Walk across Australia

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Walk across Australia Page 27

by David Mason


  Not far from Steep Point.

  I was not running or hiding from anything. Instead, I wanted to create, through my own doing, the beginning and end of a journey. I understood that there was only one way I could undertake this journey. By myself. Like my time in French Foreign Legion this trip taught me about life and the inevitability of death. Acknowledging my own death meant that in the final moment before the end I could say to myself, je ne regrette rien.

  I had also learned something else. I thought back on the words of Heriot in Randolph Stow’s To the Islands: ‘my soul is a strange country.’ I had learned that my soul is not a strange, alien or lonely place, it is my country. And then, when I stopped, how could I explain what I felt to other people? There was no need for parades, cameras or banners. How to explain something that was worth risking my life, my relationship, my job, my credibility and my own self-worth that had no reward other than its own doing? Just a beating heart, a catch in the throat and the definition in my shadow.

  At Shark Bay not far from Steep Point.

  I was part of the landscape now. I was part of my country and a small part of it was me. We had a shared history of places and times that perhaps no other person would know or perhaps even care about. But ours was a history that was common to us alone and I held it close to me. So my story, this story, became a series of stories, of meetings and thoughts and reflections across the landscape of Australia, superimposed on the stories and songlines of the Aboriginal people who had been there before me.

  I had learnt that being alone is at once a kiss and the point of a knife. By choosing to be solitary you can touch the best and worst of yourself. The taste of salt on my tongue and the sun setting over the sea were enough for me then. After a short time on my own, as a tear coursed down my face to my chin and dropped two metres into the Indian Ocean, I looked to the horizon and the adventures that waited there. Then I went to talk with the fishermen.

  Postscript

  When I finished the trip my immediate concern was for the future of my friends. Kabul, Chloe and Kashgar found a home on Cable Beach outside Broome. I could not leave them on a station, even though the offer from the Wades had been so generous. The cannery at Carnarvon was too close. Nor could I afford to have them freighted home. I was broke. And little Dalhousie? He disappeared from Hamelin Station. Most likely Kabul forced him away from the females. I like to think that he has found his way to camel heaven along the Zuytdorp Cliffs where others like him still move along the coast.

  And my relationship with Amber? It was like the late evening desert fire of mulga. Its embers still hot, the flames flickering, spluttering and, finally, sighing. We parted ways with tears and a profound misunderstanding of what the other expected. My brother Brett was preselected and duly elected to the Senate.

  When I arrived home some people congratulated me on conquering the continent, as if I had fought the land and won. As if, like the explorers of the nineteenth century, I had set out to conquer or die, and had cheated the land of my death. Nothing could be further from the truth. The land had won me. And not only the land, the people had too.

  When I arrived at the rise overlooking the sea, I saw the light. In many ways it marked the close of a journey. In my solo Walk Across Australia there were times when I did not see a fellow human for many days, when I felt the warmth and the darkness of Australia’s interior, and a silence that can be heard.

  But I did meet Australians, men and women, white and black, who took time to share their stories with me. They shared their ideas, and their understanding of the land that moves me now. Meeting people, talking with them and having them share their thinking with me gave my trip context and meaning. It gave meaning to my journey and the journey that is my life.

  People give meaning and understanding to land. We learn to live with the land, move on it, survive and thrive, if we learn from people who know the land. Without the magic of the people my journey could have easily become nothing more than a brutal marathon.

  Australia is my country, my home, my land. I have fought for it, lived with it, bled on it and told stories about it. In walking across its skin I wanted to learn more about myself and my country; its colours, its moods and its stories. Especially its stories, told by people who believed they were Australians too.

  In the course of my trip I met people I will never forget. To one of them I wrote the following words:

  ‘On our travels we had adventures with trucks, trains, snakes, scorpions and feral camels. We were at times very hot or very cold. Sometimes we were short of water and on other occasions flooded in. I don’t know about the camels but at times I was so sore and tired I cried. But the tough things, the things that hurt were always outweighed by the magic of the country and the warmth, generosity and quiet dignity of Australians like you.

  ‘Thank you.’

  From self-approval seek applause: What ken not men thou kennest, thou! Spurn ev’ry idol others raise: Before thine own Ideal bow: Be thine own Deus: Make self free, liberal as the circling air: Thy Thought to thee an Empire be; break every prison’ing lock and bar.

  Richard Francis Burton, The Kasidah

  Index

  Aboriginal wells in the Simpson Desert, 132

  Adavale, 64, 70, 72, 76–82

  Amby, 60

  Anderson and Gates, 118, 121, 123, 128, 140

  Approdinna Attora Knolls, 128

  Arklow Station, 53

  Aronui feedlot, 21, 22, 38–40

  Australian Broadcasting Commission, 41, 118, 160

  Australian National University, 11

  Beadell, Len, 188, 190

  Bedourie, 14

  Belele Station, 206

  Big Red (Nappanerica), 111–15, 118, 124

  Birdsville, 40, 68, 85, 87, 90, 92, 97, 99, 105, 106, 107–11, 119, 121, 123, 124

  Blythdale, 57

  Boles, Walter, 92

  Brigalow, 43–44

  Brisbane, 32, 36, 50, 62, 71, 107, 150, 160

  Brook, David, 112

  Brunswick Heads, 26, 30

  Brunswick Hotel, 27, 28

  Bulloo River, 78

  Burke, Robert O’Hara, and Wills, William, 108–11

  Burton, Sir Richard, 4, 9, 222

  Bushman’s Templars, 52

  Byron Bay, 8, 9, 22, 24, 25, 26, 29, 31, 41, 48, 59, 78

  Camel Destruction Act 1925, 151

  Camels

  Cable Beach, 221

  Catching, 12

  History in Australia, 115–16, 151

  Horses’ fear of camels, 49, 56

  Nose pegging, 11

  Training, including water consumption, 14, 92

  Cane toad, 47

  Canterbury, 95–96

  Carnegie Station, 187, 192, 194–96, 198, 200, 205

  Carnegie, David, 195–96

  Carrarang Station, 215–16

  Chalet Motel, 27

  Charleville, 42, 64, 68–74, 77–79, 215

  Charlotte Waters, 148, 150

  Charlton, 37

  Chinchilla, 44–46

  Clapin, Phil, 157–59

  Cobb & Co., 55, 66, 71, 76, 79, 82, 103

  Cocker, Mark, 8

  Colson Track, 134

  Colson, T., and Ains, P., 112–13

  Combidiban Creek, 54–55

  Cook, James, 24

  Cooper Creek, 86–87, 109–10

  Corones Hotel, 70–71

  Creevey, Ronnie, 59–60

  Cunningham, Allan, 20–21, 36, 38

  Curtin Springs, 162, 163, 164, 166, 169, 172, 181

  Dajarra, 12–14

  Dalby, 20, 21, 22, 23, 38, 39, 41, 42

  Dalhousie Springs, 111, 118, 121, 141–45

  Darling Downs, 20, 36, 38, 46, 68, 96

  Davidson, Robyn, 58–59, 158, 173

  Deadman Bridge, 86–87

  Dickenson, Paul and Pam, 211, 217

  Djibouti, 7, 105

  Docker River, 161, 167, 168, 169, 174, 176–77

  Dreamtime, 155, 17
3, 176

  Drillham, 51, 52

  Dulacca, 52–54

  Dulbydilla, 66

  Durack, 84

  Ethiopia, 7–8,

  Eyre Creek, 112, 114, 118, 119, 121, 123, 152

  Finke, 113, 129, 148, 159

  Forest Hill, 35

  Forrest, John, 211

  Fred Hollows Foundation, 10, 17

  French Foreign Legion, 8, 9, 10, 11, 27, 32, 41, 48, 50, 81, 89, 93, 94, 116, 124, 159, 166, 176, 190

  French Line, 100, 123, 126, 129–30, 134, 137, 139

  Friends of the Simpson Desert, 141

  Gary Highway, 191

  Gatton, 35

  Geiger, Merv, 89, 91, 95

  Geoff, Rhyna and Sam, 72, 76–79

  Ghan railway, 151, 153

  Gibbo, Mary-Anne, Meg and Drew, 21–22, 39, 60

  Gibson Desert, 8, 143, 187–94, 203

  Gibson, Alfred, 178–79

  Glengarry Stables, 47

  Glenormiston Station, 14

  Gobbert Siding, 64–65

  Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 18

  Goondiwindi, 20

  Graham, Dave, 101–3

  Grandchester, 33

  Grantham, 35

  Great Artesian Basin, 34, 35, 62, 144

  Great Dividing Range, 8, 20

  Green, Jim, 13–14

  Greenbank Military Training Area, 31

  Grey Range, 80–82

  Gunbarrel Highway, 182, 187–94

  Hamelin Station, 211, 213–14

  Hastings Point, 29

  Heather Highway, 188

  Helidon, 35

  Horrocks, J., 115–16

  Ipswich, 32

  Jack in the Rocks Hotel, 81–82

  Jackson, 54

  Jimmy, 143, 172–74, 185

  Jondaryan, 37

  Kata Tjuta, 161, 164, 166, 168, 169, 170

  Kenji, 132–33

  Kennedy, Edmund, 71

  Kingscliff, 29–30

  Kirstenfelder, Selwyn, 111–12

  Kulgera, 156–59

  Laidley, 33–34

  Lambert’s midway point, 154

  Langlo Crossing, 74, 78, 87

  Lasseter, Harold, 175–76

  Lasseter’s cave, 174–75

  Lawrence, T.E., 7, 9, 85

  Lin Wah Chinese restaurant, 50

  Lindsay, David, 128–29

  Macalister, 39, 41

  MacDonald, Alan, 70

  Madigan, Cecil, 108

  Maillart, Ella, 213

  Manefield and Tinson, Camels, 92

  Maranoa River, 57, 61

  McHugh, Paddy, 12–14

  McNicoll, Lee, Megan, Douglas, Kate and Rebecca, 52–53

  Meekatharra, 204–6, 210

  Men’s Business, 162, 173, 180, 181

  Miles, 47, 49–50

  Mileura Station, 206, 207–10

  Millar, Tony and Lorraine, Eadie and Winnie, 216

  Mitchell, 60–62, 64, 66

  Mitchell, Sir Thomas, 57, 61

  Moore, Richard, Liz, Julie and Rosemary, 73–74

  Moorhouse, Geoffrey, 81

  Morney Plains, 96–101

  Morven, 66–67

  Mount Conner, 145, 160, 161–64

  Mount Dare Station, 147

  Mount Warning, 22, 28

  Muckadilla, 60

  Mulga Park Station, 159, 160–62

  Mungallala, 64, 66

  Munkilli Claypan, 193

  Murchison River, 210–11

  Nicol, Shane and Alissa, 160–62

  Notabilis Hill, 190

  Oakey, 37

  Ocean Shores, 28

  Orana Bridge, 28

  Paroo River, 57

  Paterson, Banjo, 39, 53, 86, 87

  Petermann Range, 170, 177

  Petermann, Sir Augustus, 170

  Poeppel Corner, 113, 116, 118, 119, 122, 124–28, 140

  Point of Aries, 81

  Purnie Bore, 113, 124, 132, 138–41

  QAA Line, 116, 123

  Quilpie, 51, 64, 78, 79, 83, 85

  Rabbits, fence, plague, 46, 47, 52, 122, 134

  Rae, Colin, Annie and Colleen, 82–84

  Rambrae, 47

  Remienko, Simon, 102–3

  Rosewood, 33

  Royal Flying Doctor Service, 71

  School of Distance Education, 71

  Schwerin Mural Crescent, 177, 178

  Scott, Bruce, Maureen and Carly, 85–86

  Scott, Sir Robert Falcon, 8

  Service, Robert, 70

  Severin, Peter and Ash, 164–66

  Shark Bay, 217–18

  Simpson Desert, 8, 9, 12, 14, 23, 79, 81, 87, 100, 105, 107–42, 152, 158, 172, 196, 203

  Simpson, Ian and Marilyn, 89–90

  Smail, Nick, 164–69

  Smith, Dick, 16–17

  Smith, Ian and Faye, 195–96, 199

  Smith, Sir Ross and Sir Keith, 70

  Snell, Spencer and Gloria, 197–98, 207

  Spinifex, 85, 120, 167, 182, 185, 191–92, 196

  Sprigg, Dr Reg, 124

  Steep Point, 8, 9, 24, 143, 144, 179, 206, 211, 215–20

  Stow, Randolph, 219

  Stuart, John McDouall, 9, 152, 156

  Sturt, Charles, 9, 86, 107, 108, 114, 118, 119, 152, 161

  Surfers Paradise, 29, 30

  Swag design, 75

  Swindells, Mark, 166, 181

  Tamala Station, 215

  Thesiger, Wilfred, 9

  Thompson, John, 130

  Thryptomene Hill, 188

  Todd Ranges, 187

  Toowoomba, 36

  Toowoomba Chronicle, 58

  Ulandilla, 64

  Uluru, 8, 9, 160–61, 164–72, 175–76

  Uncle Tom’s Pie Shop, 25–26, 29

  Useless Loop, 211, 214–16

  Wake, Paul and Mary, Thomas and Christopher, 213–15

  Walloon, 32, 33

  Wallumbilla, 54, 56

  Walsh, Patrick, 207–9

  Warakurna, 158, 170, 179–82

  Warburton, 144, 158, 167, 179, 180, 182, 183–86, 187, 192

  Warburton, Peter E., 9

  Warra, 42–43, 46

  Warrego Highway, 36, 37, 42, 43, 44, 47, 54, 66

  Warrego Stock Route, 22, 42, 51, 55, 56, 60

  White, Patrick, 9

  Williams family, 141–42

  Wiluna, 198, 199, 201, 202–4

  Windorah, 76, 79, 82, 85, 87–91, 102

  Womallilla Creek, 63

  Wongawol Station, 196–98, 207

  Woodleigh Station, 212

  Woods, Gracie, 77

  Yatala Pie Shop, 31

  Yuleba, 54–55

  Zuytdorp Cliffs, 215, 221

 

 

 


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