6 Apr 2025
Was another early morning at the Shelly Beach van park, so many people up and about and it is amazing how many people cough first thing in the morning (and smoke, even before the sun is up, what is that). So as all these nice folk woke me up I decided to make sure anyone who wasn't yet awake was. I packed up the tent and everything as quietly as I could, but just after 0700am I decide to leave for the day and, well lets just say The Count isn't a morning car, took a great deal of cranking and rough idling to get going. I actually did feel sorry for anyone when was still asleep.
On setting out I discovered that those two great mining trucks that take up the whole highway are actually on quite the scenic trip and were straddling the highway just out of Ceduna, so they waved the two cars behind then around and away we went. I stopped at Penong for some fuel and as I was filling the mining truck convoy was just passing, so they were travelling a lot faster than me, so to give them time to get along I stopped at the Penong Windmill Museum for a bit of a look. Turns out it is open air and it is drive through and free.
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Australia's Biggest Windmill |
This is "Bruce" named after it's owner. Bruce has a 35 foot tower and a 35 foot diameter. It can pump 4.4 gallons every stroke of the pump and it can pump 250,000 gallons a day. Supposedly Bruce was one of 5 owned by the railway in Australia. It seems Comet knew how to make a decent windmill.
So onwards across the central section of Australia's south we reach the Eastern end of the Nullarbor Plain, The Treeless Plain, well perhaps there are one or two really big shrubs here and there.
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Eastern end of the Nullarbor Plain |
Next stop the Nullarbor Roadhouse for some of the most expensive fuel I have ever purchased. I am very pleased The Count only has a 25 litre tank and it was still half full anyway (you never pass a petrol station out here if you are half or below), it was $2.82 a litre. Really feel sorry for all the people with big RAM and Chevy two cars, I'd cry if I was paying over $200 a time to fill it up.
Onwards again, long straight roads with not a lot of traffic, which is fantastic, less trucks and when they do come along they can just go around. Oh and I forgot, the mine truck tour was at the Nullarbor Roadhouse, swapping over the police escort team or something. Anyway next stop was the Bunda Cliffs lookout on the Great Australian Bight. Stunning coastline, just amazing.
And imagine the surprise as I was just about to turn back onto the highway and the mining truck tour goes sailing past with all light flashing. I was happy to let them go as I say they were travelling faster than I was and now hopefully they have passed beyond where I am now at Eucla (which has it's own time zone in Australia, well a couple of other places do too, but it is exclusive) and therefore I won't run into them again tomorrow too.
Anyway Eucla, Police and a Nursing service a few houses and a Roadhouse with a caravan park and a motel. That's about it. Well there is the old Telegraph Station down a dirt road, not sure if I am going to do that or not, we'll see.
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Swallows seem to love the main buildings |
You have to hand it to these Western Australians, they do do a quite good sunset...