We found a bottle shop in Derby whose beer prices could compete with Dan Murphy’s in Melbourne . Dinner was barra and chips ($23.50 for two people) from the local “greasy’s shop”. It was pretty good – straight out of the paper under the stars. Tonight was probably our warmest night on the trip.
Horizontal Waterfalls |
An amazing sight |
To finish off a great day we took some photos of the sunset at Derby pier.
Sunset at Derby |
Our final day in Derby was a day of culture, starting with “scone a clock” where yours truly cooked the scones for morning tea, then we went for a drive and witnessed such national treasures as the ‘boab prison tree’ (the 2nd of this trip) and a water trough that can water 500 head of cattle at one time. All ‘serious’ towns need to have a ‘biggest’ of some sort.
Boab Prison Tree |
Our next stop was Broome and a reunion with friends who now live in Merimbula. Broome has changed significantly since Shirley and I spent four days here in 1995.
Broome has changed significantly since Shirley and I spent four days here in 1995. It is a bustling and vibrant tourist precinct. Not sure what that means but I read it somewhere and it sounded good. On Saturday we had a leisurely day with our only real activity being to check out the “stairway to the moon”. Alas it was too cloudy and we had to settle for a quiet drink and nibbles under the stars. On Sunday we visited the Broome brewery and had a few schooners while we listed to some live jazz/country music. Try http://www.davidrivettmusic.com/ for a sample. Shirley had some alcoholic ginger beer. The beer and wedges were excellent.
We have suddenly slipped from travelling mode into relaxing mode – our first real break since home. With the weather being pretty warm it is easy to be lazy. We had an enjoyable, lazy week in Broome with relaxation being the key activity. However, we did enjoy the sights and benefits of 'stairway to the moon', famous cable beach, Willy Creek Pearl farm, various walks, various coffee venues (although hard to find after 2pm). The other notable achievement was my first pizza since leaving Melbourne . The days were warm to hot and the nights were balmy. Some of the mornings were cool enough for a track suit top – until 8am anyway.
So far, for every 1000 km towing the caravan we have done and extra 450 km without the caravan, visiting local sights once we set up camp. Minor glitches on the trip have included the following (in chronological order):
· A broken part on the awning (fixed by me with the help of John and Darryl),
· Lost plug for the sink (bought two so we now have a backup),
· An “allen key” embedded in a car tyre – not good (lucky it happened in Katherine),
· Air bed # 1 going flat,
· Air intake hole in new airbed too big for pump attachment, and
· Air bed # 2 going flat.
To cap it off, a second tyre issue, this time a split on the inner wall – possibly caused by a sharp rock somewhere around Broome (lucky it happened in Broome).
Anyway back to Broome. As you do when in Broome we visited Cable Beach and caught a few waves. Brought back memories of July 1995 when Shirley and I were last here. And, as it the right thing to do, we sat on the beach (Coronas in hand) and watched the sunset (see photo). Eventually we retired back to the camp ground where the BBQ was gunned up to cook some fish, which was followed by pancakes/fruit salad/maple syrup/ice cream. How hard is this life? On another day I cooked scones for 9 (with cream & jam) and then we had a group spaghetti dinner (for 6) with crispy bread, following by fresh fruit salad and let over whipped cream. As you can see we are doing it pretty hard. Of course we had our 5 pm session between scones and dinner, i.e. a few coronas with lime.
Another thing - there was a crocodile in the Cable Beach waters yesterday - just where we were swimming a few days ago.
By the time we leave Broome (maybe tomorrow) we will have spent about 4 weeks in the Kimberley and will have covered just under 3000 km – 60% of it without the caravan – 450 km on dirt roads. It has been a wonderful four weeks with lots of memories to take away – not to mention the number of photos that I have taken. It will be hard to leave Broome.
Next stop will be the start of the Pilbara. Please stay tuned.
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