Camping on the Sandy Blight
delen
mail
loading...
Loading ...

Panoramische foto door David Rowley PRO EXPERT MAESTRO Genomen 14:08, 08/07/2011 - Views loading...

Camping on the Sandy Blight

The World > Australia

  • Vind ik leuk / Vind ik niet leuk
  • thumbs up
  • thumbs down

Some travellers with a deep spirit of Adventure spend their holiday, not on the beach or in the mountains, but in the one of Australia’s harsh deserts. Shortly before night fall a camp is selected and firewood collected. Winter here brings cold, often freezing nights, and the fire is required for both heat and cooking. The camp is surrounded by desert oak trees which help make the camp a more pleasant place to spent the evening. After dinner is eaten the travellers unwind and talk over the day’s events and socialise with a lone traveller which they met during the day before retiring to their swags for a night’s sleep.
This camp is located next to a very remote track named “The Sandy Blight Junction Road”, which skirts the Eastern edge of the Gibson Desert. During the night no cars or any other vehicles pass. The people in this photo are likely the only ones for around 80 kilometres (50 miles), and most certainly the friendliest and kindest people for 10 times that distance. (Thanks guys, I had a really good time camping with you).

 

comments powered by Disqus

Panorama's in de omgeving van Australia

map

A: Getting Water On The Sandy Blight Junction Road

door David Rowley, 15.1 hier vandaan

Surface water is not very common in this part of Australia. This traveller makes use of water from a ...

Getting Water On The Sandy Blight Junction Road

B: Sir Frederick Range

door David Rowley, 35.8 hier vandaan

Once upon a time there was a man who went by the name Len Beadell, he was employed as a surveyor and ...

Sir Frederick Range

C: Along The Gary Junction Road

door David Rowley, 224.8 hier vandaan

A view from a small hill that sits along side the Gary Junction Road. A road originally made in the 1...

Along The Gary Junction Road

D: Jackie Junction

door David Rowley, 246.4 hier vandaan

One of the many remote road junctions on the series of roads made in the 1950s and '60s by The Gunbar...

Jackie Junction

E: Uluru

door Klaus Mayer, 270.3 hier vandaan

Uluru

F: Kings Canyon

door Klaus Mayer, 305.7 hier vandaan

Kings Canyon

G: Mount Beadell

door David Rowley, 358.4 hier vandaan

Mount Beadell, named after the late Surveyor and explorer, Len Beadell. Len lead a road building part...

Mount Beadell

H: Mount Conner from Lasseter Highway

door Klaus Mayer, 358.6 hier vandaan

Mount Conner rises 300 metres above the vast plains lining Lasseter Highway in the south-west of Nort...

Mount Conner from Lasseter Highway

I: Albert Namatjira Monument

door Klaus Mayer, 437.1 hier vandaan

A monument to one of Australia's great painters and possibly best known artist, Albert Namatjira. The...

Albert Namatjira Monument

J: Breaden Hills

door David Rowley, 496.3 hier vandaan

As the Canning Stock Route passes through the Southesk Tablelands region, the Breaden Hills can be se...

Breaden Hills

Dit panorama is genomen in Australia

Dit is een overzicht van Australia

There are no kangaroos in Austria.

We're talking about Australia, the world's smallest continent. That being cleared up, let's dive right in!

Australia is a sovereign state under the Commonwealth of Nations, which is in turn overseen by Queen Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, Queen of Australia and Her other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth.

The continent was first sighted and charted by the Dutch in 1606. Captain James Cook of Britain came along in the next century to claim it for Britain and name it "New South Wales." Shortly thereafter it was declared to be a penal colony full of nothing but criminals and convicts, giving it the crap reputation you may have heard at your last cocktail party.

This rumor ignores 40,000 years of pre-European human history, especially the Aboriginal concept of Dreamtime, an interesting explanation of physical and spiritual reality.

The two biggest cities in Australia are Sydney and Melbourne. Sydney is more for business, Melbourne for arts. But that's painting in very broad strokes. Take a whirl around the panoramas to see for yourself!

Text by Steve Smith.

Deel dit panorama