AUSTRALIAN CARAVAN + RV
Arcadia Valley

In the last issue, Tim and Ros Bowden explored the Mt Moffatt Section of Carnarvon National Park, in the wild and spectacular Central Queensland Sandstone Belt. Now they're into the Gorge proper. It might only be about 40 clicks from Mt Moffatt as the black cockatoo flies, but it's a full 310km drive…

With time in hand, we decided to spend a couple of nights camping out on our way to Carnarvon Gorge, driving our venerable 80 Series diesel LandCruiser (Penelope) and our rough-road Goldstream Sovereign camper (The Palace).

The 85 kilometres of rain-damaged - but dry - dirt pavement seemed easier to drive over on the way out, and that's often the case when you know what to expect. Our run of brilliant autumn weather continued as we reached the bitumen, where we pumped up our tyres with our handy engine-mounted compressor, and headed for Injun on the junction with the Carnarvon Highway where we knew there was a general store to top up our dwindling supplies.

Well, there was and there wasn't… On arrival we learned it had closed the previous day for three months for re-building. We did manage to get a loaf of bread, two avocados and a few bananas from the service station, and then pressed on. At least there was some fuel available.

On a whim we took a detour up into Arcadia Valley because it sounded attractive. Dropping down the range, we happened upon a sign to a camping ground at the small but perfectly formed Lonesome National Park. There were only two camp sites, and we had them all to ourselves with the late afternoon sun illuminating distant sandstone escarpments. We sat outside listening to Beethoven's Choral Fantasy courtesy of our iPod and battery-powered speakers, with a distinctly Australian obbligato of insane kookaburra laughter.

Next morning, after an intentionally late and leisurely start, we drove further into Arcadia Valley, a well-grassed open area studded with fat cattle grazing contentedly on our way to Lake Nuga Nuga National Park over a mix of single strip bitumen and good dirt. With only 70km to travel we were there in time for lunch beside the still waters of the lake, studded with water lilies and teeming with bird life. We quickly spotted a pair of circling sea eagles, and closer at hand, cranes, shags, ducks and a lone stately pelican. The extensive national park bird list revealed a twitchers' paradise. We camped within a few metres of the water, close to the steep flanks of the conical Mt Warrinilla. Dragonflies like miniature Tiger Moth biplanes dashed about, presumably feeding on small insects.

Because of the dead trees giving sanctuary to roosting water birds, we thought it must be a man-made lake, but not so. It was formed naturally very recently. Originally mapped by surveyor Vernon Brown in 1865 it was then noted as low swampy land. When the explorer Ludwig Leichhardt came through in 1884 there was still no lake, which was formed not long afterwards when local flash floods deposited silty banks which acted as a natural dam wall. We sat, drinks in hand, watching the sunset, the low light making sculptures of the dead trees against the orange western sky.

Next morning Ros heard a noise like horses shuffling about and looked out to see hundreds of white cranes roosting in our bay, but the little movement and her whisper to alert me inside the camper caused them all to take off with a sudden whooshing sound. Their getaway was so speedy I didn't see any of them! It was certainly our most spectacular campsite so far



Where to Stay

Weather
January: 20-34°C
July: 3-20°C

Most of the annual rainfall falls between May and July.

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