Category Archives: Christine

On the road

In the early morning twilight the shapes moving in front of me are vague and unformed.  I hear the excited squeals of my dog as she dashes forward, hurtling into the darkness.   I feel the ground shake. Thump thump thump.  A dark silhouette emerges from the shadows and a panting kangaroo bounds past, almost brushing my left shoulder.   A white blur and my dog follows at top speed.  I call into the mist as the day begins to break.  My heart pounds.  Not today…

Rushing to get ready for a long trip alters time.  Everything on your to do list takes longer than you expect.  But finally we are ready.  Dogs safely housed.  Chickens and cattle fed.  Last minute chores complete.  We drive away from the house.

Today we are leaving for Cape York.  We have arranged to meet with three pairs of our fellow travellers at 8 am.   The phone rings.  A breathless Suzanne apologises.  They will be delayed.

We arrive at the meeting point and are greeted by Howard and Beryl, our “tour leaders”.  Standing smiling beside them are our sending off party, Brett and Christine.  This time last year they were getting ready to leave with us.  Desert crossing companions, they will be greatly missed, but a last minute gift, a journal, means we will take them with us on our travels.

Brett and Christine sending off

We learn that Heather and Max, who were due to leave with us today are also delayed by a recalcitrant cow and calf.  We feel slightly lonely as two utes of the expected four pull away and leave Dean’s Marsh for Cape York.
Two Utes leave Dean's Marsh

Our home state of Victoria is wearing her winter clothes.  Pale grey clouds lie unmoving in the chill air.   Weak sunlight plays on paddock stubble.  I see sheep huddled together for warmth and comfort, their enviable woolly coats barely enough for this late May morning.

At Creswick a biting breeze rises as we hurry to find hot coffee and toasties to help ward off the wintry weather.

Leaving chilly Creswick, a long avenue of remembrance leads us on our way.  Each tree marked with the name of a lost son, father, husband, brother.  Falling leaves honour them with a shower of yellow, amber and gold.  Falling leaves for fallen lives.

Light grey and yellow limbs of gum trees embrace the road as it winds through well grazed paddocks to Smeaton and then to Maldon.

A popular day trip from the city, Maldon today is quiet.  Inside the oldtime shop fronts, sellers shiver in their darkened treasure troves.   Kitsch rubs shoulders with quirky modern.   (Poodle lamps anyone?) Gluten free cakes are on offer beside traditional pea and ham soup.   It’s said the best cream bun in the Southern Hemisphere can be purchased here.

Maldon poodle lamps

As we lunch, the sun breaks through.  Golden rays warm the street.   Shoppers slow their pace, stop to chat and enjoy the radiant heat while it lasts.  We see a familiar vehicle drive by.  They have arrived.   Dom and Suzanne join us and then there were three.

The road from Maldon passes properties belonging to independent spirited homesteaders.  A pig snorts and snuffles in the front yard.  Two donkeys graze in the garden.   Chooks cluck in backyard chicken coops.

Richard spots lovely old trucks by the score.  Oh what bargains he could find here.

The land is changing.  Red and yellow ochre stains the banks along the roadside.   We are in goldfields country.   Ballarat, scene of the Eureka Stockade, passes by.  Her sister city, Bendigo, is a regal old lady.  She retains much of the grandeur of her bygone days.   Chinese dragon museums tell of the long history of Asian Australians hereabouts.  There’s gold in these hills.   Wealthy citizens built in stone to the glory of God, the Queen and their own success.  I wish we had more time to do this city justice.

As we drive out of Bendigo, a UHF radio exchange about the acclaimed Maldon cream bun is interrupted by a familiar wit.  Malcolm and Olive are nearby.   They tag along as we drive by and now, count the vehicles, we are four.  Yes, this is a convoy.

Cuppas on the riverside at Echuca give us time to catch up on all the news before we drive on to Deniliquin, our destination for today.   This is where we leave Victoria and cross the Murray River to New South Wales.   In NSW the roads seem wider and almost roman in their unwavering directness.   Easy driving.  We are soon in Deniliquin.  Deni Motel is the final stop for the day.

The local RSL is recommended for dinner by a policeman.  He stops to chat between random breath tests for passing motorists.  It does not disappoint.  Good food and an injection of funds for Beryl.   Two dollars wagered on the pokies produces a return of ten.  Take the money and run, we cry.

The busy days preparing for the trip catch up with us.  We retire early.   Heads hit pillows dreaming of tomorrow and the Darling River.

Bush Poetry #3

By Christine Smith

The softness of a dressing gown
Dyed in the hues of the desert
Suzanne, yes I did notice
Your nurturing hands releasing
Our survival kits to adventure
“Bon Voyage would-be Diggers”.
The Prison of Warwick weeps
Across lushness, green
Who invented the bars of exclusion?

Autumn leaves scatter with tourists roaming
That extra H of Hahndorf
Echoes the bells of Europe
The gulping of beer,
The ode to holidays
Tempts the thirst
Across hills of vineyards
As the Pen folds onto the
Chalice of Cab Sav and twisted sheets

Lutheran dreams and Hans Heysen landscapes
Where knarled Herbnick eyes gaze hollowed,
as the Cornish leave rugged cliffs for
Their burrows to copper as we
Would be Diggers are lulled by giant wind gods
While McCartney unplugged harmonises
With Ulolooloo, Orroroo and Wallaway hey hey,
Cupp’d or cocktails? Hey hey hey!
Yes, I am serious

The hub of the Flinders
Is not the Hawker of barking dogs and whinging toms
But Jeff Morgan’s palette of
Sharpened ridges and smokey grey ranges
Compared with undies drying on the dash
Framing a landscape
Is this the moon?

Roads forget their fences as
I breathe in wilderness
Brachina gorge collects 520 million
Years of existence as trees
Line the hills like Sydney bridge climbers
No wilderness
Back on track
The land flattens like a
Giant pancake to laughing skies

Red gibbers shine their tongues to
The ancestors of rivers and wind
Farina beckons an ancient oven
Of cream buns and
Hollowed corridors embrace ceilings of stars
A heart broken mother in the loss of your son
Beloved sons and daughters
This is the wilderness
The breath of the Outback.

Christine Smith