Fraser Island
We had scored a great hotel deal that included the ferry
price ($175 for us and the car). It departed
from River Heads and arrived on Fraser Island at Wanggoolba Creek. When we boarded the ferry, Ben was thrilled
to meet up with two kids he had made friends with in Townsville. He played with Angus and Sophie for the whole
trip over and was disappointed to find out that they were not staying in the
same place with us.
Upon arrival, we had to drive about 45 mins across the
island to Eurong Resort. All of the
roads on Fraser Island are sand so a high clearance 4WD is needed. Luckily, we
have one of those and it was certainly needed.
There are potholes and soft sand sections, tree roots and steep
inclines. The speed limit on the
internal roads is 30kmph and you’d be hard pressed to do more than that without
risking serious damage to your car. The
main ‘road’ along 75 Mile Beach is actually an official road with an 80kmph
speed limit. It is patrolled by Police
and National Parks Rangers and has several sections where it doubles as an
airstrip so you need to make sure you look up!
One standout feature of Fraser Island is the abundance of
dingo warning signs. They are everywhere. You literally cannot turn around
without being reminded not to walk anywhere alone and to keep your children
close by. Do not run anywhere. Do not feed the dingoes or leave food where
they might be able to access it. If you
see a dingo, do not run away, stand tall and back away slowly. If attacked,
fight them off aggressively because they will try to kill you. Don’t leave bait out when you are fishing, shut
it in your car. Don’t clean your fish
where dingoes might see you. Don’t even
leave food in containers on top of your car because dingoes can get up there
and break them open. The message is very
clear. And yet, we still saw stupid people
throwing food scraps into the bushes and letting their kids walk around
alone. Some people just can’t be told.
We checked into our hotel, delighted at full sized beds and
a room four times the size of the caravan. We unpacked before taking a drive to
Lake Birrabeen. Lake Birrabeen is a
lovely lake with white sand and clear blue water. We had a swim and headed back for dinner.
The following day we did a big drive up 75 Mile Beach. We had to time it quite carefully as it is
recommended that you only try to cross Eli Creek within two hours of low
tide. Eli Creek is close to Eurong and
we had to cross it on the way up the beach and once again later in the afternoon
to get back south again. We did NOT want
to feature in one of those ‘4WD is washed out to sea’ pictures.
Awesome beach driving. |
We stopped off at Eli Creek on the way north. There is a boardwalk you follow upstream and then the current is so strong that you hop in the water and float down. Many people take inflatable tyres or boogie boards and Ben did it several times, even going upstream once out of curiosity.
Floating down Eli Creek. |
You hop out and walk back up the boardwalk to the start again. |
He was very excited to see his friends Angus and Sophie
there too but we couldn’t stay to play for very long as we had to be back
before the tide came in too far.
Our next stop was the wreck of the Maheno, a container ship with
distinguished ANZAC service that had been sold to the Japanese for scrap in the
60s. During a freak storm, it became
detached from the ship towing it to Tokyo and it beached on Fraser Island. Nobody wanted to pay to recover it so it
stayed there rotting and rusting over the decades.
Further north was Champagne Pools, rock pools that produce champagne
like bubbles when the incoming tide causes waves to break over them. They are pretty cool and the views from the
path on the way in are spectacular.
The pools from above. |
The following day was rainy and dreary as we ventured inland again, to Central
Station and Lake McKenzie. Central
Station is a big camping area next to Wanggoolba Creek. It was a sacred Aboriginal women’s area and
later the central home of logging operations on the island (back when logging
was permitted). The remnants of an old school
and some other buildings are still there and several walking tracks intersect
here, making it a good spot to do some short walks.
We took the track along the banks of the creek, which is
shallow and crystal clear, flowing silently over pristine white sand and
surrounded by lush green ferns and trees.
Everything has a covering of moss and the air has a really damp,
rainforest feel. We were all being very
dingo aware and Ben picked up a big whacking stick to walk with. He’s been watching Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles so stuck the stick down the back of his shirt ninja style. This amused another group of walkers, some
Spanish tourists and we had a great chat to them along the way.
As we arrived back at the car we saw a huge black crow ripping into the rubbish bag that the people parked next to us had put up on their roof, presumably to keep it away from dingoes. They would come back to a very big mess.
We headed to Lake McKenzie, the jewel of Fraser Island. This is what it looks like in the brochures:
This is what it looks like on a rainy, overcast day:
It was still lovely, but we had to use our imaginations to
visualise the beauty that has it listed in ‘Top Ten Beaches of the World’. We had a swim but it was a bit cold and windy
so we didn’t say too long.
In the carpark, we saw our only dingo of the four days we
were on the island. It was a juvenile
and had white socks. It mainly skulked
in the bushes, scavenging the food that people had tossed in there but it did
come out for a short time to walk openly around the carpark.
We continued our drive and went to a lookout above Lake
Wabby and another overlooking Stonetool Sandblow.
Our hotel building was right next to a tennis court and Ben
was keen for a game so we borrowed some equipment and had a hit. The balls they gave us were absolutely
rubbish so it was a bit hard but Ben enjoyed doing an activity we haven’t done
for months.
It bucketed down rain overnight but luckily had stopped by
morning. It was still overcast but we
could see the sun trying to break through.
We hadn’t been for a swim in the resort pool yet and Ben was very keen
so we spent the morning there before heading out to the beach again for some
fishing.
Apparently Fraser Island is a
fishing mecca but it seems that you really need proper surf rods as the incoming waves are so
strong that it’s hard to cast out far enough for your rig not to just get
washed back in straight away.
While we were driving along the beach we saw an odd black
and white lump of something on the sand near the waterline. We went to investigate and found a huge ball
of plastic bags all tied around each other and tangled. It weighted at least 25 or 30 kilos. Obviously a lot of that was sand and water
and it took both of us to lift it up and carry it back up the beach to the car. We couldn’t work out how it had got there but
did our bit for the environment by taking it back to put in the bins at the
resort.
We caught the ferry back to Hervey Bay that afternoon and after
unpacking washed as much sand as we could out of the undercarriage. Jenny spent a considerable amount of time
lying under the car with a hose and came out covered in dirt and leaves. We then took the car straight to the car wash
for another good wash and a thorough vacuum.
We had to make sure to wash every bit of salt water out of all the nooks
and gaps and troughs under the car to prevent rust setting in. Finally Jenny spent 30 minutes spraying the engine bay and underneath with degreaser to get out any last remnants of salt. As a result of Jenny’s OCD about it, the underside
of the car and particularly the engine bay, now look almost as clean as when we
drove it out of the dealership. You’d
never know it had been through months of red dust let alone four days of solid sand
and salt 4WDing.
Hervey Bay
We intended to stay one extra day to check out Hervey Bay
before continuing south but loved the feel of the place so much that we stayed
an extra four. There is a fantastic long
esplanade right along the beach with a bike track running end to end. There are cafes, playgrounds, parks, exercise
stations (Ben loves those), a free water park and a small skate park. There a several short jetties and one huge
one that runs 800m out to sea. We spent
a relaxing few days riding, swimming, fishing and playing. It was nice not to be rushing around
sightseeing for a while.
Down he goes.. |
Ben was keen to go for a ride at the bigger skate park in town so we took him there one afternoon. There was a group of older boys there and we were blown away by how good they were. Thanks to Ben’s interest, we have been to a lot of skate parks all over the country and the guys at Hervey Bay are by far the most talented we have seen, on BMX and scooters. They were flipping and flying high, riding on front wheels and doing all kinds of things we usually only see on YouTube.
One of the boys doing crazy flips. |
The Three Blonde Nomads are now reluctantly leaving Hervey Bay as we need to be home
in Melbourne in 15 days.
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