18/09/2022
WEEK 13 COOBER PEDY to FLINDERS RANGES
Emu's: well I am still the winner but we saw so many emu's coming into Wilpena pound that I lost count!!
Goats: all these wild goats everywhere too!!
We**ie: 3
Snake: 1
Echidna: 2!!!!! Omg they are SO damn adorable.
Wow, what a weird, quirky, strange, fascinating, amazing, bizarre place in the middle of Aus. Aside from the fact that it is now where all 3 boys want to move, live underground and become opal noodlers, Coober Pedy weedled it's way into all our hearts for all of these reasons. Met some characters, had a blast (no pun 😜) at an underground mine tour where the kids got to barter their goods they noodled, enjoyed a beer in the underground bar and spent some time with our new friends. The landscape consists of piles of dirt next to up to 90 foot deep holes everywhere. Like EVERYWHERE!! You can go and dig a hole wherever you like and if you strike opal you go pay $500 to the govt and off you go, your a opal miner!!!!
Our next leg involved the legendary Oodnadatta track, which follows what was the original Old Ghan railway line. This was something special. However what we weren't prepared for was it to a) rain b) storm c) the road to turn into an ice skating rink and d) literally be in the centre of nowhere at the end of a long day trying to find a campsite where we would not get stuck in the bog forever. We found out later that the track gets shut pretty much as soon as it rains, probably a good thing I didn't know this. So after a finger biting, white knuckle day driving we managed to find a campsite that we could drive out of the next day. Thank goodness for Callum's "cracked" (as the boys called it) driving abilities we managed to avoid getting our van and car bogged and safe from landing in a ditch. With some interesting transportation of all of us from car to van we slept well and the sun was shining on us the next morning. Following the ruins and history of the old Ghan was more special than I had thought. When we lost sight of the track we would get a bit sad.
We arrived in the Flinders safely and excited as our beautiful friends from Lismore arrived after 2000km in 2 days with small kiddos. Legends. So of course we backed this up with a 9 km walk and then the next day climbed the tallest (ok it's only the second tallest but not by much) mountain peak in SA. Not gonna lie, it wasn't easy, not in the slightest. It was hell at some stages, but when an experienced hiker told us we were superior hikers (ok he didn't, he said we did well as he thought he'd catch us sooner than he did but I heard different) it gave us the will to continue, that and the promise of an ice cream.
The Flinders ranges are like nothing we have seen so far. They are absolutely the prettiest, most vast, stunning mountain ranges we have seen. Definitely pleased we "backtracked" a little to see these amazing formations. Haha.