Lake Eyre Archives - Australia by Red Nomad OZ https://www.redzaustralia.com/category/lake-eyre/ go-see-do guide for adventurous travellers Sun, 23 Jan 2022 12:44:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.redzaustralia.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/cropped-Site-Icon-1-1-32x32.jpg Lake Eyre Archives - Australia by Red Nomad OZ https://www.redzaustralia.com/category/lake-eyre/ 32 32 Freddie and the Flight over Lake Eyre! Coober Pedy, South Australia https://www.redzaustralia.com/2022/01/flight-over-lake-eyre-coober-pedy-south-australia/ https://www.redzaustralia.com/2022/01/flight-over-lake-eyre-coober-pedy-south-australia/#comments Sun, 23 Jan 2022 12:30:14 +0000 https://www.redzaustralia.com/?p=6917 NEW from RedzAustralia!

I suspected it when I first saw him in the distance.  Then he slipped on his super-cool aviator sunnies* and I knew it for sure. Our pilot and tour guide for the flight over Lake Eyre was a dead ringer** for Freddie Mercury! Of course looking like the Queen ex-frontman didn’t guarantee anything.  But a top priority—not just for Freddie[...]

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Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre from the Air
Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre filling with Water from the Air, South Australia

I suspected it when I first saw him in the distance.  Then he slipped on his super-cool aviator sunnies* and I knew it for sure. Our pilot and tour guide for the flight over Lake Eyre was a dead ringer** for Freddie Mercury!

Of course looking like the Queen ex-frontman didn’t guarantee anything.  But a top priority—not just for Freddie lookalikes but for ANY pilot—would be to keep yourself alive, wouldn’t it?

Good to know when you’re a nervous flyer waiting for the hammer to fall. Because during the four-hour tour, we’d fly over some of the most remote and inhospitable outback countryside in Australia!

Flying over Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre
Flying over Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, South Australian Outback

The booking form had a field for total weight including the clothes you’d be wearing on the flight. I was tempted to lie, but figured I’d be outed as a fat-bottomed girl just by turning up. And besides, before Freddie (not his real name!) could make the 13-seater plane spread its wings and fly, he’d need to work a kind of magic and ensure it was properly balanced.

Easier said than done with a range of 13 different body sizes, shapes and weights to fit into super-narrow seats with super-constricting seat belts from which I knew I’d want to break free.

But even under pressure Freddie managed to play the game.  He matched people to seats, made sure our headphones were fully operational, and hurtled down the runway before we could say “God save the Queen”.

Coober Pedy Mullock Heaps
Coober Pedy Mullock Heaps from the Air

Leaving Coober Pedy

After leaving opal mining town Coober Pedy’s distinctive moonscape of mullock heaps*** behind, the first leg of the flight north-east to Lake Eyre North covered some spectacularly arid scenery. That was unsurprising given that the town’s rainfall for the year to date before this mid-June flight had totalled just 19.8 mm (0.8 inches).

Outback River Bed from the air
Dry Outback River Bed from the Air, via Coober Pedy

Rolling rocky ranges in the rich outback colour palette of ochres, reds and greens unfolded far beneath, and massive dry riverbeds cut feathery patterns into the sand and rock far below.  Trees cast long shadows in the early morning light, and straight roads bisected the dry country below where occasional vehicles seemingly heading into oblivion traversed the endless landscape trailing powdery plumes. Out here in the harsh desert environment, being prepared could determine if another one bites the dust or not.

River Patterns in the Outback
River Patterns in the Desert from the Air

Although 1974 was the last time its area of 9,500 km² (3668 mi²) was filled to capacity, Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is Australia’s largest salt lake, and one of the largest in the world.

Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre Patterns
Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre Patterns from the Air, South Australia

It also has Australia’s lowest natural point at 15 metres (49 ft) below sea level.  If flying over the lake wasn’t considered cheating, I could tick two more Aussie records off my list.

Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre

After two days experiencing Coober Pedy’s arid conditions and 90 minutes of flying over the dry and dusty desert we were completely unprepared for a volume of water so massive it merged with the horizon.  Larger than life–just like Freddie’s namesake–but really to be expected out here where huge distances, huge landscapes and huge skies are just the norm. As my shutter-button finger went into overdrive, I felt this crazy little thing called love for the outback and its magnificent, but ever-changing panoramas.

Lake Eyre Fills Up
Lake Eyre Filling up from the Air

From Lake Eyre North, we flew south along the lake’s western edge where flocks of birds could occasionally be seen below. The salt-encrusted lake’s edge contrasted with the colours of the water in a breathtaking array of coloured lines and patterns and tiny vehicles came and went from the Halligan Bay Point camping area.

Pelicans at Kati Chanda-Lake Eyre
Pelicans at Kati Chanda-Lake Eyre, Outback South Australia

William Creek

A short time later we were touching down in William Creek for morning tea at Australia’s most remote pub while the plane was being refuelled.  The smallest town in Oz, closest town to Lake Eyre, and home of Wrightsair (our tour operator), its permanent population of three**** was outnumbered by the planes on the runway. Now that water from heavy rains in the northern catchment a few weeks earlier was flowing into Lake Eyre North, Wrightsair scenic tours, especially the flight over Lake Eyre were in hot demand and pilots from all over were working around the clock.

Crossing the Oodnadatta Track at William Creek
Crossing the Oodnadatta Track at William Creek, Outback South Australia

But the show must go on, so Freddie herded us back to the plane for the return flight west to Coober Pedy. Now nearly noon, the day was warming up and the flight over the little-known Anna Creek Painted Hills promised to be the ‘we will rock you’ leg. But who wants to live forever anyway?! The bumpy flight combined with the amount of morning tea some passengers had eaten was a killer combination. But no matter, Freddie had pointed out the on-board barf bags, which ensured it was heaven for everyone!

Flying over Sand Dunes, South Australian Outback
Flying over Sand Dunes, South Australian Outback

Anna Creek Station, 34 km (21 mi) from William Creek and 160 km (99 mi) east of Coober Pedy, is the largest working cattle station in the world and at 23,667 km² (9,142 mi²) in area, just a little bigger than Israel or El Salvador or Belize. Station land completely surrounds William Creek, and the property is also over seven times bigger than King Ranch in Texas, often cited as one of the largest in the world.

Anna Creek Painted Hills
Anna Creek Painted Hills, Outback South Australia

Anna Creek Painted Hills

The Anna Creek Painted Hills unfolded below in a symphony of colours and shapes.  Only accessible by air and on a guided tour, I could see a lucky tour group exploring the area below and was consumed by jealousy. Was it so wrong to want it all?  A few hundred (give or take) photos later, we left the hills behind—but I knew I was born to love them.

Pillar at Anna Creek Painted Hills
Pillar at Anna Creek Painted Hills, Outback South Australia

Then in a flash we were flying over the bohemian rhapsody that makes up the distinctive landscape of Coober Pedy’s mullock heaps***, mines, accommodation and rock formations again. With so many hazards on the ground, it was no bicycle race down there. Freddie’s flight radio was going ga-ga as we touched down. But as the plane taxied down the runway, I wanted to scream ‘don’t stop me now’, and turn around to do it all again. It’s a hard life.

Coober Pedy Mine from the Air
Coober Pedy Mine from the Air, Outback South Australia

Yes, the tour really is that good. Tie your mother down if that’ll get you on a Lake Eyre flight—although I can’t guarantee you’ll be piloted by fab Freddie, who, by the way, obligingly posed for photos once we’d disembarked.

Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre Flight Fast Facts:

Where to find it: Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is 647 km (402 mi) north-east of Adelaide, and is part of the Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre National Park.

How to get there: Fly or drive to Coober Pedy, 850 km (528 mi) north-west of Adelaide.  From Coober Pedy, it’s a further 166 km (103 mi) to William Creek. The lake is also accessible from Marree at the start of the Oodnadatta Track 655 km (407 mi) north of Adelaide.

Outback Road near William Creek
Outback Road near William Creek, South Australia

Things to do:  Experience the lake from above by taking a flight.  We flew with Wrightsair, based in William Creek and flew from Coober Pedy with a stopover in William Creek.  Flights are also available from Port Augusta, Marree, William Creek, Rawnsley Park (Flinders Ranges) and Parachilna (and some further afield) all of which offer accommodation, although availability should be checked before arrival.

On the ground, drive to the lake via the Oodnadatta Track from Coober Pedy/William Creek or Marree. Campgrounds are available in the National Park, and a Desert Parks Pass is required for access. Extreme care must be taken when travelling in the remote outback (see below for link).

Halligan Bay Point Camping Area
Halligan Bay Point Camping Area, Kati Chanda-Lake Eyre, Outback South Australia

When to go: Although it rarely fills to capacity, Lake Eyre has some water most years, but is most spectacular when flooded by outback rains.  The Australian winter months of June to August are the most comfortable for outback travel.

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William Creek Pub Mascot
William Creek Pub Mascot, Outback South Australia

*  Sunnies = Australian for sunglasses
** Dead Ringer = Aussie slang for lookalike
*** Mullock Heap = a cone-shaped mound of loose stone left over from mining operations
**** According to the Wrightsair website

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Postcard from … Marree South Australia https://www.redzaustralia.com/2013/12/postcard-from-marree-south-australia/ https://www.redzaustralia.com/2013/12/postcard-from-marree-south-australia/#comments Sat, 07 Dec 2013 14:05:00 +0000 http://www.redzaustralia.com/wp/?p=16 NEW from RedzAustralia!

Hi there! Tiny town Marree South Australia is the first major sign of civilisation in over 500 km (~310 miles) for travellers heading south down the iconic Oodnadatta or Birdsville tracks – both LOOOOONG stretches of dirt, rocks, gravel and bulldust. But we approached it over several days from the other direction – a straight run from Adelaide of nearly[...]

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Clockwise from Left:  Afghan Cameleers Monument; Tom Kruse's Mail Truck; Lake Eyre Yacht Club; Railway Memorabilia from the Ghan at the Marree Railway Station
Clockwise from Left:  Afghan Cameleers Monument; Tom Kruse’s Mail Truck; Lake Eyre Yacht Club;
Railway Memorabilia from the Ghan at the Marree Railway Station

Hi there!

Two Iconic OZ tracks meet at Marree
Two Iconic OZ tracks meet at Marree

Tiny town Marree South Australia is the first major sign of civilisation in over 500 km (~310 miles) for travellers heading south down the iconic Oodnadatta or Birdsville tracks – both LOOOOONG stretches of dirt, rocks, gravel and bulldust. But we approached it over several days from the other direction – a straight run from Adelaide of nearly 700 km – or 7.5 hours on the road, thanks to the bitumen – further north!

In THIS region, a sealed road is noteworthy!

At the crossroads linking some of Australia’s most isolated areas Marree is remote by anyone’s standards. BUT … it’s an inland transport hub with credentials including Afghan cameleers, one-time rail head for the Ghan railway line from Alice Springs, legendary outback mailman Tom Kruse AND the Lake Eyre yacht club!

Warning!  Sealed Road AHEAD!!
Warning!  Sealed Road AHEAD!!

The irony of being simultaneously within cooee of Australia’s lowest rainfall area AND its largest lake (Lake Eyre) was almost as thrilling as being so close to the Marree Man Mystery.

Referenced by a statue at Marree’s southern entrance, it’s unknown how the REAL Marree Man, a 4.2 km (2+ miles) long outline of an Aboriginal man on a plateau discovered in 1998 got there. Or why! Or by whom!!

Tragically, Marree Man is on the verge of disappearing back into the desert, BUT … at 60 km (37 miles) out of town along those deadly tyre-shredding roads, a Marree Man sighting wasn’t going to happen for us on this trip.

Not-the-real Marree Man on the outskirts of Marree, South Australia
Not-the-real Marree Man on the outskirts of Marree, South Australia

Especially when the FAAAABULOUS Farina Bakery, conveniently on the way back to our campsite at Copley was calling our names!!  But that’s another story

See ya later!

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Previous Post:  As High As You can GO! Scenic Public Loo #27

Next Post:  The Aussie Scenic Public Loo that WASN’T!

 

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RED Alert #4 – Adventure Before Dementia goes WEST! https://www.redzaustralia.com/2012/02/red-alert-4-adventure-before-dementia-goes-west/ https://www.redzaustralia.com/2012/02/red-alert-4-adventure-before-dementia-goes-west/#comments Mon, 27 Feb 2012 21:33:00 +0000 http://www.redzaustralia.com/wp/?p=147 NEW from RedzAustralia!

WARNING: My REDAlert #4 guest has photos that’ll make you turn GREEN! Don’t believe me? Well … read on and see if I’m right!! Diane’s wonderful ‘Adventure Before Dementia’ blog has MANY great shots – but I was particularly interested in her REDphotos from places in Western Australia (WA) and South Australia (SA) I’ve yet to see! Pindan Country, Gantheaume[...]

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WARNING: My REDAlert #4 guest has photos that’ll make you turn GREEN! Don’t believe me? Well … read on and see if I’m right!!

Diane’s wonderful ‘Adventure Before Dementia’ blog has MANY great shots – but I was particularly interested in her REDphotos from places in Western Australia (WA) and South Australia (SA) I’ve yet to see!
Pindan Country, Gantheaume Point, Kimberleys, Western Australia

 

RED: Diane, welcome and thank you for being my 4th REDAlert victim visitor! I’m SO jealous of these magnificent shots – are the rocks really that red?

 

Diane’s mates at Gantheaume Point, Kimberleys, Western Australia
Diane: The rocks and earth in this area are extremely red! It is called Pindan Country, from the local language. The red is accentuated against the pearlescent aquamarine water, but I must confess I did hit the ‘enhance’ button on my iphoto program!

 

RED: Haha, I know I could do with a bit of enhancement! Does ALL the west coast look this good?
Diane: Pindan Country is restricted to the south west of the Kimberly Coast. However, all the beaches that I saw near Fremantle and south to the southern tip of WA all have this beautiful coloured water.
RED: It looks amazing. Were you on a tour?
Diane: We were on a 4WD bus tour from Broome to Darwin. There were 8 of us friends from Brisbane on board with another 16 poor souls who had to put up with us senior larrikins.
RED: Haha! I’m sure they appreciated the entertainment!! Is this area as remote as it looks?

 

RED Rocks at Gantheaume Point, Kimberleys, Western Australia
Diane: This part of the Kimberley Coast – Gantheaume Point – sticks out into the Indian Ocean only 6 km south of Broome.
RED: HHHMMMmmm… I could be there by tomorrow afternoon … Sorry, just fantasizing!! I know the Kimberley region (northwest WA) is HUGE, but what’s your best Kimberley memory?
Diane: Too hard, too hard. It took us 15 days to travel across the Kimberley only stopping one or two nights in each exciting place. It is like nothing else in Australia.
RED: So everyone keeps telling me!
Diane: Sometimes you even think you could be on another planet the rock formations are so different, especially in the Bungle Bungles (Purnululu National Park). We flew over the Bungle Bungle Range in a helicopter and that was one of the best memories, but I also walked into them and that was like being in a magical world.

 

Super Pit, Kalgoorlie, Western Australia
RED: I look forward to seeing it for myself! This hole in the ground looks massive – AND RED! Where is it?
Diane: The ‘Super Pit’ is in the town of Kalgoorlie in the middle of the desert in the middle of WA a LONG way south of the Kimberley.
RED: The distances are SO great in WA, aren’t they? How big is the pit?
Diane: 3.6km (2.2m) long, 1.6km (1m) wide and 512m (1,680 ft) deep. Can you see the little trucks in the bottom of the pit?
RED: Yes, they look like insects!
Diane: They are actually huge mining trucks. It takes them 45 minutes to drive the round trip from the top to the bottom.
RED: Not a bad day at the office, huh?! What’s the pit for?
Diane: Since the 1893 gold rush, gold and nickel have been mined here. The concentrated area of gold mines is known as the ‘Golden Mile’ – the richest square mile of earth on the planet!
RED: If only some of that would rub off …
Diane: Recently a number of the underground mines were bought and the Super Pit made.

 

Lookout, Coolgardie, Western Australia
RED: Another item for my ‘must see’ list! The view from this lookout is quite different to the Super Pit. What’s at Coolgardie?
Diane: It was a gold mining town from 1892 to 1963, now it is a historical tourist town. The buildings are beautifully preserved and the museum is a must. This town reeks of gold mining history and opens ones eyes into the harsh life they lived in those days. They also make a super sandwich at the Gold Rush Motel!
RED: So, no bakery then? Only kidding! Is it as remote as it appears in your photo?
Diane: It’s a few hundred km from Kalgoorlie but both sit on the edge of the Nullarbor Plain, a huge expanse of desert stretching across the southern interior of Oz. It sure is remote.
RED: Is Coolgardie the home of the Coolgardie safe?
Diane: Yes! One challenge for prospectors was how to extend the life of their perishables. So the low-tech refrigerator was invented by A.P. McCormick in the 1890’s. He used the same principle as canvas water bags, which were adapted from the way aborigines carried water in skins.
Salt Pan with water at Lake LeFroy, Western Australia

 

RED: Aussie ingenuity strikes again! But here you’ve got REDAND White! We know the white can’t be snow – so what is it?
Diane: Salt! Lake Lefroy is a salt pan so we were lucky to see it with water. It is 510 m²and used by land sailors from all over the world.
RED: That’d be cool to watch! What made you choose to visit Lake Lefroy?
Diane: That’s easy, I didn’t, the company organising the ‘Western Wildflower Wonderland Tour’ did! That is one advantage of a tour company – they know the good places and you don’t have to do the research.
RED Road, Western Australia
RED: Do you ever get tired of seeing the endless WA REDS?

 

Diane: I was astounded at how much REDis in WA. The soil, rocks roads and just everywhere. It is beautiful but I wouldn’t like to clean it out of my house everyday.

 

RED: I SO get that – cleaning house isn’t one of my strengths either!! As a contrast, let’s slip into South Australia for a moment – how is SA’s Lake Eyre different to WA’s Lake Lefroy?

 

Diane: They are both salt lakes but Lake Eyre is much bigger. Its water has REDpatches caused by a bacteria. It was amazing to see.

 

Lake Eyre from the Air! South Australia
RED: I LOVE that photo!! Are you a ‘nervous flier’ like me?
Diane: I used to be nervous but not as I’ve got older. Experiences I’ve had and seen from small planes over the mountains in Papua New Guinea, over the Swiss Alps and Alaskan glaciers; and in a helicopter into the Grand Canyon make me forget any fear and I just soak up the beauty of the world.
RED:  Is it hard to get good aerial shots?
Lake Eyre surrounding countryside, South Australia
Diane: Extremely difficult! First you have to dive for a window seat not obstructed by the wing. Then you have to deal with reflections on the glass, which isn’t really glass and causes a discolouration. Besides all that you have the vibration shaking the camera and when you use a telephoto lens every little vibration causes blur. Bla bla bla – kick me off my soap box. All in all if you get one good shot you are lucky!

 

RED: Well, you did it with these great shots of Lake Eyre and the surrounding countryside! Especially in a plane like the one below – my worst nightmare!! Where did it take you?

 

Diane: The Lake Eyre tour included a flight over the lake then we flew north to Cowarie Station, one of Australia’s biggest cattle stations – as big as a small country. It’s in central Oz where 3 deserts – Simpson, Tirari and Sturt – meet.

 

Cowarie Station, South Australia
RED: Could you live in a place like this?
Diane: NO! NO! NO! I would not like to live there, but I sure do admire those who do; like the station owner and the ranger, both women.
RED: They must think us ‘fair weather’ tourists are such big girls! This sky is magnificent. Is it a sunset or sunrise?
Diane: This sunset was taken from my neighbour’s deck in Daisy Hill, Logan City, QLD. We get these skies mainly in September/Spring.
Brisbane Sunset

 

RED: So you made it safely back home then! You’ve travelled extensively in Australia and overseas. What’s the best thing about travel in Australia?
Diane: I know the language and money! But most of all the countryside is so unique.
RED: Do you have a favourite destination?
Diane: The Kimberley!
RED: What’s good about travel overseas?
Diane: Experiencing different cultures and landscapes and the ancient history of other countries compared to our young country.
RED: And a favourite overseas destination?
Diane: The River cruise from Amsterdam to Budapest.
RED: Do other countries you’ve visited have as much REDas Australia?
Diane: I have never seen REDanywhere like in Australia … but I haven’t travelled in Africa yet.
RED: Looks like there’s plenty there if RED Alert #1 is anything to go by!! Is blogging a big part of your life?
Diane: I have been blogging for several years. I like reading travel blogs, photoblogs and humorous blogs. I also like Journal type blogs and life stories and I sometimes get travel ideas from other blogs.
RED: What’s your biggest blogging turnoff?
Diane: I’m not very interested in Political or religious blogs or blogs with loads and loads of writing and no photos.
RED: Note to self – cut down on the writing and hope Diane hasn’t noticed … Do you have any final RED words of wisdom for my readers?
Diane: Thank you so much for having me as a guest on RED Alert and, by the way we have two REDcars!

 

Thank you Diane!
So was I right? Are you GREEN?? Don’t forget to go visit Diane over at Adventure Before Dementia to see where else she’s been! AND … watch out for the FAAAABULOUS Scenic Public Toilet pic Diane sent me – SO great, it deserves its own post!
Got some RED pictures from your corner of the world? Then YOU could be my next RED Alert guest! Email me through my profile and we’ll talk! It’s painless – just ask my RED Alert guests:

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