The Kimberley
By Roderick Eime
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The Kimberley - Stunning
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Roderick Eime wanders among some of the oldest landscapes on Earth.
He
stares down on me as if from the heavens, mute and limbless, his power
over the elements is total. The Wandjina are the spirit gods of the
Kimberley who control the weather and their images abound throughout
the caves and craggy overhangs of this rugged and foreboding corner of
Australia.
For countless thousands of years the Aboriginal
people of the Kimberley, with such evocative names as the Ngarinyin,
Umida, Wunambul and Unggarangi, kept watch over the Wandjina figures,
just as their spirits kept watch over them.
Today, privileged
visitors can still see these images in all their mysterious glory
gazing imperiously down from their cave ceiling frescos.
The landscape of the Kimberley is among the oldest formations in the world, dating back some 1.8 billion years.
“Where are the fossils?” I innocently enquire of Carly, my naturalist guide at the El Questro Wilderness Park.
“There are none,” comes the matter-of-fact reply, “these rocks were formed before there was any life to fossilise.”
It
takes a moment for me to compute that data and I return my gaze to the
deep orange hues of the ultra-hard sandstone cliffs along Chamberlain
Gorge. The namesake river, replete with fresh, crystal clear water is
home to a seemingly endless supply of mighty Barramundi, guarded by a
permanent squad of freshwater crocodiles.
Just over one hundred
years ago, white Europeans brought cattle to the Kimberley from the
east in search of new pastures. Pioneering drover, the Irish-born
Patrick Durack, established Argyle Station in 1886 after bringing 7000
head from Queensland and arriving with about half of them.
If
ever a harsh and unforgiving land epitomised the bush spirit of early
European settlement, it is the Kimberley. Blessed with clean, permanent
water, but cursed with oppressive heat and humidity, the Kimberley
tolerates man’s presence, but offers no comfort.
The sprawling,
400,000 ha El Questro Wilderness Park is still a working cattle station
and provides a range of accommodation options for intrepid visitors.
From
humble, riverside camping plots to the iconic, ultra-chic El Questro
Homestead, visitors can indulge their outback passion no matter what
their budget.
A few kilometres south of Wyndham along the King
River is the unassuming Diggers Rest, a knockabout homestead that was
home to 90 crew during two months of filming. Now reverted to its
regular persona of quaint fishing camp and simple lodge, the tiny bar
and games room still bears the evidence – dozens of autographs scrawled
on the wall above the flat screen TV.
“We had some pretty wild
nights here,” confesses Alida Woodland, who runs the property with
husband Roderick, “we put almost one hundred tents out the back and
built that new ablution block. It looked like an army camp here for
about two months!”
A few kilometres down the Karunjie Road are
the wide mud flats used to film some of the stock mustering scenes.
With the ample Pentecost River to the west and the vast Cockburn Ranges
to the east, the scene will contrast the harsh territory and stark
beauty of the Kimberley.
At the other end of the rough track is
Home Valley Station, a site frequented by the cast and crew of the
motion picture "Australia".
“Baz just loved the view across the
(Pentecost) river toward the Cockburn Ranges,” says Nicolle Fenech who
manages the station with husband Chris, “so he spent a lot of time
filming the vistas and sunset panoramas you’ll see in the movie.”
Home
Valley Station is a recently refurbished destination property offering
visitors quality accommodation, food and even conference facilities.
Owned by the Indigenous Land Council (ILC) on behalf of the Balanggarra
people of the East Kimberley, Home Valley is an accredited TAFE
training college where locals learn the art of hospitality as well as
pastoral skills.
Meanwhile, the Wandjina cast their hollow eyes
down impassively on those below, their task long pre-defined in the
Dreamtime, their destiny beyond our reach and comprehension.
Fact File:
Regional activities: Fishing, 4WDing, trekking, flight-seeing, camping Nearest Airport: Kununurra (KNX), Serviced by Qantas, Skywest, Airnorth
El Questro Wilderness Park (Google Map: -16.01, 127.98) 08 9169 1777 110 kilometres west of Kununurra by road www.elquestro.com.au
Home Valley Station (Google Map: -15.722, 127.82) 120 kilometres west of Kununurra by road Phone: +61 (8) 9161 4322 www.homevalley.com.au
Diggers Rest Station (Google Map: -15.64, 128.08) (08) 9161 1029 37 kilometres south of Wyndam www.diggersreststation.com.au
Fact File:
North Star Cruises operate the 50 metre, 36-passenger luxury expedition
vessel, True North II on six and 12 night itineraries throughout the
Kimberley region. Their twenty-plus year experience and intimate
knowledge of the largely uncharted river and inlet system sets them
apart from other similar operators in Australia’s remote North West.
Prices
start from $8995 per person twin share for the six night expedition and
$13,995 for twelve nights. Includes all meals, transfers and
water-based excursions. Helicopter excursions separate.
For further information contact North Star Cruises on 08 9192 1829 or visit www.northstarcruises.com.au
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