Alice
Springs 23:42.00 S 133:52.93 E
14th-16th
July 2007
Following
a great time with yachtie friends in Darwin, we were met at the airport by
our friend Brian Bateman who is the local surveyor for Alice Springs.
Alice
Springs is not just this desert that surrounds it, it is a vibrant, clean and
nicely laid out town, full of tourists this time of the year. Brian
stacked our bags into the back of his Toyota Land Cruiser, which he has
specially adapted with highly specialised GPS surveying equipment he uses for
going to the outback to plan for schools, roads and any other work he
may be called on to perform. Brian can spend up to a week at a time in
the outback surveying, cooking on a camp fire and sleeping under the stars in
a swag
The Road
Trains are an everyday part of outback life some of them can be over 50
metres long!
Surrounded
by a sea of red sand the size of Europe, Alice Springs attracted many famous
pioneering characters, miners and cattlemen searching for fortune.
Ambitious projects included the laying of the Overland Telegraph Line that
opened up inland Australia to the world, the Old Ghan railway, the Royal
Flying Doctor Service, being the first aerial medical organization of its
type. This pioneering spirit lives on in the people of Alice Springs
today
The
hilarious Camel Cuup being one of the quirky events.
Do you
choose the camel by the look on his face or what?
The
Camel Cup in full racing mode
One
camel lost it’s rider at the start making it a fun event to watch
This is
the Aboriginal clans story of the beginning of Alice Springs, and the
painting representing their story
The
memorial to Rev. John Flyn the founder of the Flying Doctor Service in 1939
he also introduced the pedal radio (SSB) to allow remote Stockmen to keep in
touch with the town
Our next
stop was the desert park full of wonderful flora and fauna thriving in this
very harsh environment
The area
represents the different micro climates within the desert so well, it gave us
more understanding of the plants and animal life we were about to
experience. The deserts was in full flower, after some unusual rain.
There
were amazing Thorny Devils a plenty
This
black kite showed off his arial skills with his keeper
Whilst
this buzzard showed us how he cracks open the emu egg by breaking it with the
stone which is in his beak
Being 14th
July, we enjoyed an excellent French meal at Lanes Restaurant with Brian and
his wife Josie
Who is
the computer braines behind their business, turning Brian’s work into
the finished drawings and reports.
The
MacDonnell Ranges stretch all along the road from Alice Springs out to
Glen Ellen Gorge for 150 km
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