NIGHT 236 -
MOORE RIVER BRIDGE REST AREA.
That we are staying in a roadside rest area when we are so
near to several seaside towns says much about our impressions of the present
surroundings.
Earlier we swung through Cervantes and, although we love the
name, a quick scan was all we needed – just more windswept sand-dunes and
beaches full of reeking mountains of seaweed.
Next stop Lancelin, a surfing hotspot so they say. Back Beach was pretty and we had a lovely
swim but the surf was lame. (I’m beginning to think that actual surfable waves
in Western Australia are a myth. It’s the big surfwear companies, isn’t
it. It’s all about selling product. Just as very few people who buy clothes in a
Kathmandu store ever require a Sherpa’s assistance , I believe very few people
wearing Quicksilver/Billabong/Rip Curl gear in Western Australia need an actual
surfboard. It really is a pointless cultural
artefact. They may as well buy an
inflatable air-mattress to sit on in the ocean.)
Leaving Lancelin we tried Ledge Point, about 20kms further
towards Perth. At Ledge Point we could
smell the seaweed before we could see the town.
We negotiated the roundabout straight back out.
So, about 5kms off the coast, with several coastal towns nearby,
we have elected to stay at a rest-stop alongside a busy road. Here the river flows with a similar lack of
surf but the grass is green and alive and free from the stench of decay.
I give the Moore River
Bridge Rest Area 2 stars out of 5. The
river has water and so do the toilets.
NIGHTS 237 – 243 -
BURNS BEACH CARAVAN PARK.
We stopped in at Yanchep on the way through to Perth,
another seaside village and surfing hotspot that left us disappointed. But enough of that.
We felt sorry for Yanchep.
What was once a country surf town is now a vulgar knot of housing
estates and tight circled roundabouts.
These estates go on for twenty or so kilometres, all with vapid names
like Seaview Ridge or Ocean Breezes, and they spawn two-story beige brick boxes
that chew up any possible yard space. They
are big and modern and lacking in anything idiosyncratic or interesting. Then, suddenly, these beige boxes stop
polluting the roadside, but only because last decade’s boxes have taken their
place – with bricks noticeably redder and roofs less fashionably white, blue or
black. When combined with the
proliferation of traffic lights and expanding low-rise shopping centres we knew
we’d reached Perth’s far northern suburbs.
We’d also reached the need to make a decision.
There is no caravan park close to Perth that accepts
dogs. The Burns Beach Caravan Park is
about 30kms away from Perth’s CBD and there were a few parks out east (in the
‘burbs) about the same distance away, and we knew nothing about any of them. But we figured that the north side has Perth’s
beaches and so, being the optimist I continue to be, the possibility of
surfable waves continued to set our agenda.
We booked into The Burns Beach for two nights.
The two nights became four nights which became seven when we
learned there was a ‘stay seven nights pay for six’ deal. So our first week in Perth involved the daily
commute out of Burns Beach toward whatever the weather and wind allowed. For example:
·
Okay, I’ll get this out of the way first. The surf was rubbish. We checked it most every day, driving the
strip along past Scarborough, along past Trigg, along past Cottesloe, and not
once did my board get wet. Our bodies
occasionally got wet, sheltered from the wind behind the breakwall at Cottesloe
or swimming at a couple of dog beaches we’d found, but the board stayed snug in
its bag as I rejected the tepid shorebreaks on offer. But Morrissey frolicked along various
northside beaches and he’s such a beachy doofus that it always brightened up
the day.
·
Shanzie loves a market and she read that one of
Perth’s largest monthly markets was being held while we were nearby. It was at Kalamundra, a town in the Perth
Hills about an hour away. If I’m honest,
I don’t mind a market myself, especially when held in picturesque
surrounds. So we chugged our way up into
the hills. It was a good market, if a
little too skewed toward Christmas which I think is ages away but probably
isn’t. It was very crowded, which
freaked Mozza out. I had to sit with him
in the shade out of the way while Shan’ looked around and then she did the
same. He’s a good people dog though,
enchanting everyone who passed by with his smiling face and panting
tongue. Shan bought a few things, I had
a greasy bacon and egg roll, Moz ate
crap off the ground and all was right with the world again.
·
We had a day deep in the suburbs getting a part
replaced on the ‘bago. This part has
been faulty since Townsville, where Winnebago said it wasn’t under
warranty. Some diligent work by Shana and
a terse email or two convinced Winnebago that the part was indeed covered under
warranty and they agree to replace it.
But we were a thousand kms from Townsville by then and the next
Winnebago dealership was in Perth. Given
that the part wasn’t integral – the fault caused an annoying light to flash on
and off throughout the night – we elected to wait until we reached Perth. It took all day for us to get to the
Winnebago dealership and for them to replace the part but it was worth it - it
no longer feels like we are sleeping in a disco.
·
People had told us that Perth’s city centre is a
bit sterile and ‘lacks soul’. I’m not
sure I’d go that far but there isn’t much there to capture the
imagination. The malls are full of
generic could-be-anywhere shops and there’s no real ‘city’ feel. I don’t think it’s fair to make any sweeping
appraisal though. I think it could be a
place that reveals itself over time. The
street that was built like old time London was kind of cool.
·
We decided that we were going to stay put for
the day; that we didn’t want to pack everything up and spend hours in traffic
again. As bizarre as it sounds, we
wanted a day off. The day we chose was a
Sunday. It turned out to be the first
Sunday of the month. Or, to be even more
precise, it was the first Sunday of Spring, which probably doesn’t mean too
much to too many people. It is, however,
a highly significant day in Perth if you’re the type of person who desires to
catch (gather) abalone. Now, we had a great seaview from the back of the ‘bago over
the cliffs and across the ocean. There
was only a walking path between us and the drop into the water. Every morning we pulled the curtains aside to
embrace this view. On this Sunday, however,
when we pulled the curtains aside, we were confronted by people bustling along
the path dressed in old, ill-fitting wetsuits, some with goggles and snorkel covering
their faces as if in the water. They rushed
along just beyond our window carrying large sacks. There were dozens of them. At first we thought it was some weird charity
event. A fancy dress walk or something
where this year’s theme was wetsuits or divers or things aquatic. But getting up and looking over the edge of
the cliffs revealed dozens more people in the water, all walking or wading or
swimming along the edges of the rocks.
Most were in wetsuits but some had ordinary street clothes on, sodden
and wet. Again, all had sacks.
By asking around we discovered that the wet
and the wetsuited were collecting abalone for the first time since last December. It was part of an annual abalone frenzy generated
by strict regulations. These regulations
allow 20 abalone per person, but they can only be collected between the hours
of 7 – 8 am on five consecutive Sundays, beginning on the first Sunday in
Spring, (which was today). That’s it.
Five hours over five weeks and then no more legal abalone until next
year. We awoke nearer to 8am when it was almost over. People were scurrying in and around the rocks
and filling bags, shouting to each other and at each other. Whole families lined the beaches and scoured
through crags – grandmas and grandpas with sacks, toddlers with sacks, teens
with sacks, mums, dads, aunties, etc, all with sacks weighted down and seeking
more. Then 8am arrived and everybody
exited the water. By 8:05 there wasn’t a wetsuit or an abalone sack to be seen.
We give the Burn’s
Beach Caravan Park 3 stars out of 5. We
had a grass site which at times felt like we were poked into a paddock but it
had fantastic views. The toilets were a
hike away though and dingy. The café
next door had curly fries that I fell in love with and can still taste now.
NIGHT 244 -
JULIENNE’S HOUSE, CHIDLOW.
Chidlow is another pretty ‘mountain’ town high in the Perth
hills. Julienne and Shana read for their
PhDs together at UQ. They hadn’t seen
each other in over 10 years. A catch-up
was overdue.
So, in a rammed earth house beneath the trees we ate fresh salmon
and discussed literary theory and the demise of left-wing politics. We tipped a young boy’s car collection onto a
rug and zoomed our favourites across the floor.
We slept in the ‘bago parked on the neighbours land because Julienne’s
driveway was too steep.
NIGHTS 245 -
247 - AMY’S HOUSE, KELMSCOTT.
Kelmscott is a suburb like you’d find in any capital
city. It’s a long way from the city and
the rent is comparatively cheap. It’s
not the prettiest of suburbs, or the most progressive, but it’s where Amy,
Shana’s cousin, lives, and that was good enough for us.
With Amy we got to do the tourist thing with someone to show
us around. She took us to Fremantle and we
fell in love with it. Fremantle is old
and funky and vibrant and just a little seedy.
What more could you want in a city?
We drank cider surrounded by retro chairs and water views; we went to
Freo jail and took a tour with an ex-correctional officer whose humour was as
dark and scary as any of the cells; and we balanced out healthy food with
unhealthy treats at the weekly farmer’s market.
We then went to Kings Park where Amy and Shana struck modelling poses
against the magnificent backdrop of Perth’s cityscape. We wandered the botanical gardens, Shana and
Amy dissecting the various weddings we were witness to. We then went home, sat on the back deck, and continued
drinking cider while dismantling and reconstructing family history. I was happy.
I cadged the occasional cigarette.
The next day it was
back to Freo again, lazing on a southside dog beach, messing about and getting
burned. The water was cool and clear,
unlike our heads after a night on the slops.
It was a busy two days (and three nights). Thanks Amy and Ash for being tour guides.
NIGHT 248 - LAKE CLIFTON CARAVAN PARK
Today was Remembrance Day but we didn’t realise it. It was while we were in Woolworths that it
became apparent.
We were pushing our
trolley along the cold foods aisle when a voice came over the loudspeaker,
first reciting the ANZAC ode and then requesting a minutes silence. Everybody
stopped in the middle of what they were doing.
There were three other trolleys in our aisle and, in the act of being
respectful and silent, the scene looked like something from a movie where
everything becomes somehow frozen in time.
Some people were facing the shelves, others stood behind their
trolleys. I was half into the butter
fridge when the Last Post sounded, allowing myself only to straighten up but
not move. Shana was stuck reading the labels of dips. For a minute the air settled cold around us
and the only sound was the whir of the fridge motor. Then the loudspeaker said ‘thank you’ and, as
if everyone had suddenly defrosted, we all started moving about again, taking
up our conversations where we left them.
Shopping done, we’d yet to decide where we were going. We’d joked with Amy and Ash that we didn’t
always have plans and how liberating that could be but the day proved
otherwise. Sometimes not having plans is
a pain in the arse.
Our original idea was to go to Rockingham but it seemed too
close so we opted for Mandurah instead.
Mandurah looked beautiful with its bridge over the flatwater and it was
there we did our shopping. Alas, no dog
friendly places existed anywhere near anything nice, so we kept going. We never doubted that we’d find
something. Congratulating ourselves for
our spontaneity a search on Wikicamps revealed that the Miami Caravan Park was
nearby, and it received good reviews. We
smiled to each other across the cab.
But the Miami Beach Caravan Park was having a tree-lopping
day. We pulled in behind a large tip-truck. Up in the tree-canopy men with chainsaws and
safety caps were sawing through large branches while men below collected and ground
the branches into woodchips. The
chainsaw shrieked and whined and the chipper growled and crunched and noise
layered upon noise and it was exactly what we didn’t need after a weekend of
alcoholic excess. We reversed out and
drove on. Aimlessly. A bit less sure.
A sign along the highway directed us towards the Dawesville
Caravan Park. Demonstrating admirable
assertiveness I wheeled in without even consulting Wikicamps (or Shana). From the entrance all we could see were very
old caravans with fibro annexes, their wheels removed, axles now resting up on
bricks. It indicated a park full of permanents and semi-permanents. A woman met us at the office, her body openly
losing a battle with hay fever. Her red,
puffy eyes could hardly see and her nose leaked continuously. She told us she’d locked herself out of the
office. She wasn’t really sure how. “Find the space you want” she sniffled “the
hubby will come and collect the money later.
There’s a grass site and concrete slab.
Take your pick”.
The grass site had a woman lying next to it, an empty four
pack of Bacardi Breezers beside her. The
concrete slab was cracked, uneven and across the road from the woman. Beside it sprawled a young guy on an old
weather-beaten lounge outside his annex, a cigarette in his mouth and an
overflowing ashtray on the ground beside him.
Although this reads like cheap characterisation I assure you it was
real. And they seemed to be having a
conversation, shouting their sentences across the road. We drove between them.
Then around a loop and straight back out the gate.
We didn’t even stop to tell the woman we weren’t going to
stay.
The Lake Clifton Caravan Park is rural and serene. It could even be described as boring. We found it about 15kms further down the
road. There’s not many residents
here. There’s lots of vacant spaces,
probably because the park is a tad pointless.
It provides no access to Lake Clifton but, if you park on one of the two
sites up the hill down the back, you can glimpse Lake Clifton through the
trees. So that’s where we parked. We stopped and glimpsed at Lake Clifton through
our windows and waited for the darkness to tell us the day had ended.
We give the Lake
Clifton Caravan Park 2 stars out of 5.
It was open, non-threatening, quiet and accepted dogs.
NIGHT 249 - PINE
TREES REST STOP, BETWEEN BUNBURY AND BUSSELTON.
This place came with a caveat that it is a known haunt where
local crystal meth addicts stop and imbibe.
There was nobody there when we drove near though, so we wheeled in and
‘chanced our arm’. During the late
afternoon a Jucy van pulled in beside us, but it proved to be driven by French
tourists rather than meth addicts. Just
on dark a rented Toyota Corolla with a fold out tent on roof-racks also wheeled
in. Two brawny guys got out and,
although I was concerned about how they would both fit into a small fold out
tent 2mtrs off the ground, I wasn’t concerned about their motives toward us or
toward life in general.
There was no surf in Bunbury today.
I give the Pine Trees
Rest Stop 1 star out of 5. It has been
crystal meth free for at least 1 day and counting.
NIGHT 250 - FOUR
SEASONS CARAVAN PARK, BUSSELTON.
250 nights on the road is something to celebrate and there
is nothing that shouts celebration to us, confined as we are in a small space, more
than these two words – ‘dog spa’.
That’s right, the Four Seasons Caravan Park is not only dog
friendly, it houses one of the few dog spas in the world (as far as we
know). We know that Morrissey can’t
really help it that he loves to smell disgusting. We know it’s not his fault
that he seeks out the worst smelling places he can find and then rolls in them,
over and over and over. We know it, but
we don’t really like it. But fate has
positioned us so that we can spend night 250 with a clean smelling dog. Of course we accepted.
The dog spa cost eight bucks. It was not well maintained, the water well
holding the combined stench of a hundred filthy mutts that had gone before us,
releasing a face-melting fug when the lid was lifted. It
worked okay though, with warmed water and a rich lather of bubbles. It came with a bottle of shampoo and a
separate conditioner, just like at the best salons. Moz stood there, reluctantly compliant while
Shanzie did all the work. He spent the
night smelling clean and fresh, (if still slightly damp). It was nose-joy for an evening and, to set
the bar even higher for night 300, I’m hoping to somehow retard his
flatulence.
We’d spent the day in Busselton. Here an old man in bib and brace overalls barely
covering his belly drove us to the end of the Southern Hemisphere’s longest
jetty, the train clunking and jerking all the way. There we took a tour below water-level, a
teenage guide pointing out various fish and different types of coral. We then rode the train back again, dismissing
the romantic idea of walking back hand in hand while laughing and pointing
toward dolphins just like they do on the front of the brochures.
We give the Four
Seasons Caravan Park 2 stars out of 5.
There was nothing wrong with it but, besides the dog spa, it had little
to recommend it either.
NIGHTS 251 &
252 -
CAVES CARAVAN PARK, YALLINGUP.
If ever you’ve wondered what impact the sport of surfing has
had on society in general then Caves Caravan Park offers a clear example.
The Caves Caravan Park is over 100 years old. Not the buildings - they’re reasonably modern
- but the park’s actual existence. It is
opposite to, and owned by, the very plush and exclusive Caves House, as it has
always been. Caves House was built to
cater for the well-heeled and time-rich as a place to stay while journeying out
to look at the many large caves in the area.
This was in the horse and cart days.
The Caves Caravan Park was originally cleared as the space allotted to
the servants and staff who accompanied these idle rich. At the time there was no thought of going to
the beach just a kilometre away. Why
would anyone want to struggle down the cliffs to stand on a wind-blown stretch
of reefs and sand?
Over time the caves
continued to be a popular tourist destination and the caravan park began
catering to the middle classes who came to visit – those with a tent or a
caravan and enough money to do the trip without being able to afford to stay in
the mainhouse. Still few people felt
they needed to visit the oceanside.
Then, in the early 60s, surfing became popular and the beach
became attractive and desirable, if only initially to the young and the
radical. But as the young and radical
became older and established the sport exploded. Surfing became the coolest of the cool and
you didn’t necessarily have to be adept at it, or even to surf at all, to feel
part of this new cool clique. You could
simply buy the lifestyle by living near the beach.
Now most people want to live near the beach. In fact, the beach has come to symbolise
freedom and fun and is a cornerstone of Australian identity. In Australia, living near the beach is symbol
of success, the closer the better.
And thus the poor old Caves Beach Caravan Park has become
supplanted as a ‘go to’ place in the area.
Yallingup is now a famous surfing destination with a new and modern
caravan park built a stone’s throw from the main reef break. Only 1 kilometre from the same break, the Caves
Beach Caravan Park is now considered too far away, too inconvenient. It now has to accept dogs to attract
patronage and we were thankful that it did.
For us dog owners, being allowed to camp so close to several quality
breaks is a rare treat.
And, in another glorious piece of synchronicity, the break
that was working the best while we were there – Rabbits – is right in front of
the dog beach section of Yallingup. I
could (and did) surf the glassy little right hand beach barrels while Shana and
Moz did what they do along the beach.
Two days in a row. Happy times!
But one can’t surf all day (especially at an age when able
to apply for pensioner’s insurance) so, after the morning surf, we took a day
trip into Dunsborough and up to Cape Naturaliste lighthouse. Dunsborough is a beautiful little town. I often say “I could live here” about places
I’m attracted to, but Shana rarely does.
She’s more discerning than I. We
both said it about Dunsborough though.
We even looked into real estate windows to compare house prices and in
the local paper to find a job (Shana would get a job at a winery cellar door,
I’d become a groundskeeper/handyman, possibly at the same winery).
It still lingers as a
strong desire within us.
We give the Caves
Caravan Park 2 ½ stars out of 5. It had
an actual old school games room complete with pinnies and a space
invader/pacman/galaxian sit down arcade table.
It had an ensuite on every site.
It also had magpies that swooped to protect their young and a rogue
dugite that was known to sun itself along a main path, but these were both over
the other side of the park and, whilst heeding the warnings we gave them little
thought.
NIGHTS 253 – 256 -
MARGARET RIVER CARAVAN PARK
While writing for this blog a man has just been killed by a
shark at Gracetown. The news is
tragic. I feel for those left behind,
especially his wife and kids. If the
attack had of occurred two weeks ago I doubt I’d feel so affected. I’d have felt sad and a bit spooked, but I
wouldn’t have the attachment to it that I do now. That’s because exactly a week before the day
of the attack I was surfing the same coastline, about 500mtr south of where the
attack occurred. So now in my mind I can
see the break he was at; I can see where he would have been sitting in relation
to the reefs and jutting rocks. I can
see Gracetown itself, the small cluster of houses cut into the hillside, the
general store, the jetty and boat ramp, the bay, North Point, South Point, the
petrol pumps with a hand-written sign saying they’d run out of diesel, the
silver metal phonebox with the orange Telstra logo. I can see the intersection to get to Lefties,
turning left pass the small estate of new houses with no lawns, following the
recently tarred road up over the rise and down into the carpark. I can see the carpark, half-full on top of
the headland, people sitting on their bonnets checking the several breaks
visible from up there. And mostly I can
see the monument that has been erected at the top of the stairs that leads to
Lefties. It’s a monument where Shana and
I stopped and reflected about how good life can be and how easily it can be
taken from you. The monument is a
memorial to a fatal shark attack that occurred there 3 years ago. It is lovingly crafted, incorporating a
stone-walled shade shelter in the shape of a surfboard. The monument mentioned in its carved epitaph,
just as recent newsprint mentioned in this week’s paper, that the surfer died
while doing something that he loved. I
get it. The waves I caught around
Gracetown where fun. It is spring and
the waves were small but they had surprising power. They drove me faster and
harder than I thought they would.
It really is easy to fall in love with the surf along the
Margaret River coastline. But it’s a
dangerous love, I’m sure we all realise that.
Because the Margaret River coastline is still remote. It is untamed, wild and desolate. Sharks live and hunt there. It’s a well-known fact. But, even so, many thousands of surfers can
say what I’m about to say - I’m so very thankful
it wasn’t me.
R.I.P. Chris Boyd.
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