Criss-crossing the Kimberley

First activity the next morning was a helo flight. Bellburn (BXF/YBEB) is the park airstrip, a short distance from Savannah Lodge.

Don’t visit the Bungle Bungle without doing a helo flight over it! (Tip: fly early in the morning to get the best sun angle on the domes.)

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Let’s rock ‘n roll. Forget doors.

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Back to the lodge for lunch, then an afternoon excursion to Echidna chasm. I’ve been to the Bungle Bungle a few times but never previously got to Echidna Chasm, so I was looking forward to this. I was not to be disappointed.

The geomorphology of the Bungle Bungle bears a remarkable similarity to Uluru/Ayers Rock and Kata Tjuta/The Olgas. Like Kata Tjuta, Echidna chasm is cut into a very coarse rock-fragment sedimentary conglomerate; like Uluru the ‘beehive’ domes of the Bungle Bungle are sandstone.

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The riverbed walking trail into Echidna Chasm is strewn with rounded rocks.

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Echidna Chasm is noted for its 200m high walls (greater than Kata Tjuta) and the abundance of Livistona palms.

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Bower bird’s bower.

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Next morning we pulled out of Purnululu and headed to Wyndham, arriving in time to have lunch on The Bastion aka Five Rivers Lookout, with its expansive view over the lower Cambridge Gulf where five rivers (Ord, Forrest, King, Durack, Pentecost) enter the sea.

Wyndham is these days pretty much a ghost town, having been superseded by Kununurra as the regional centre.

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We then turned back to arrive in Kununurra early afternoon for a chill to complete a cruisy day and for a one-night stay at the Country Club hotel.

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Next morning it was aboard a Triple-J boat for a tour up the Ord River from the Lake Kununurra diversion dam to the Lake Argyle dam wall, while the coach was driven there to meet us.

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‘Sleeping Buddha’/Elephant Rock Lake Kununurra.

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Comb-crested jacana, aka ‘Jesus bird’ because of its seeming ability to walk on water.

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Rock wallaby and crocodile trap – set if a salty is spotted., but crocs are rare above the diversion dam at Kununurra.

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Informative spiel about the river, dams and Ord River irrigation system.

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Morning tea stop.

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Fruit bats.

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The river narrows and the flow quickens, all governed by water release from Lake Argyle (21 SydHarbs in size) to keep the diversion dam at a level where gravity alone distributes water to the main (north eastern) Ord River Irrigation Area.

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A visit to the relocated Durack homestead; the original site now being under water.

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Resident bower bird, then drive back to Kununurra for a look around before heading to the Gibb River Road.

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The ORIA stretches out to the NNE. Cotton.

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Ord River Ivanhoe Crossing, downstream of the diversion dam.

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The old and the new Gibb River Road signs.

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Our destination for the next two nights was Emma Gorge Resort, which is a part of the famed El Questro. Not very far along the Gibb River Road and sealed to there.

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Next morning. After breakfast a short drive to El Questro proper for a boat cruise in picturesque Chamberlain Gorge.

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Enticing archer fish to spit water at ’prey’ of pellets. Too quick to capture on a still camera, but a frame from a movie catches it.

Interlopers included barramundi and some other species I did not get the name of.

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Back to Emma Gorge Resort for lunch and then the serious hiking mission – into Emma Gorge.

It starts benignly enough.

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But soon gets rougher.

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And rougher – but more picturesque.

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Beautiful pool – but not quite there yet. Up and over the final hump.

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Mission accomplished! Just stunning.

But we’ll need to do it all over again to get out…

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A few beers went down well that night…
 
Next day we pulled out of Emma Gorge Resort to begin the westward journey on the Gibb River Road, stopping for lunch at Ellenbrae Station, before turning N off the GRR onto the Kalumburu road to overnight at Drysdale River Station. The cattle station owns all the infrastructure set up for tourists, but Outback Spirit operates the restaurant and bar facilities.

But first up was a visit to Zebedee Thermal Springs, a thermal stream also at El Questro. It’s in a small Livistona palm-filled valley at the foot of a range. Water temperature is around 30 deg C. It was school holidays on top of being generally peak time in the Kimberley, so it was a bit of a zoo, but still a pleasant place to visit before pressing on.

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Leaving Zebedee Springs and the next stop being the iconic postcard-picture GRR crossing of the Pentecost River with the coughburn Range in the background.

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Kapok tree.

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Continuing along the GRR. I thought that it was in quite reasonable condition. I think the horror reputation is more down to people travelling too fast and towing large - and probably mostly overloaded – caravans and inappropriate tyre pressure. All the gear/no idea…

We saw one caravan with a broken axle, and I believe our driver mentioned another one loaded onto a flatbed truck.

Take it steadily and it’s fine. There were a few patches of fairly heavily corrugated road that rattled the tooth fillings, but nothing to rival the Canning Stock Route (post #80: Way into the WA wilderness) or parts of the road into Rudall River NP (post #112: Covid Revised: Roaming near Rudall River/Karlamilyi National Park).

Another river crossing – the Durack, I think. Our driver went over and back for us the get some pics of the coach going through. Nothing heavy-duty in any river crossings.

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Ellenbrae Station is an oasis well-placed for a lunch stop and famed for its scones, included in our set lunch. I don’t like scones, so I declined them and so no pics. Scone lovers said they were good.

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Onto the Kalumburu road and about 60 clicks in we crossed the Drysdale River. There were quite a few people camping there.

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On to our overnight stop at Drysdale River Station. Comfortable donga-style accommodation and a very pleasant restaurant/bar area with the biggest frangipani I think I’ve seen. Nice spot.

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Next day we headed further N on the Kalumburu road before turning onto the Port Warrender road and up onto the Mitchell Plateau, towards Mitchell Falls. Kandiwal is a small Aboriginal community nearby the airstrip, Outback Spirit and APT lodges and the campground, all well separated from each other.

A short distance after turning off the Kalumburu road, there is a rock art site with both Wandjina and Gwion Gwion (aka ‘Bradshaw’) art, and the road crosses the King Edward River which offered a nice spot for a swim after lunch.

Pressing on, the vegetation became increasingly dominated by Livistona palms.

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Arrival at Ngauwudu Safari Camp, an Outback Spirit property and a step up in the accommodation, food and bev. Everything is inclusive on Outback Spirit tours, with the bar always open at their own properties, but at lunch and half an hour before dinner and during dinner from a sub-list at other properties.

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