Monday, 30 August 2021

North Queensland - 30 Aug 2021

We packed up casually. 

Darryl made a little shroud for the Billy so it boils quickly. I think it looks like a Dalek!

All Darryl's hard work paid off with a nice haul

We all drove back to Cloncurry, sharing the gates (which meant we only had to do one each). 5 camels were in a paddock on the side of the road. 

Don't you love a stop signal when there's no one actually working!



This looks like someone has relocated both a railway siding and carriage for their home


We overtook a truck, (thanks to the good truckie spotting for us), and as we overtook Eddie were just pulling back to our side of the road when another truck pulled out from a track on our right without looking...very close but we were safe.

Back in Cloncurry, we went to the tourist info again. Met up with Gail and she gave me more fossicking information. In town we fuelled up, got some supplies then drove west before taking the road to Duchess. 


Turned south and after Malbon had lunch beside the Cloncurry River, before finding Kuridala township and cemetery. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuridala_Township_site This was where Darry's grandfather, (Sydney Walsh) first started working for the railway as a boy porter in 1914 when he was 14 years old. 

Not a lot left of the township




The cemetery was fenced off and 'out of bounds', but a copy of the Register of Burials was in a an old fusebox

Darryl used his zoom to get a few headstones


Lots of birds were coming down to share the cattle trough

Hampden Smelter at Kuridala https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuridala_Township_site
















Mine mullock heap a few hundred meters away.

We had a look around the smelter area, then headed for the amethyst fossicking area. 







A mining shaft


A mullock heap

Camping isn't allowed at the historic township, but the Fossicking permit allows it at the diggings

A pretty steep, rocky track took us up to the top of the ridge, where we set up camp.



Darryl found a few poor quality stones almost immediately.


This site afforded magnificent views and sunsets. 




Crepuscular rays formed in the east and in the west (below)




Looked like we 'might' get a visitor but they never arrived. Found that I had 'some' phone signal at times up on the hill.

I was able to play with the star mode on my camera - Venus in the west

The Southern Cross sitting in the centre of the Milky Way



3 comments:

  1. Hi form A&O A very different county site indeed, tailored for pioneers, historians and fossikers. It seems, the exiting part is the never stopping feeling of suspense what to find and see around the next hill.

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  2. The shroud around the billy may look like a Dalek but it does a good job of blocking the wind, boils quicker with less fuel, and folds up flat for storage.

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  3. Who needs TV when you can sit around enjoying: the company, happy hour, sunrises, sunsets, fauna, and scenery. We were so fortunate on this trip to capture crepuscular rays.

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