Archive for the 'coffee & raisin toast' Category

Marching into March

Amanda March 6th, 2009

I am looking forward to the end of the hot weather and the beginning of autumn here. Last week and into the beginning of this one, it’s been unbearably hot and I’ve been out bush for most of it. If you can imagine what it’s like camping when the temperature is 39 degrees (that more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit) in the company of 10 gazillion flies, then driving over extremely remote country (check out the photo below – there were no tracks, but that’s what we were driving over), you’ll get the idea.

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 At night the temperatures have been strangely warm. We usually get a respite from the daytime heat here at night. Rarely are our summer nights more than 25 degrees – this week it’s been 27 and more with humidity. Whilst the dramatic and sacred nature of the landscape are compensation for the heat, flies and discomfort, camping out during this kind of weather is tough and exhausting – even for someone who’s very fit and very used to the heat.

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I could write at length about the nature of the work I was doing (sacred site clearances for uranium exploration) but I am –as you might well guess- not able to give details of either the sacred nature of the sites or the company wishing to undertake exploration in this place.

Needless to say, I have far more concerns about the possibility of a uranium mine in this location than I do about the possibility of a mine 25km south of Alice Springs (which is far more geologically stable and biodiversity-poor landscape). And yes, I’ve been working on that sacred site clearance, too. (Uranium exploration in the Northern Territory has been crazy for the past 2 years – mining companies are looking everywhere for the magic deposit that will bring them $$$).

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If you’re wondering what this mysterious ‘sacred site clearance’ is, quite simply, individuals, government agencies and private companies who wish to conduct any ground-disturbing works in the Northern Territory are required by law to seek a sacred site clearance through the agency I work for if they wish to avoid Aboriginal sacred sites and prosecution for damaging them. My role is to identify the correct Aboriginal Elders/Custodians, describe the proposed works to them, take them out into the field and have them identify any sacred sites that need protecting and say what can and can’t be done on these sites. I map the sites, records ethnographic and cultural information relating to them (which is protected by secrecy provisions under law, so this is not publicly available information) and then turn this information into a legal document and a map that indemnifies the individual/company/government department against prosecution. That’s one part of my job in a nutshell. My other work involves managing anthropological staff…

This week was equally stressful with a Board meeting held here in Alice Springs. I work for a Board of 12 people – 10 Aboriginal people and 2 white people. Four times each year, my agency convenes a Board meeting, which is an enormous logistical and preparatory effort to bring all together. I’m glad once it’s over and done. So I am a bit exhausted after all this and looking forward to a more normal week at work next week, when I finish off the reports and maps for both lots of uranium exploration, and create the all-important sacred site clearance documents that tell these companies where they must not go and what they must not do if they wish to protect themselves from prosecution.

By mid-week, a blessed cool change marched thru (pun intended), and finally we’ve got the gentle slide into our beautiful desert winter… and camping and bushwalking season! Yippee!! The night time temperatures have come down as low as 12 degrees (Centigrade – no idea what that is in Fahrenheit) and the days have only been around 30 degrees (which is like 25 degrees in Sydney or Melbourne cos we don’t got no humidity here!). Bliss bliss bliss!!

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Murray River Daze

Amanda January 25th, 2009



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This year, we again made a peri-annual trip to the Murray River. Before you ask, there is water in the river above the lochs and weirs. The level of water is fairly well controlled by these artificial barriers. Downstream of these, from Mannum in South Australia to Lake Alexandrina, the water level drops and drops and keeps on dropping.

Gadget & I love our houseboat holidays because on the river and in the long distances between, there has been space for reflection. For clearing out the mental clutter, letting go of what’s not needed and connecting with the things that matter. It is truly one of the most mentally and physically relaxing holidays you can ever go on. You feel like you’ve been cleaned inside with a broom. I don’t get the same effect from seaside holidays – for me, there has to be bush.

We went on the boat this time with Ben, with my mum and dad, and with Gadget’s mum and her partner, Joe. Here are a few pictures:

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There was lots of time for bushwalking, canoeing, geocaching, birdwatching and swimming. Oh year, and for Gadget to do some of the things he does best:

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Of course, there wasn’t just Gary eating… there was lots of drinking AND eating by everyone … Here’s photographic evidence:

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We also saved a possum with gummy eyes. Gary caught him and I bathed his eyes in saline. We put him back in his tree and the next morning he was gone, so we hope he’s ok:

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There were also sunsets and moonrises- the rhythms of the day and time, often forgotten in our busy, urban lives:

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Tomorrow, I’ll post the amazing trip home via the Oodnanatta Track.

Desert Christmas

Amanda December 31st, 2008


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Living in Central Australia means that we have an unusual Christmas. We don’t often spend it with families – our families live 1500 km and 3500 km away from us. Usually, we spend it with colleagues and friends.

 

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As Gary is a ranger who works on a remote national park, we have a house in town (Alice Springs) and a house on at Watarrka (King’s Canyon) National Park. Remote parks have their own little communities of rangers and their families. At Christmas time, these ranger communities become surrogate extended family for each other. In the past, we’ve had incredible fun and incredible feasts at Owen Springs & Ormiston Gorge. This year, we spent Christmas at Watarrka.  It’s about 350km from Alice Springs.

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Thus our Christmas was an evening gathering of rangers and partners. Watarrka has a good supply of vegetable gardens and chickens, and a number of very culinary-oriented rangers, so the array of food was diverse. There were delectable salads, cold meats, and several vegetarian dishes. There were even fiery chilli prawn kebabs. Several days later, we were still all sharing the food.

 There was Kris Kringle as well. Kris Kringle is where you buy a present anonymously for someone else. Usually, the names are drawn out of a hat. Hilariously, someone had found a c.1980 aerobics LP and a 1984 aerobics instructor book and gave them to me! I love them.

Over dinner, we shared stories, recalled the year, discussed plans for the future. We solved the problems of the world and shook our heads at things we will never solve (like coal-fired power stations or the incomprehensible fact that the ranger houses are still run from diesel-powered generators despite the abundant solar energy supply).

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 As a backdrop there were whispering desert oaks, dunes all a blossom in wildflowers after the good rains, the birds, the sky, the stars. And the canyon. From the windows and backyards of the ranger’s houses –which blend incrementally into the surrounding sand country- Watarrka is always inviting the eye to survey the latest shifts in light, its planes and edges. Its deep, dark clefts.

 In the days that follow, we enjoyed walks, more impromptu socialising, pondering the waterholes in the Canyon, the wondrous opening of Spinifex leaves after rain, the purple-blue clouds of a passing storm. The smell of rain on red sand dunes. We visited Ian and Lyn Conway at King’s Creek Station and again solved the problems of the world. We also went for a helicopter flight over Petermann Pound.

 

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Christmas on remote parks is one of deep community. It is raw and simple: about people, place, and connection to both. The peace and recharging effect of remote Australia often invokes pathetic clichés involving timelessness and emptiness and lame references to Aboriginal spirituality (which doesn’t exist in the way that white people understand spirituality). If you’ve read and felt the deep spirituality in The Snow Leopard or can relate to Jack Kerouac’s experiences in the wilderness in The Dharma Bums, or if you’ve ever spent extended periods hiking with good friends, then you will understand the authenticity of Christmas in remote Australia.

Book Review – The 4 Hour Work Week

gadget December 20th, 2008

The 4-Hour work Week: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich

 The 4-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferriss, is a book with a pretentious -if not slightly unbelievable- title.

 

When I first became aware of the book about a year ago, I thought: oh yeah, another self-help book with the promise of becoming a self-made millionaire in the same time it takes for you to go through the Drive-Thru at MacDonald’s. Pass. I didn’t bother ordering it from Amazon.

 

Recently, I saw that my local Dymocks (an Australian chain of bookstores) was stocking it. I picked it up, leafed through, and promptly bought it for my daughter. She decided it was too much hard work before her trip to South Africa and then to uni, so she left it for me. Last week, I finished reading it and I’ve decided to write a more detailed review than I normally would. So here is what I found both useful and useless from the The 4-Hour Workweek.

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Ms Beach Party

gadget November 2nd, 2008

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It’s been a while since we last updated the blog.

We’ve both been very busy at work. I was acting as Regional Manager for 3 weeks, and Gary’s been down at Watarrka a lot. My Yoga intensive is fast approaching, and another chapter of the thesis is out of the way, with another hot on its heels.

Gary also went in the Masters Games (basketball) and his team won a silver medal. Of course, there were only two teams in their age grade, so you can read between the lines there, if you like!

Yesterday, Rhiannon went in the Lassaster’s Casino ‘Best Beach Body’ competition. She did this partly as a bit of fun, but mostly because of the $500 prize money. She’s saving every penny at the moment, getting ready for her move to Perth and trip OS next month.

Well, she went in and… WON!!!

We took these photos of her getting ready for the beach party.

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So glamourous!

Cold

Amanda August 24th, 2008

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It’s been extremely cold here in Alice Springs for the past two weeks. When I say cold, I mean we’ve had days where the maximum temperature has been 14 degrees celsius. This is cold. (Alright. If you’re reading this and you live in Iceland, Halifax or even Chicago, I take your point. 14 C (57F) isn’t cold for you … but it is for us!). 

So we haven’t done much except watch the Olympics. And we’re not going to talk about the Olympics here, are we?  We’re not going to mention that we are a tad annoyed that the Pommies (the English) have more gold medals than we do (until the Commonwealth Games in India in 2010, that is, when we’ll woop their lily-white backsides), nor that we really sucked at cycling and rowing this time, when usually we’re really good. Let’s face it …

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Intermission

gadget July 27th, 2008

After a big bush trip, I’m back and I’ll be updating the blog with my latest adventure this week. To everyone who’s commented on the Podcast blog, thank you. I will get back to you and follow up your suggestions. Right now though, it’s great to be sleeping in my own bed again.

BTW. Kylie and Phil had a baby girl (Abbey) last Monday. Check out their blog on the blogroll.

Amanda 

Quick Update

gadget July 12th, 2008

cache-contents.jpgA very busy couple of weeks for us, with trips to Watarrka and Newhaven, plus the usual world of work, home and everything. I am still writing up the Sandy Blight Junction post (although I need to snaffle the photos from Gadget’s camera so I can finish this). Now I’ve got to do a Newhaven post as well -thankfully all the photos are on my hard drive already so it’s just a matter of me getting to them. 

 I guess the exciting news (or maybe not so exciting) is that we have hidden our first geocache. I am planning to hide a few more – Gary and I have been formulating a list of places to hide them in parks around the centre in the interests of encouraging cachers to visit parks other than Uluru and Watarrka.  I mean, Trephina Gorge is begging for a cache hide, as are several locations in the West Macs that aren’t even that far from town. I also have a few ideas about where to put a couple of extra town caches.

Anyway, we have a weekend at home planned, so I count on finishing at least two of those blog posts mentioned above. 

We’ve Been Busy & Mt Zeil Access Update

gadget June 3rd, 2008

Yes, as you might have gleaned from the scarcity of posts, we’ve been very busy.

Gadget is well and truly installed as Watarrka’s acting Power Ranger, and going down to King’s Canyon (Watarrka) for half of every week. I think he’s enjoying it. I am looking forward to going down there soon for the weekend and doing some off track walking (hint hint). As you can see from the last few blog entries, I’ve been all around the place from Finke in the south to Mt Liebig and Yuendumu in the northwest.

The other big thing that happened was the my parents came and stayed with us for three weeks. We went to Chamber’s Pillar, Rainbow Valley, Owen Springs (of course) and hired a camper trailer and went back to Spotted Tiger Camping Ground near Harts Range. We went fossicking at the old Rex Mine – which was really interesting because it had old miner’s huts still partially intact and a few interesting shafts to explore. I did a bit of birding and geocaching as well.

Anyway, we’re off on an adventure on the weekend -we’ll just keep it to ourselves for the time being and post photos and a story next week …

Mt Zeil Access:

Please check out our ‘climbing Mt Zeil’ page. Access across Derwent Station is now CLOSED to the public. You can try and negotiate with the pastoralist, but for details it’s best to ring Chris Day (his number is on our Mt Zeil webpage). 

Birding:

It’s very dry up here at the moment (although rain is predicted for this weekend yay!), so things aren’t all that great. However, with all the corkwoods and a few grevilleas in bloom, there are still a few birds around. The highlights for me in the past month were Hooded Robins and a very beautiful Red Capped Robin at Spotted Tiger Campsite. Last week whilst I was at Mt Liebig, I saw some Bourke’s Parrots. And then on the weekend whilst at Ormiston Gorge, Gary and I saw the biggest flockof Spinifex Pigeons we’ve ever seen on Stretch’s front lawn.

Geocaching:

Yes, I’m up to 21 caches. I’ve now done all the easy ones around Alice Springs, Harts Range, up and down the Stuart Highway and the Lambert Centre cache. I got two first-to-finds in a row at Harts Range. I suspect no one will go looking for them until the Picnic Races are on in August. I will be adding a few more to my tally on the long weekend. I will also be hiding four new caches shortly. So stay tuned.

Anyway, that’s all from us for the time being. 

Meanwhile…

gadget April 12th, 2008

We’re back at home after our epic flight (!) from Bali to Darwin, a five hour wait in Darwin airport from 1.30am to 5.45am, and then a two-hour flight back to Alice Springs. We were, to say the least, STUFFED. We’re both still recovering. Next time (yes, there will be yet another sojourn to Indonesia), I think we’ll fly straight to Denspasar and then spend a couple of days in Darwin at the end of the holiday.

At any rate, I’ve started to update the blog with photos. Please scroll down and check the posts below, starting from those written pre-Bali, for photos of our Chinese Silky Chickens (we now have 5), the Knob-Tailed Gecko and Perentie, and shots of Redbank Gorge at Easter. I’ll be putting the Bali shots up over the next few days and adding detail/fixing typos on the posts I wrote whilst in-situ. given the prevalance of free Wi-fi hotspots in Bali, next time we will take the PDA and I can go for broke whilst sitting in Kafe enjoying my iced tea!

Otherness

There’s a bit of blog maintenance that needs to be done, so over the next few weeks I will be:

  • updating the blogroll
  • adding a ‘Climbing Mt Zeil’ instruction page - apparently, we have a reputation to maintain 
  • encoraging Gadget to write a few posts

So a little bit of work to be done here.

Please check back every day or so over the next week for our improved posts and Bali photos.

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