
                        Diff oil
                        Engine and transfer box oil
                        Hydraulic oil
            Suspension bushes
            Tarp
            Welder hand tools and rods and gas blow torch

Rear Gate Tool Boxes
(These are boxes built into the skin of the rear gate hatch after removal of the internal steel panel)

            Allen keys
            Clamps, files, tie wraps, tent pegs and raw materials (LHS)
            Hex screw drivers
            Saws, chisels and cutting equipment (RHS)
            Small sockets and drivers
            Small spanners
                        A/F and Whitworth
                        Metric

Rear Overhead Compartment
(This is one of the internal overhead compartments built into the raised roof. Other compartments are used for domestic storage)

            Box of wire
            Electric terminal kit
            Electronic components
            Shortwave Radio
            USB keyboard
            Yagi antenna beam (for NextG phone/modem)

Seat Compartment
(This is a long compartment built below a seat alongside our kitchen unit)

            Chairs
            Hessian sacks
            Hub adaptor and bearing puller
            Sand mats
            Spade (small)
            Table top
            Table leg
            Wheel brace extension bar
            Wooden and plastic strip

Shower Recess
(When not used as a shower we store lightweight bulky things in it)

            Hanging rails for damp clothes
            Laundry equipment
            Padded Milk Crate (used as a seat/step), containing
                         Wine casks
                         Dirty clothes bags

            Screens for all rear windows to provide heat and light insulation
                         Made from Aircell aluminium bubblepack insulation from Bunnings
                         Fitted with suction caps

            Spray water bottles for very hot weather
            Toilet tent

Side Box
(This is an external steel box mounted behind drivers wheel mudflap)

            Bow shackles (2 x 4.75 tonne)
            Ropes various
            Winch extension strap (used as a tow/object removal rope)

Under/Behind Drivers Seat

            Behind seat
                        Emergency Rucksack above computer box
                        Flashlube and funnel
                        Rubber Gloves
                        Thin box with hand tools, pliers, small screw drivers, small adjustable wrench
            In wheel arch box (accessible from under the seat)
                        Bearing locknut socket
                        Bearings (s/h)
                        Brake pads (1 of each)
                        Clutch cable (used, but usable for repair of cables)
                        Gas bottle to airline pipe (emergency tyre “air” source)
                        Hi Lift jack extension (for winching)
                        Hi Lift jack overhaul kit
                        Lift Pump and gasket
                        Spring repair kit (allows spare half leaf to be used to repair broken spring eye)
                        Suspension pins and bushes
                        U-Bolt and nuts

Under/Behind Passenger Seat

            Behind seat
                        Airline (small), tyre pressure gauge and air blower tool (in canvas bag, behind seat)
                        Screens for the windscreen and front door windows (same type as for rear windows)
                        Tyre repair kit (behind passenger’s seat, under library)
            In wheel arch box (accessible from under the seat)
                        Bearing lock washers and tab bending puller
                        Bearings (new)
                        Brake parts
                        Free wheeling hubs spares
                        Gear ball joint
                        Oil seals
                        Spare  UJ
                        Split pins

Under Rear Bed/Seat
(This compartment is under the seat/bed base and shares its space with a 50 L reserve flexible water tank)

            Drill bits, drill and battery
            Electric tool kits
            Small hex screwdriver kit and small fixing screws
            Small Stanley socket set

On the Rear Gate
(The rear gate is for holding one of the spare wheels but we also use it for storing other external items)

            Coiled airline mounted on a 120mm diameter PVC pipe (covered to avoid the effects of sunlight/ultraviolet)
            Levelling wedges (won’t be used so much now we have airbags all round but useful as chocks or small sand mats)
            Long handled spade (extension handle inside PVC pipe)
            Water hoses (long and short) coiled up inside the spare wheel
            Water tank/tap connectors, inside airline PVC pipe

Travels WITHOUT an Oka, New Zealand 2011

We’ve just come back from 3 weeks in New Zealand.


We didn’t take our Oka with us (the excess baggage cost was beyond our budget) but we did hire a people mover and had a great tour of the North Island. (We’ll need to return someday to do the South Island).
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The Christchurch earthquake hit while on the northwest coast fortunately, but in a strange way we wish we had been in the south to help with the rescue effort, you just feel so impotent stuck in the north, looking on. The people generally were shattered. Chch (as they abbreviate it) is their second largest city (it ties with Wellington) and the effect on them would be similar to Melbourne being destroyed here.

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The reason we went to NZ was to attend a niece’s wedding on a beach north of Wellington. That went very well but will be of little interest to the Oka community at large. But with Oka’s in mind, we did visit Okato, a small town on the west coast and the nearest we came mentally to an actual Oka. Pity they didn’t actually use any.




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Good things: Very scenic, high quality lifestyle, clean, economic, quirky and fun.
Not so good things: Cool and cloudy, extensive land clearance and logging, almost no native wildlife, daily earthquakes.
Janet’s highlight: Cultural performance at the Maori Thermal Village in Rotorua.
My highlight: Tour of White Island, an active volcano 50 km off the north coast. You don’t get to see that every day.
Summary: We’ll be back for a longer tour, it was good.


If you are interested in what the NI was like for us (much good, some bad),  click on Read more just below, otherwise use the links in the right sidebar to find our other articles.




Read more:




Overview


NZ is larger than we thought and extremely hilly, most houses seem to built on the steep sides of hills. Although it looks small on the map and is only one 30th the size of Australia, NZ is larger than the UK and 4 times the area of Tasmania.

Its coastline, at 15,000 km long, is around half the length of Australia’s, due to the thousands of small bays and inlets. This makes most of the country extremely scenic, but it also means that roads are, in general, very winding and hilly, which slows driving and give the impression that distances are longer than they actually are.

Across the centre there are a few large flat farming areas and Wellington and Auckland have very good motorway systems which makes driving in and out quite simple. A Navman or similar is very useful for finding the best routes between centres as some of their towns have very long and unfamiliar place names.

Commerce

Right now, New Zealand makes for very economical traveling. The rising Aussie dollar and the prices of most commodities in NZ makes touring NZ reasonably inexpensive. Apart from petrol ($NZ2.00/l) most goods are at similar or lower prices than in Australia, but with a 1.3:1 exchange rate, the resulting price is about 2/3 the Aussie price for the same item.

Credit cards work fine but not our ATM cash cards. Maybe they need to be activated before traveling but we really thought we would have no problems in this regard in our nearest neighbour. We also heard that NZ cash cards don’t work in OZ, which is also strange considering most banks are common to both countries. I must check this out.

Language Duffuculties

There are a few words which quickly become part of the vocabulary after arriving in NZ:

Earthquake. NZ is located on the edge of the Australasian tectonic plate and is very earthquake prone, as sadly evidenced by the tragic Christchurch quake. Reasonable earthquakes between 4 and 5 on the Richter scale are very common, on average 1 per day. They can be felt at this magnitude but seldom do any real damage. There was one in Wellington the day after we left. Most houses are timber framed to reduce their susceptibility to earthquake and everyone has an earthquake survival kit in their homes and cars. Although major quakes are rare, 1 or 2 per year, it’s impossible to drive through the motorway tunnels around Wellington with giving a casual thought as to their strength in a quake.

This picture from the NZ Geonet website shows the extent of earthquake activity in NZ. It’s hard to escape from them but it’s interesting that Christchurch on the east coast of the South Island is not in a particularly susceptible area. Perhaps it is now.

Slup or Landslup. Due to the steepness of the hillsides and high rainfall, land slips are common place and all roads can be regularly affected by land slips. This has been made worse by the unfortunate mass clearing of much of the bushland for sheep and cattle grazing in the late 1800’s which removed the binding effect of roots in the soil.

Quirky. All over NZ there are signs, sculptures, buildings and businesses that can only be described as quirky. This makes NZ fun as well as scenic. Their obsession with things extreme is a good example: including bungy jumping, jet boats, tubing over rapids, caving and white water rafting.


Volcano. There are at least 2 active volcanoes in the NI (White Island and Ruapehu) and dozens of dormant ones. We did a trip out to White Island, an active volcano on an island 50 km off the northern coast. It was a very strange feeling walking around a hissing, steaming, bubbling volcanic crater. It last erupted in 2000 which is not that long ago in geological terms, and we had to wear hard hats and gas masks. What we didn’t know is that there had been 6.4 earthquake on White Island only last September 29th, more powerful than the Christchurch quake but presumably deeper.

Marae. A Maori meeting room or village hall. There is a very strong Maori culture present in NZ with Maori villages distributed across the country and Maori place names very common. The Maori language uses only 15 letters but they are able to generate extremely long and unpronounceable place names. Try Papakawhai (where we stayed in Wellington), Paraparaumu, Paekakariki, and for extreme size, Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokaiwhenuakitanatahu, which is officially the longest place name in the world, in the north east of the North Island, but strangely they don’t mark it on the map. We actually met a resident who could pronounce it.

And just to make things more interesting, “wh” in a word is pronounced “f”.

Thermal. In a broad belt all across the North Island, there are thermal areas of bubbling mud pools, geysers, pools of boiling water, thermal baths and steam just issuing forth from green paddocks alongside quietly grazing cattle. They also produce a lot of geothermal electricity and heating. Some of these features can be seen freely, but most are now sadly in private hands (including White Island oddly, now who would want to own an active volcano?) and charge quite highly for tours and access. Despite this, they are well worth visiting for things you just don’t see everyday.

Fush an Chups. Yes it’s difficult to ignore the peculiarities of the Kiwi accent, but after a few days you do get used to it. Initially it makes you giggle a bit and then you get used to it and then, heavens above, you actually start talking like one. In an apparent swipe at the Aussies, you do actually get the words Fush and Chups written that way on the menu, and Fish and Chip shops are the predominant fast food outlet, far more common than the usual Chinese, Indian or even Maca type take aways.

My favourite Kiwi expression came from an episode of Go Girls: “Thus just guves me the shuts!”

Most houses have a timber outdoor eating area and it’s hard not to laugh out loud when the men proudly offer to show you their dicks. Personally, I’d prefer to see their decks.

i-Site. This is what they call their tourist offices and they are located in all towns and localities. Full of the usual glossy brochures and local information but can book tours and accommodation as well.

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The Wedding

Although the actual details of the wedding are probably not that relevant to your average Oka owner, they do show some of the coastal scenery and lifestyle habits of a typical NZ family.


Jules and Matt (being a surfer) wanted a beach wedding and chose Peka Peka Beach about 1 hour up the coast from Wellington.

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The Peka Peka Beach wedding location

It rained a bit on the morning but the afternoon was calm and clear but cloudy. The photographer said he preferred those conditions since there was no fierce glare from the sun or dark shadows to contend with. We were just pleased not to have to stand in the burning sun, or rain, for an hour.

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The beach wedding with Kapiti Island in the background

The wedding was preceded by a Cocktail Party, thoughtfully staged 2 days before the wedding to allow hangovers to subside.

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The Cocktail Party over looking the beautiful Porirua Valley

Our job, as family members, was then to provide the hard labour shifting furniture, erecting marquees, preparing food and generally meeting transportation needs. But we also got to taste the wine to ensure it was suitable.

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The minimalist Wedding Aisle constructed of driftwood

The event went off well with only one minor hitch. One of the small dogs leading the bridal party decided on a nature call on the sandy track to the beach. This caused a short delay while the steaming obstruction was shifted into the sand dunes.

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The Bridal Party approaches, after the short nature delay


A beach wedding could have been a very tricky affair weather wise, a raging surf, flocks of seagull or squally winds could all have transpired to ruin things but they didn’t, and even if they had, there was food and champers on the beach to defray any ill effects.

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The formalities in calm conditions (at least the weather was)


We agonised over the appropriate attire for a beach wedding, but so as not to look too daggy, I bought a flamboyant Polynesian shirt in NZ (actually made there, or at least the label was) and here is the result. 

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I certainly brightened up one part of the beach whilst complimenting the beautiful bride?

But soon it was over, the paperwork signed on a small table near the surf and the food and drink consumed. Then it was back to the marital home for a big BBQ cum party.

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The after-the-wedding BBQ and hers and his drinks 

There were the usual (actually fairly unusual) speeches, drink spilling competitions and a who-can-look-silliest-in-a-BBQ-apron contest.

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All three contestants won that one 

The next day(s) were for cleaning up and returning to those the things that were theirs, mostly. Meanwhile we sorted out a hire car and a route to circumnavigate the North Island.

Our Travels

The descriptions below are simply a listing of our travels, once the wedding was over, where we went and what we thought. Total distance was 2500 km over 11 days, which is all we had left. To fully experience the North Island would require 3-4 weeks and the South Island considerably more.

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Our route around the North Island

Wellington

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Wellington’s airport fits snugly across a land bridge, the only flat land around, created by an earthquake in the 1800’s

Wellington, the capital, is a large city with substantial business, political and transport infrastructure but a relatively small population of 340,000. It’s a magnificent city, situated on a beautiful peninsular with spectacular coastal vistas. On a clear day you can easily see the mountains of the South Island on the horizon around 30 km away.

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Wellington skyline from Mount Victoria

It can be very chilly and windy in Wellington, even in summer, but with clean, clear air the sun can be very powerful and sunburn is a real risk while sightseeing.

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Quirky timber sculptures on Wellington’s wharves
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Sculptures outside the Te Papa National Museum

The wharves and dock areas are lined with museums, quirky monuments, sculptures and café’s. The fine Te Papa museum on the water front is New Zealand’s national museum housing exhibits defining the country’s history, geology, geography, wild life and development.

Standing in the simulated 5.3 earthquake exhibit feeling the floor shaking and things rattle around you is quite scary but enlightening. The building itself is designed to be earthquake “resistant” and is supported on 152 huge blocks of rubber impregnated with lead sheeting to dampen the vibrations. The foundations are actually part of the museum’s exhibits.

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The Cable Car up to the Botanic Gardens

A trip in the cable car up to the Botanic Gardens provides spectacular views over the city, as does the drive up to the lookout on Mount Victoria, while a drive round Island Bay south of the airport shows off its superb coastal scenery.

Wellington to Napier

This route took us over the Tararua Hills to the Hutt Valley and north east though flat farming lands to Hastings and Napier on the coast.

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Along the way we stopped at the Pukaha Wildlife Conservation Park at Mount Bruce. Since Polynesian settlement around 1000 years ago, and more particularly since European settlement, most of New Zealand’s indigenous wildlife has vanished.

Land clearance and introduced carnivores have decimated the wildlife which had no defences, since previously there had been no mammals (except bats) or other predators on the islands. Many of the birds were flightless and easily fell pray to stoats, rats, dogs, cats and possums.

Pukaha (http://www.pukaha.org.nz/) is dedicated to conserving and replenishing endangered species which can now only survive on protected offshore islands. We saw Kiwi and Tuatara (NZ’s only lizard), Kokako, Huia and Kakapo being reared for release into protected areas.

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Young Kiwi in need of manual feeding

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Kiwi egg starting to hatch, which can take several days

It is sad to say the we saw almost no indigenous animals in the wild. Most sightings were of sparrows, starlings, Indian mynas and possums (road kill, and the most devastating introduced species, intended to start a fur trade). Strangely there are no foxes or snakes in NZ so chooks can run free, and several introduced species failed to survive, including kangaroo, deer and camels(!).

There are of course plenty of sheep and dairy cattle in NZ, but in recent years the focus has changed away from wool to dairy products and the number of sheep has declined markedly so that they are now far outnumbered by cattle.
We did however see, and more obviously hear, their large native insects, the Weta. These are like crickets or locusts but don’t fly and they are everywhere, and are very loud. In some forests their clicking and screeching was absolutely deafening.
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There is no accommodation at Mount Bruce so, against all recommendations that we backtrack to Masterton, we continued on the Ekatahuna. This is a small outback town and the only accommodation was in the Commercial Hotel. Sadly this was not a good place, it was very old and the rooms were featureless (no fridge or tv, and the showers and toilets were communal). Even worse the pub closed at 8.30 pm. There was however, a nice little cafe which served a HUGE fish and chips special with 2 eggs, 2 fish, a mountain of chips and salad and a large brown teapot of tea, all for $NZ10. But we were the only customers in an otherwise quiet and deserted town. Ekatahuna; note it down and remember not to stay there.

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Eketahuna is obsessed by Kiwis

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THE cafe of the huge fish and chips

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Not the BBC but a start

From Ekatahuna, the road passes through several farming communities including Dannevirke, in an area settled by Scandinavian immigrants. It was OK but the guide book said that it contained “no features which would cause travellers to stop in the town”.

Further on is the pretty little town of Waipukuau close to where the aforementioned longest named town is located. A stop for a chat in the railway station/i-Site tourist office is interesting.

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At Mangatainoka resides the headquarters of the Tui Brewery company, named after a native NZ bird, the Tui, which is a honey eater with white plumes around its neck.
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The Tui brewery brochure with “workers” in almost every window

It is a strange high rise factory building from which, according to the brochure, scantily clad production workers hang from every window. Well the only one I saw was on the advertising hoarding on the way into town.

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The only “worker” I saw was on the advertising hoarding


The large towns of Hastings and Napier are fairly close together, and were rebuilt after the 1931 earthquake in the art deco fashion of the period. Most subsequent buildings have followed a similar style and the many shops selling 30’s clothes, costumes and artefacts give the area a 1930’s Bonnie and Clyde feel. People regularly dress in the 30’s style for festivals and olden day cars can be seen cruising the streets.

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Hastings was prettier than Napier due to the baskets of petunias hanging from every shop verandah

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Although the weather was grey and gloomy while we were there, the area has a very pleasant nostalgic feel to it. We weren’t so enamoured of the black sand and pebbles on the beach though.
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Napier is almost the most antipodean town you can drive to, nearly 177º E. Only Gisborne up the coast is more easterly at 178º E. But due to time constraints we chose to head north west to the touristy areas of Taupo and Rotorua.

Napier to Taupo

A nice, but cloudy drive over the Ahimanawa Ranges takes us to the beautiful town of Taupo on Lake Taupo. There are plenty of mountain views and waterfalls along this drive and Taupo quickly became our favourite town.

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Lake Taupo is a huge crater lake, around 25 km diameter, formed by one of the worlds largest ever volcanic eruptions 27,000 years ago. It last erupted in 180 AD with a magnitude so large that it was heard in China, and was recorded by Romans.

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Lake Taupo on a cloudy day
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Better the next day…
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…the clouds had cleared and the mountains appeared.







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Chuncky furniture around the lake

Despite its violent creation, Lake Taupo is now a beautiful peaceful scene and provides a magnificent backdrop to the town of Taupo.

Lake Taupo has only 1 exit, a narrow 15m wide crack in the crater wall though which a veritable torrent of water continuously roars over the 10m Huka Falls. It looks like a man-made canal but it is natural and several Sydney Harbour’s worth of water flows through it daily in a beautiful, but deadly, swirling blue cascade and it’s not a good place for swimming. More than a few camera pixels were used up on that day.

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The roaring outflow from Lake Taupo
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The 10m Huka Falls

In the early morning when the air is clear, volcanic Mounts Tongoriro and Ruapehu can be seen across the lake. We stayed 2 days and it was hard to drag ourselves away.

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Mounts Tongariro and Ruapehu across the lake

Taupo is a clean, open, pretty town with plenty of water-borne pursuits available. Nearby are the Craters of the Moon, our first introduction to steaming fumaroles, and further north is Orakei Korako (Hidden Valley) with its colourful terraces, hot springs, sulphur beds and geysers.

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Craters of the Moon. A walk amongst steaming fumaroles and mud pools.




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Colourful terraces at Orakei Korako

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Bushwalk at Hidden Valley

Taupo to Rotorua 

This is quite a short drive but thermal wonderlands abound and steam can be seen rising along the roadside and up though grazing paddocks.

 

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Steam just rising from alongside the road

Rotorua has some very interesting Maori cultural centres and thermal displays but the town is not as pretty as Taupo. The lake is home to hundreds of ducks and swans which make a mess of the lake side pathways and gardens. It won the 2010 Best Towns award but we would have given it to Taupo.

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Ducks and float planes on Lake Rotorua

The Maori Whakarewarewa Thermal Village near the centre of town is well worth a visit. It’s a working Maori village, where several families live, work or go to school. It has been opened up to visitors with guided tours of thermal sites, geysers and an excellent cultural display. It provides a good understanding of Maori culture and living in an active geothermal environment. To cook your veggies, you tie a string to them and toss them in the nearest thermal pool. A few minutes later they are done.


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Vegetables cooking in the boiling pools


Twin geysers at Rotorua Thermal Village


The craft shops in the thermal village are also very good and surprisingly economic compared with big city shops. But be aware of the Aussie quarantine restrictions when buying crafts. Finished, carved wooden items are OK but swirling grass skirts could cause a problem. 

Rotorua to Whakatane

This road follows a line of lakes to the coastal town of Whakatane. This is a pleasant medium sized town on the estuary of the Rangitaiki River with a superb Ohope beach just a few km further east. But the main drawcard for our visit was the volcano on White Island, about 50 km off the coast.

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The enticing advertised hoarding

This is one of the few places in the world where you can walk around an active volcano in relative safety and I knew as soon as I saw a brochure that this was one trip not to be missed, and we weren’t disappointed.

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White Island volcano tantalises on the horizon

You can visit by helicopter which is quite expensive ($NZ550) or take a day trip on a boat for 1/3rd the cost which, naturally, is what we did. Even cheaper is to view the crater activity from the rim on the Geonet webcam here.

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Drawing ever closer to the volcano

It takes 1 1/2 hours in the boat across open sea with quite a high cross swell so being a good sailor certainly helps. Janet failed in that respect, despite the Sealegs tablets, and one of the crew lent her an old shirt which made her look like a pirate. Janet may have been the first but she wasn’t the only casualty.

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Janet in her pirate shirt

Landing on the barren island requires transfer to an inflatable Zodiac and is not easy. In fact half way out the Captain said he thought the swell might make it too difficult to land we might have to abort (but they would refund our money). He wallowed around for 1/2 an hour, which didn’t help the seasickness, looking for dolphins and whales. We didn’t find any but we did see some flying fish and then he said we could just make it in and made a rush for the sheltered bay.

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The landing jetty on White Island, a broken down lump of 1800’s concrete

There is an old broken concrete jetty left behind by some previous sulphur miners from a failed industry in the 1800’s. Landing required launching yourself from the wallowing Zodiac at some timber supports on the jetty and hauling yourself up. The return journey required the same dexterity, but we had to hurry, the tide was going out and the seas were rising again.

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Getting ready to disembark

On the island we had to wear hard hats in case of an ejection of lava bombs and carried gas masks in case the hydrogen sulphide gas became overwhelming. Due to the acidity of the ground, this volcano does not produce lava flows when erupting, like those on Hawaii do, instead it spits out hard lumps of lava which are still molten inside. We had 2 guides, a leader, John, who gave us a running commentary and a support guide Meghan, who trailed along to ensure no one got left behind.

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Where we were heading, with some slight misgivings
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Getting our safety instructions. We listened well.
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Entering the volcano
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Bubbling mud pools





Bubbling mud pools, well, bubbling. That’s what they do.

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A sulphur stream

It was an erie and slightly worrying feeling to be walking alongside hissing and roaring fumaroles, bubbling mud pools and sulphur beds, to the steaming, green, acidic crater lake, knowing that the last eruption was only 10 years ago. In fact, before the 2000 eruption, there was no lake at all and you could walk right across the crater. Not now though, and if we’d known the Christchurch earthquake was going to happen the very next day we’d have been even more concerned. Earthquakes have been known to trigger volcanic eruptions.

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Steaming, roaring fumaroles leading to the crater





Fumaroles roaring continuously at 200ºC


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In our full safety gear on a sulphur mound
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Did I look a bit worried or what?





Trudging towards the crater









While watching the steaming crater lake, a cloud of sulphurous gas wafted over us (about 1.06 min into the video) and we had to don our gas masks and turn away until it passed by.


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Leaving the grumbling crater behind us
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We had walked into the jaws of death and survived
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The relived party trudging back to the boat





Janet returning to the boat in the Zodiac, she’s the last off. Just made it in time, notice the seas crashing over the jetty at 40 sec

The volcano is under constant electronic surveillance and is at category 1 level of activity. If it had been on the mainland it would have been a category 2 or 3 (the highest state of activity) due to it’s potential impact on the land and population. But at 50 km out to sea, the only people in danger are curious tourists, like us, oh, and a colony of Australasian Gannets. 
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Corroding mining equipment from the failed sulphur mining operations

Lunch was provided on the boat (parked in the lee of the island fortunately) and the long return journey to shore was uneventful (if you see what I mean). We spent an hour and a half on the island and we were happy to have seen the volcano close up but relived to have survived.

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Quiet lunch spot

You can see more info, pics and videos of the volcano on the White Island Endeavour website, and more NZ geo-activity data on their Geonet website, including earthquake reports and recording drum images. They record tremors occurring about every 20 minutes, and they’ve had 30 quakes between 3 and 5 in the last 2 days.

The day after we left White Island, we heard the devastating news about the Christchurch earthquake which severely dampened our enjoyment of the country. For several days people looked physically numbed, even in a country used to earthquakes, with groups gathered around TVs in supermarkets and shop windows talking in low tones about what the future might hold. We were not unaffected either having just endured the remote pain of the cyclone and floods in Queensland and Victoria, and fires in WA.

On the way back into Whakatane harbour, a large landslip was visible on the road out of town. An apartment block and large house had to be evacuated as a wall of rocks and soil had engulfed their back yards a few days earlier.

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A major landslip in  Whakatane

As such things are commonplace in NZ, it does make you wonder about the planning approval process for buildings in such risky areas. Nearly all houses around Wellington are built on steep hillsides, which gives them superb ocean views but at what risk? Maybe land shortages leave them no options.

Whakatane to Corromandel

The drive along the north coast and up the Corromandel Peninsular in one of the more scenic in the NI. The sheltered bays and beaches are a haven for boat owners, and nearly everyone in NZ seems to own one. The water on the north side was blue and inviting, although we didn’t test its temperature, and on the southern side there is a range of dormant volcanoes. In between, huge paddocks of sweetcorn and Kiwi fruit are grown.

Corromandel to New Plymouth

New Plymouth to Wellington

Visiting Lesley

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Lesley and Janet at the Byrd Memorial on Mount Victoria. “The South Pole is that way!”.
TBC…

In the Wheel Ruts of Len Beadell

Rut: a long deep track made by the repeated passage of the wheels of vehicles. 
I was going to call this article “In the Wheel Tracks of Len Beadell”, but 2 things stopped me. Firstly, the name has already been used for a similar travel article, and secondly, “ruts” more accurately describes the current conditions of his tracks. Alternatively, the words furrow, groove, corrugation, trough, ditch, hollow, pothole, wash-away or crater would not be inappropriate.

This is not Len Beadell’s fault of course, his job finished in the 1960’s and almost no maintenance has been undertaken since then. What’s actually surprising is that most of his 50 year old bush tracks are still navigable at all. But more importantly, Len Beadell’s tracks provide a great outback driving experience, with some challenges and excitement thrown in, and along the way you can’t help but get caught up in the history and scenic splendour of this part of Australia.











A typical sample of a Len Beadell track.

The Sandy Blight Junction Road heading north towards Mt Leisler

Click on Read More below on for some history surrounding Len Beadell and our account of travels on some of his tracks.







“Ruts” on the Sandy Blight Junction Road at the 200 Mile rock, like running on rails
Len Beadell’s History

You don’t have to point your vehicle far off the bitumen in southern or western Australia to come across the name of Len Beadell. Len Beadell is one of Australia’s best known modern day pioneers and a quick Google search will provide access to thousands of sites, so there is no shortage of information about the man and his mission

Starting his working life as an army surveyor in SE Asia during WW11, he subsequently joined the Weapons Research Establishment in Salisbury, South Australia (now the Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO)) and was instrumental in developing most of the infrastructure to support the British atomic tests carried out in the remote west of South Australia during the 1950’s and 60’s.

The Gibson Desert from McPhersons Pillar just 30 km off the Gary Highway, built by Len Beadell in 1963.
It looks deceptively green and pleasant but we are 300 km from the nearest habitation (at Warburton) and it was scarily remote. We saw no one for 5 days.
As part of that 8 year program, he surveyed and selected the location for the Woomera Rocket Range, the Giles Meteorological Office, and the Emu and Maralinga atomic test sites.
Integrating these facilities with existing highway and rail access meant the development of 6,000 kms of linking roads and tracks covering 2.5m square km of then undeveloped areas across South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory.

A mudmap of Len Beadell’s tracks can be found on the Beadell Tours Home Page here and a more detailed map of Len Beadell’s outback road network and a complete anthology of all his work is contained in “A Lifetime In The Bush“, a biography of Len Beadell © Mark Shepard, available from Westprint.




Mudmap from Len Beadell Home Page


From “A Lifetime In The Bush”, a biography of Len Beadell © Mark Shepard

The tracks we have covered are the red and blue coloured GPS route plots on this map, which covers an area of roughly 2000 km by 1500 km (3 million sq km).
And not a speck of bitumen to be seen.
Some of these roads and tracks have gone on to become major outback highways (sand and gravel, no bitumen) linking remote desert communities, while some have succumbed to the forces of nature and all but disappeared, but his work will be remembered mostly for the construction of his most famous track, the Gunbarrel Highway 

Gunbarrel Highway heading east towards Mount Beadell in the far distance
Sandy Blight Junction Road heading north towards Mt Leisler

The Gunbarrel Highway was not the first of Len Beadell’s tracks, (the first was the eastern end of the Anne Beadell Highway from Mabel Creek to Emu), but it is his most famous and it was the “straightness” of the track building process he used that inspired the name of his “Gunbarrel Road Construction Party”. Actually, the Gunbarrel is not straight at all if you look at the map, it meanders around geographic obstacles and between lakes and sanddunes. But it was his method of surveying ahead in his LandRover and then signalling to the graders behind to follow his signs in a straight line which gave this construction method its name.

Criss-crossing the deserts of South, Central and Western Australia, Len Beadell built a series of tracks stretching west from Coober Pedy to Laverton (the Anne Beadell Highway), from Kulgera to Willuna (the Gunbarrel Highway) and from Alice Springs to Talawana (the Gary Junction Road). He also built corresponding tracks north from Cocklebiddy to Warburton (the Connie Sue Highway), and then on to Sandy Blight Junction, from the Trans-Australian Railway through Maralinga to Emu, and northwest to 80 Mile Beach (the Gary Highway and Callawa Tracks).

Veevers Meteorite Crater, 16 km east of the Gary Highway. 80 m across and 15 m deep,
only discovered in 1975 and confirmed as an impact crater in 1984. Original 1975 hand written notes are still there in the visitors book.
Our Interest in Len Beadell

Once we started to learn a bit about the man and his achievements, we got drawn into knowing more about his tracks and how he built them, and a yearning to follow his grader tracks to see what remote desert travel is all about.

We have read most of his books, studied his activities and heard tapes of his talks. He was a very independent, self-sufficient person and a very funny writer with a sharp wit and laid back style. This must have made him a joy to have at dinner parties but a bugger to work with.

During the 60’s and 70’s, Len Beadell became good friends with American experts in meteorite craters, Eugene and Carolyn Shoemaker. On visits to Australia they had been researching the Veevers and Connolly Basin craters, access to which had been made possible by the newly formed Gary Highway and Talawana Tracks. They even named an asteroid after him, 3161 Beadell (1980 TB5), 12.5 km diameter. Tragically, Eugene Shoemaker was killed in a car crash on the Tamami Track in 1997 and his ashes were buried on the moon, the only person to date who has been accorded that privilege.

Everard Junction at the end of the Gary Highway on the Gunbarrel Highway.
It doesn’t look it, but it was a stinking hot 40º that day
Sadly, although we never talked with Len Beadell himself, we did meet him once in his later life at our sons’ school speech night in 1995, (as a local dignitary, Beadell House was named after him at Trinity Collage, Gawler). He was too unwell to speak himself so his wife Anne gave a wonderful account of life with Len and their time on the road, on the few occasions he allowed his family to come along.

More recently we were even sadder to read of the untimely death of his wife Anne, on 24th November 2010, aged 69. They were married in 1961 and had what must have been a whirlwind 34 year relationship until Len’s death in 1995.

Mt Beadell on the Gunbarrel Highway, a fitting memorial to Len Beadell 
Anyone who has travelled an outback track in searing heat (and not necessarily in summer time either) can relate to the sentiments in these short extracts of a poem by Barcroft Boake, written around 1890. He might have been describing the conditions Len Beadell would face during the construction of his as yet unbuilt tracks.

Out on the wastes of the Never Never –
That’s where dead men lie!
There where heat-waves dance forever –
That’s where dead men lie!

Out where the grinning skulls bleach whitely,
Under the saltbush sparkling brightly,
Out where the wild dogs chorus nightly,
That’s where the dead men lie.

This poem sends a forceful and realistic message about Australia’s harsh outback that’s still valid today. It can be read in full here.

I have to say that in our air-conditioned and insect-proof 4WD motorhome, with all the comforts of home and the safety features of modern navigation and communications systems, it’s difficult not to admire what Len Beadell achieved, all alone for months at a time with a very rudimentary equipment and transport, in a very harsh and then unknown (to Europeans) country. It’s just as harsh and almost as unknown now, 50 years later, and his tracks are just as long and remote as they ever were.

This quote from Heather Schmidt sums up his achievements perfectly:


Len Beadell 
Did exceedingly well 
To traverse our geology 
Without modern technology



We even made up our own silly little clerihew*:


David and Janet
Each with a flynet
Endured all the cracks
On Len’s outback tracks

* a witty, four-line verse that pokes fun at people

McDougall Knoll on the Gary Highway.
Visitors notes are in a tin can jammed in the cairn


Our Travels on Len Beadell’s Tracks


In the past 6 years we have travelled many of Len Beadell’s tracks, some quite deliberately, and some just to get from A to B. The first pretty obvious observation is that they are all very long and very remote, so a lot of advance planning is essential. It can be an adventure in itself just to get to the start of most of his tracks.

The second thing we discovered is that, with a couple of exceptions, all Len Beadell’s tracks are sandy or gravel single lane tracks requiring a high clearance 4WD since they have almost never been maintained in the 50 years since they were built. Most are narrow and corrugated with frequent wash-aways and occasionally overgrown. Len Beadell never built them for casual tourists (they were scientific roads after all) and they are therefore not suitable for caravans or low clearance vehicles. Even his own vehicles suffered many breakdowns and failures, and one even caught fire; his ration truck was destroyed near Kiwikurra while building the Gary Junction Road in November 1960.

Anne Beadell Highway, long and straight, but rough.
Paint will get scratched
The third thing to be aware of is that, for the most part, there are no buildings, habitation or facilities of any kind along most of Len Beadell’s tracks and travellers should be totally self-sufficient in terms of fuel, food, water and vehicle support. An HF radio or satellite phone should also be carried for emergencies.

Possible exceptions to this are are the Gary Junction Road, sometimes used as a shortcut from Alice Springs to Marble Bar, and the West Australian section of the Great Central Road from Yalara to Laverton. Both these roads have been redeveloped and are regularly maintained and can be used by sturdy 2WD vehicles, but they are still long and remote gravel roads with widely spaced facilities and the need for considerable advanced planning still applies.

Tropic of Capricorn signs on the Gary Highway
Strictly speaking the Great Central Road is not a Len Beadell road, but it does follow the general line of some of his tracks and certainly crosses the same geographic area. Neither is the Canning Stock Route a Len Beadell track since it already existed before Len Beadell built his roads, but it does integrate into his overall road network and is a similar type of track.

Some original Len Beadell tracks are no longer accessible, either due to deterioration (eg the abandoned eastern section of the Gunbarrel Highway) or have been absorbed by Native Title restrictions (the Callawa and Mt Davies Tracks). Native Title restrictions are also having an adverse impact of many other tracks as well and obtaining permits may prove difficult, see this report.

Gary Junction Road, one of the better maintained tracks

Our own experiences with a big strong 4WD on Len Beadell’s tracks includes broken springs, broken drive shafts and various broken bolts, not to mention body damage from trees and bushes overgrowing the tracks, which can also break off wing mirrors, side lights, aerials and any other protuberances. Punctures however have been relatively few since his tracks across predominately sandy or gravel deserts, but staking of tyre walls on tree roots or fallen branches just off the sides of tracks is always a serious risk, especially with low tyre pressures, so 2 spare wheels, a repair kit and keeping to established wheel tracks is a good thing.

Trailers are certainly NOT recommended on Len Beadell tracks either unless they are of very strong off-road construction and even then passing other vehicles is made more difficult, with one or both vehicles having to clamber up the side of the track to create passing space. We have seen many broken and abandoned trailers during our travels and rough outback tracks are just no place for them.

Despite the technical risks and distance from help, there is a strong sense of exhilaration and achievement just to travel on such remote and scenic tracks, built 50 years ago, which very few people will ever experience. And they are remote, on the Gary and Gunbarrel Highways, for 5 days and 800 km from Kunawaritji to Warburton, we saw not a single vehicle or person. Our HF radio provided our only contact with the world.

McPhersons Pillar 30 km east of the Gary Highway.
Possibly the remotest point from help on all our travels so far,
more than 300 km by road from the nearest habitation
Len Beadell Tracks we’ve covered

We have travelled many of Len Beadell’s tracks for which we have compiled blog articles describing our experiences. Don’t forget to add distances to and from these tracks to the nearest facilities.
  1. Gary Junction Road, Alice Springs to Kunawaritji (Well 33 on the CSR). Easy going but long, 1200 km. Several Aboriginal communities selling supplies and fuel.
  2. Talawana Track from Well 22 on the CSR/Georgia Bore to Newman via the Rudall River National Park (reference in here). Fairly easy going (rough in RR NP) but remote and lonely, and further than it looks, 500+ km inc. Rudall River visit, (800 km from Well 33), with no facilities.
  3. Anne Beadell Highway, from Coober Pedy to Laverton (see also here). Very long, 1500 km, narrow and very corrugated. Only one fuel stop, at Ilkurlka, 750 km west of Coober Pedy. No water on SA section, rain dependent tanks on WA section.
  4. Sandy Blight Junction Road, from Giles to Sandy Blight Junction. Tortuous, rough, narrow but one of his more interesting tracks, 400 km. No facilities.
  5. Gary Highway, Kunawaritji to Everard Junction on the Gunbarrel Highway. Straight, corrugated but with interesting side trips, 400 km. No facilities.
  6. Gunbarrel Highway, east from Everard Junction to Warburton (reference in here), 400 km. Mostly straight, long and corrugated. The Gary and Gunbarrel Highways together total 800 km with no facilities.
  7. Canning Stock Route, top section only from Halls Creek to Well 22 via Kunawaritji (Well 33) (references in here and here and here). Very long, 1000 km (700 km to K, plus 300 km to Well 22) and remote from help, with many steep and difficult soft sand dunes, but a great drive.

Note: the CSR is not a Len Beadell track but it could have been, except that Alfred Canning had already surveyed the track in 1906 and completed its development by 1910. The compelling story of the Canning Stock Route deserves to be the subject of a separate article but it has a link with Len Beadell, since as part of his development of the Talawana Track, he re-discovered several of the wells on the CSR that had been lost by the ravages of time.

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    Our recent treks which include Len Beadell’s outback roads.
    Roll mouse over the photo and click on tracks to visit articles in a new tab.



    Future Tracks


    We plan to tackle these Len Beadell tracks in the future.
    1. Connie Sue Highwy, Cocklebiddy to Warburton
    2. Gunbarrel Highway, west from Everard Junction to Willuna
    3. Talawana Track, Talawana to Windy Corner on the Gary Highway
    4. Kidson Track (not a Len Beadell Track but traverses the Great Sandy Desert in a similar direction to the Callawa Track)
    5. Callawa Track, (an extension of the Gary Junction Road from Kunawaritji to 80 Mile Beach but no longer gazetted as a vehicle track and now inaccessible)
    References
    In The Wheel Tracks of Len Beadell, 2 articles by Laurel and Gordon Rollinson in the Oka Owners Group News letters of April and August 2003, see here and here.

    Len Beadell website here, where his books can be bought.


    They are also available at ABC Shops and Westprint.

    Anne Beadell Highway

    Firstly the Anne Beadell is NOT a highway. It’s a sandy, corrugated, single lane desert track and quite overgrown for long stretches. And although fairly straight and mostly flat (with a few wash-aways),it is a very long track (nearly 1500 kms from Coober Pedy to Laverton, including essential side trips) and crosses the Great Victoria Desert.
    There are almost no water sources along the track and only one fuel supply point, at Ilkurlka, 170 kms west of the WA/SA state border, 700 kms west of Coober Pedy. The track is very corrugated and can take at least 7-10 days, plus an allowance for breakdowns and other stoppages.

    We did it in about 11 days in the company of 2 other vehicles, which was very handy for the inevitable problems and breakdowns.

    Read on for all the details of our trip…

    The Anne Beadell Highway completely traverses the Great Victoria Desert in South and Western Australia.

    Several permits are required for the track since it crosses 2 National Parks, the Woomera Prohibited Area and aboriginal land in both states.

    rough map
    Rough map of the Anne Beadell Highway (from http://home.vicnet.net.au/~fgvd/facts.htm)
    The track is also very narrow and corrugated for most of its length so breakdowns are common and should be anticipated. There are a few winding sand dune areas to add interest but it’s no place for trailers and certainly shouldn’t be tackled alone. Fortunately (actually through good planning) we were in the company of 2 other vehicles which proved invaluable when the inevitable breakdowns occurred, which we all suffered to some degree.
    It started off quite wide and smooth…
    …but got progressively narrower and rougher
    Due to the nature of the track, going will be slow and the whole trip to Laverton will take from 7 to 10 days, more if breakdowns happen, so supplies and provisions should be taken accordingly.
    I did say it’s a bit corrugated…
    We actually took about 11 days and met quite a number of vehicles coming the other way. Some were driving way too fast, to do it in 3 or 4 days, and you can’t enjoy it much like that, quite apart from the increased risk of breakdown.

    The SA section of the track is certainly the worst as far as corrugations go. The WA section is better but still not very good, but has been graded for short distances around Ilkurlka Roadhouse. The Yeo to Laverton section is excellent.

    Water is available at 3 rest areas on the WA side of the border (assuming rain has replenished the tanks), but there is NO reliable water available on the SA section.

    However, there are quite a few points of interest, plus some impressive desert scenery. More importantly, it’s a remote travel adventure that few people have ever heard of let alone ever go on. It’s not hot during normal winter travel periods so lack of water is not the severe problem it might be on more northerly tracks. In fact it was so cold we could have a campfire every evening and enjoy a comfortable walk up the sand dunes during the day, and there weren’t many insects about either.

    Mabel Creek.
    The track starts at Coober Pedy and this is where all our fuel and water tanks were filled to the brim. The first 50 km was fine as it follows Mabel Creek Station tracks, then it started to get progressively narrower, rougher and more corrugated.
    Tallaringa Well.
    The first point of interest is Tallaringa Well, an important aboriginal water source that had first been discovered by European explorer Richard Maurice in May 1902 (see this report), but had then been lost for years until Len Beadell rediscovered it in 1951, during his survey of the eventual Anne Beadell Highway from Mabel Creek Station to Emu. See this SA Memory site.
    Tallaringa Well Sign
    Len Beadell’s plaque at Tallarniga Well

    Tallaringa Well
    Tallaringa Well does not look good as a water source
    Although the Len Beadell plaque here is dated 1951, the track was actually built in stages from 1953 until its completion in 1962. The reason is that this area was surveyed for atomic test sites in 1951 and centre line pegs from Woomera were marked out before the Anne Beadell was built. Len Beadell rediscovered Tallaringa Well in June 1951 whilst surveying for the nearby 250 Mile peg.
    The well was not in good condition and it may or may not have accessible water in it. Even if it does, I don’t think I’d drink it unless desperate, and anyway it’s only 200 km to/from Coober Pedy. There is much more remote country to follow and reliance should not be placed on natural water sources.
    Dingo Claypan
    This small claypan is on a side track about 50 km north of the Anne Beadell and was the initial aerodrome prepared by Len Beadell to allow supplies to be flown in for the atomic test sites.
    Dingo Claypan Pano
    Glassy surface of Dingo Claypan
    Wet looking, but glassy hard surface on Dingo Claypan
    It has a wet looking, but glassy hard surface and the 44 gallon drums marking the landing strip can still be seen in the lake surface. There are also plenty of other drums laying around the area, some still containing fuel.
    Fuel Driums at Dingo Claypan
    Fuel drums at Dingo Claypan, some still had fuel in them
    The 300 M peg (down range on the centre line from the Woomera launch site) is accessible from Dingo after driving around the claypan and then a further 9 km into the scrub on a marked track.
    300 Mile Peg sign
    The 300 Mile Peg plaque
    300 Mile Peg
    The 300 Mile peg near Dingo Claypan
    While we were at Dingo Claypan, we had to remove the front bullbar to replace a broken bolt. This is not an easy task on any vehicle and especially an Oka, but luckily we had fellow travellers with us to help with the heavy lifting.
    Repairing a broken bolt on the bull bar
    We also had to fix a slow puncture and recover fuel from a leaking spare tank. Just the usual problems we expect to face on a rough outback track. Other breakages included aerials, the overhead fan which broke it mountings and pop rivets which popped from the aluminium brackets holding the solar panels. Oh, and the front drive shaft broke. More on that later.
    Atomic Test Sites.
    About 6 km past the Dingo Claypan turn off is a track to the sites of the actual atomic tests.
    Two bombs were detonated at Emu Field on the 15 and 27 October 1953, and 7 more subsequently at Maralinga about 200 km south.
    Len Beadell built the roads and tracks to support this project, some of which are still accessible, although Maralinga access is still very restricted, and for good reason. See the findings of the Royal Commission.
    As close as we ever want to be to an atomic explosion
    You can visit the sites of the Emu Field bomb tests and it’s quite an eerie experience standing on the very point where an atomic bomb was exploded. Not many people do that and survive!

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    Lumps of molten sand from the blast

    It’s a weird feeling being at ground zero and seeing lumps of molten glass all around you. See our blog here for a more detailed review of the British Atomic Test Program in Australia.
    The first 2 bombs, code-named Totem 1 and Totem 11 were 9.1 and 7.1 kilotons respectively, not big by super-power standards, but they made quite a mess of the ground. Of the 100ft towers they were mounted on, only a few buckled frames remain on the ground, and the surrounding desert is covered in glassy lumps of molten sand where it was heated to incredible temperatures by the explosion.
    All that remains of a 100 ft tower
    Concrete obelisks now mark the Ground Zero points and a level of radiation still remains, but it is no longer classed as dangerous for casual visitors and there are no restriction on visits. Radiation is now at a low enough level to allow short duration visits, but not permanent habitation in the area. Prudence suggests that visits be as short as possible, and no earth or other souvenirs, like glassy lumps of molten sand for the mantelpiece, should be taken away. They might glow in the dark, or worse.
    Emu Claypan and Airstrip
    Emu airstrip is just as good now as when it was built
    The airstrip on Emu claypan is a larger all weather airstrip prepared by Len Beadell for subsequent tests and is still in good condition today. Originally there was a residential village established nearby and the whole area was known as Emu Field, but little of it now remains. Odd pieces of old electronic equipment are scattered around the northern end of the airstrip.
    Emu Airstrip
    Emu Airstrip
    Ironically, Emu Field was subsequently determined as being too remote for follow up tests. Now you would think that remoteness would be a prime requirement for atomic tests, but apparently not. A location more convenient to the Trans-Australia railway was sought so Len Beadell was tasked to find a suitable site and Maralinga was the result.
    Anne’s Corner
    Anne’s Corner is at the junction of the Mt Davies Road built by Len Beadell in 1956 to provide direct access between Emu Field and Giles Meteorological Office about 600 km to the northwest.
    Annes Corner plaque
    Len Beadell’s plaque at Anne’s Corner
    One of Len Beadell’s original plaques is located at here, bolted to star droppers in a 44 gallon drum, it’s dated 1956, and located 200 M (300 km) west of Coober Pedy, 400 M (600 km) east of Neale Junction and 260 M (400 km) from Mt Davies.
    The Mt Davies track is not widely used and permits can be difficult to obtain as it crosses several aboriginal lands. A sign written on the oil drum points up the Mt Davies Road and reads “Good Track. Need plenty of tyres etc. Very overgrown track. Car needs paint job”.
    Beadell Trig Marker on sand dune
    A Trig Point on a nearby sand dune
    As we progress slowly westwards, the corrugations get progressively worse but the scenery gets better. Superb rings of spinifex cover the red sand dunes and camels wander on and off the track, mostly on, and why wouldn’t they? It’s direct, smooth (compared with spinifex) and they can see where they’re going.
    Spinifex rings
    Spinifex rings along the track
    Camel. Dead ahead
    A Loud Clonking
    At almost the geographic centre of the track, at 2.44 in the afternoon, there was a sudden and very loud clonking from the front drive shaft area of our Oka, so we stopped (obviously) to check it out.
    A loud clonking
    Looking for the source of the loud conking
    An initial inspection didn’t reveal anything wrong with the axle or diff or axle shafts, but then I found that the rear of the drive shaft had come loose and had been flailing around hitting the transfer box gear linkages as it went. The “U” bolts holding the universal joint on to the transfer box had worked loose allowing the end caps and needle bearings to fall out, which in turn allowed the shaft to disengage from the transfer box.
    The pivot bar for the transfer box controls was badly bent by the loose drive shaft
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    Removing the drive shaft
    I took the shaft off and was going to replace the whole UJ unit, but Craig suggested replacing just the end caps from a spare UJ which would be a lot quicker than replacing the whole thing.
    IMG_8300.JPG
    Fixing the broken drive shaft
    This we did, and with new bolts holding the UJ clamps in place, everything was greased up and we were back on the road within an hour. But it could have been much worse, the main gearbox and engine sump were right next to the flailing shaft.

    We also had to do a temporary fix on the damaged gear linkage to get that operational again since it was bent and touching the exhaust pipe. We used extra large plastic tie-wraps (12mm wide) to hold the transfer linkage in a useable position but this worked fine and survived a further 12,000 km without problems.
    While the blokes were working on the problem, the girls were taking photos of our bums protruding out from under the vehicle. Perhaps it was to ensure that we had a photographic record of the event?
    Post trip note: The main damage was to the pivot lever on the side of the gearbox which directs the transfer lever action to the transfer box via a ball joint. It is a 6mm thick steel lever which was bent severely by the impact of the flailing drive shaft, causing the ball joint to be twisted and the transfer rod to foul the exhaust pipe. It took a lot of effort to bend that straight enough to operate normally again.
    Vokes Hill Corner.
    Vokes Hill Corner is at the junction of the road from Cook on the Trans-Australia railway built by Len Beadell in 1961.
    Vokes Hill Corner
    An epistle reading from the visitors book at Vokes Corner
    Another original plaque is located here (19 nails holding it to the post), dated “from star observations on 2 April 1962”. It shows we were 100 M (160 km) west of Emu and 180 M (280 km) north of Cook and only 555 M (900 km) to go to Laverton. It’s the only plaque we’ve seen with a personal message from Len Beadell to “please leave this sign for travel(l)ers”. He decided too late that 2 “L”‘s were required and added a second.
    Hand modified sign
    “Please leave this sign for other travellers”…
    There is a feint track to the actual Vokes Hill, 14 km NW of the junction. It even has a Give Way sign on it. However, the height of Vokes Hill is only 347 m, which is lower than some of the surrounding sand dunes. There must be some other history attached to it.
    The brilliantly named Unnamed Conservation Park
    Vokes Hill is within the brilliantly named Unnamed Conservation Park, (which now, after 29 years has a real name, it was renamed the Mamungari Conservation Park in 2006) and extends over 21,000 sq km of pristine arid zone wilderness. The Anne Beadell is the only road access in or out of the park and the name boards had yet to be replaced in 2008.
    Interpretive Markers.
    As we moved westwards from Vokes Corner, we kept seeing green posts with numbers on them. I’ve since discovered that they are interpretative markers put in place by the Friends of the Great Victoria Desert (FGVD), who are “a volunteer group which assists the rangers in caring for the parks and reserves in the South Australian section of the GVD”.
    The posts apparently indicate the presence of particular species of plants in the area. I wish we had known that before we left, it would have solved a question and added to our enjoyment and understanding of the track.
    More information can be obtained from the FGVD web site at Friends of the Great Victoria Desert.
    2 Oka’s and a UniMog
    We met a big UniMog coming the other way and stopped for photos.
    Serpentine Lakes.
    Serpentine lakes sign
    The Serpentine Lakes straddle the SA/WA border and are normally a series of dry salt lakes. Officially they are a “significant palaeodrainage system, comprising ephemeral saline playa lakes”. Well they were certainly ephemeral when we passed through in 2008 but they do sometimes flood, see Serpentine Lakes with water (see beadelltours com.au).
    Serpentine Lakes
    “A significant palaeodrainage system, comprising ephemeral saline playa lakes”
    Jump down to Serpentine Lakes
    A steep jump-down to the lake bed
    There was a very steep jump up (or down) on to the lake bed on the SA side but the track across the lake was smooth and dry.
    SA/WA Border.
    Hand marked distance to Laverton
    The state border is just on the west side of the Serpentine Lake crossing and is marked by another original Len Beadell plaque. What’s interesting on this one is that the distance to Laverton (455 M) is engraved (scratched) on the plaque rather than stamped on. It suggests that it was not Len Beadell who did this since if he measured the distance in his LandRover he is sure to have taken his letter punches with him. The distance to Vokes Hill (110 M) is stamped on as normal.
    Ilkurlka Roadhouse.
    The aboriginal owned Ilkurlka Roadhouse appears as if by magic after a week’s travelling. You get the feeling that you will never see civilisation, or even a smooth road again, when suddenly there it is, a campground with a small modern shop, showers and fuel supplies.
    The manager also owns a grader and the 20 or 30 km either side of the roadhouse are reasonably smooth compared with the previous 1000 km.
    The manager told us we were lucky to catch him there as he was leaving the next morning to meet someone in Perth, a trip he expected to do in a day! Well it was only 1400 km.
    While we were camped at Neale Junction the next night, I was out doing my late night ablutions when there were loud rumblings and crashings and flashing of distant lights from down the track and a few minutes later the manager roared by in his ute. You would think that in the middle of a desert, late at night, you could get on with your business without being caught by the glare of car headlights. But as he rushed past with horn blaring, he gave the very real impression that he really was going to make Perth in a day.
    Aircraft Wreck
    This aircraft crashed in 1993
    Aircraft Wreck sign
    Directions to the aircraft wreck
    In 1993, a Goldfields Air Services twin engine Cessna crash landed in the desert about 50 km west of Ilkurlka and 6 km north of the track. The crew survived the crash and were rescued. In 1995 a track was formed over the sand dunes to the crash site and most of the plane still remains, except, of course for any valuable parts which have been souvenired. It’s a worthwhile diversion but the track is fairly difficult as it crosses about 20 very soft sand dunes in its 10 km.
    Man Made Rock Formations
    Stange Rock Formations
    Strange rock formations…
    About 25 km before Neale Junction, we came across an abandoned airstrip and nearby were strange manmade, possibly aboriginal, rock arangements spread out over several hundred metres.
    Strange Rock Formations
    … stretch for several hundred metres…
    These could not have been constructed in an afternoon but had obviously been planned and implemented over a long period of time.
    Stange Rock Formations
    … alongside the track
    The formations are of small rocks placed in circles, lines, zigzags and curves but without any obvious overall design or purpose.
    They remain a mystery. Interesting but still a mystery.
    Rest Stops and Water.
    On the WA side of the border, there are 3 rest facilities with toilets and rain water tanks. These, apart from the Ilkurlka roadhouse and possibly Yeo Homestead, are the only sources of drinkable water on the Anne Beadell, and even then availability depends on rain. We were lucky that there was some at the one nearest the border and we could replenish our drinking water tank, but it’s sensible not to rely on them, or waste the water, and we carried sufficient for the whole journey, even though that meant no showers for a week.
    There was no water on the SA section of the track, Tallaringa Well was not useable.
    Neale Junction.
    Neale Junction is an important intersection with the Connie Sue Highway which stretches from Rawlinna on the Trans-Australia railway in the south to Warburton community on the Great Central Road to the north. That’s the track we plan to tackle next.
    Len Beadell’s plaque at Neales Junction
    There is another Len Beadell plaque and visitors book here. On this plaque all the GRCP members are named, including their dogs Bonnie and Lassie.
    We are now 600 M (1000 km) from Coober Pedy with 240 M (400 km) still to go to reach Laverton, but even so we began to feel like we were approaching the end of the track.
    I got in the car to move it from the junction to a camping area and turned on the ignition (which is a bit of a misnomer in a diesel) but instead of a hearty roar there was just a faint click from the starter motor.
    Neale Junction
    Stuck at Neale Junction with a battery problem
    Now the starter motor is one of the few single-points-of-failure we have in our vehicle, most other problems can be got around but we don’t carry a spare starter motor, and this is a particularly bad place to have a failure when it’s a single point of one.
    However the planets must have been in alignment that day since it turned out to be just a loose connection on the battery terminal, tight enough to provide normal power but totally insufficient to start the engine. A twist on the connector was all it took to fix the problem.
    Later I checked and tightened the terminals on all 3 batteries.
    Bishop Riley’s Pulpit.
    The track started to get wider and less corrugated as we left Neale Junction and even the weather was warming up. We’d had freezing nights for the past week or so.
    Bishop Riley’s Pulpit
    We stopped to investigate Bishop Riley’s Pulpit, a rock formation just off the track in the Yeo Lakes Conservation Park and met a large convoy of 4wd’s all busily fitting tarps over their radiators. One of them even took a photo of us arriving and posted it on the web.
    Our Oka at Bishop Riley's Pulpit
    Photo of us arriving at Bishop Riley’s Pulpit
    It seems the group was heading off overland (hence the spinifex guards on the radiators), following the route of explorer Frank Hann’s 1903 expedition from Laverton to the Warburton area. And cutting off the corner between the Anne Beadell and Connie Sue Highways whilst doing so.
    While all this sounds like good fun, I’m not sure I agree with the concept of large numbers of vehicles bush bashing across a pristine desert, even if it is in the name of scientific discovery. Hopefully this group was following established, if unmarked, tracks.
    Yeo Homestead.
    Yeo homestead is a restored 19th century wooden house comprising 2 rooms and “outside” facilities. It used to be the homestead for Yeo Station before CALM created the Yeo Lake Nature Reserve.
    Yeo Homestead
    Yeo Homestead, a good place to stay for the night
    It’s a good place to stay for the night, it provides shelter but it’s a bit dusty inside.
    Outside Shower at Yeo Homestead
    The outside shower at Yeo Homestead
    The old style dunny, shower and well down the “garden” are worth investigating.
    On the maps there are various tracks leading to the lake but after 11 days on the Anne Beadell, we’re rather keen to get to Laverton and a real shop. We’ve marked this down for more exploration on our next trip. In fact the whole of this area looks worth spending more time in.
    Trip Summary.
    When we eventually reached Laverton, after about 11 days constant travelling due west, we headed down to Kalgoorlie and met up with an old friend at the Oka company there.
    The chart below shows our speed along the Anne Beadell Highway. Around 25 kph for most of the first 900 kms after leaving Mabel Creek, but definitely slightly faster in the WA section, up to 50 kph plus in sections. Wow!
    Our speed profile on the Anne Beadell Highway
    The dip in speed at 950 kms was when we visited the site of the crashed aircraft about 10 kms off the track. There were a lot of sanddunes to cross in that 10 kms.
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    Western end of the Anne Beadell Highway at Laverton
    Overall our impressions of the Anne Beadell were that it is very long, fairly flat and not overly difficult, if you and your vehicle can stand the corrugations. There are plenty of things to see and some areas really need more time to explore properly. Although 11 days seemed like a long time to be on one track, it was no where near long enough to take it all in. When we do the Connie Sue maybe we’ll use that opportunity to explore the Plumridge Lakes and Yeo Lakes areas better.