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Cape York – Day 3

Probably the shortest day of the trip in the air, from The Tip to Weipa. The geography is not was varied on the west coast of the Cape, but plenty of rivers and lakes. Report and pictures here.

Cape York – the magic continues

The magic continues, Day 2 of the Cape York Helicopter Trip. Report and photos are here.

The croc in the tannin coloured water is a 14 foot long!

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Or a WWII Bell P-39 Aircobra, recently discovered after going down over 70 years ago.

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Picca in the wet season

Last year The Doc visited Piccaninny Plains on Cape York, an AWC event. That visit inspired the helicopter Cape York trip this year.

Bungie, who The Doc met at the Piccaninny event, was the pilot who flew him all over The Cape. This time we flew over Picca (its nickname) on Day 4. We were going to land but a late start due to rain meant we could not. The Doc took some wet season photos and the Report and photos are here.

AWC’s Brooklyn Sanctuary

Not many people get to visit Brooklyn Sanctuary. Brooklyn has the greatest diversity of wildlife (500 vertebrate species) than any other single property in Australia. The Doc flew over and then drove out as part of his recent trip to Cape York. The short Report and photos are here.

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Back in Sydney – all cut up

The Doc has returned to Sydney after a trip to Flinders Island and a brief stopover in Tasmania. Time to sort through Cape York and Flinders Islands photos.

Two more skin cancers cut out yesterday, that makes three in total. The Doc has a few stitches 17, 11 and 8 plus the internal stitches. The first operation has gone well with minimal scarring (17 stitches), let’s hope the other two work out the same.

Outback Driving Tips

Some driving tips The Doc has learnt on the Adventure, in part inspired by the excessive roadkill he has seen.

  1. If you cannot see the where the road is going, slow down.
  2. Stay focused on driving (not talking, listening to music or day dreaming), especially on the ever changing road surface and keep a lookout for wildlife on the side of the road. If you are part of a convoy, communicate material information on the UHF.
  3. When approaching dips in the road (often at floodways), slow down or the car will bottom out on the exit of the dip. You can damage wiring or puncture a fuel tank.
  4. People drive too fast in the country. A good off-road track can be travelled at 80kph, as the quality drops so should your speed. At night I travel between 40-60kph on good roads and slower when needed. If wildlife is around the speed drops to 30-40kph, even on good roads with spot lights.
  5. A dirt or travel track has far less grip than a bitumen road, so slow down.
  6. More corrugations, means less grip.
  7. Slow down before corners, as corrugations and soft edges mean you can skid off the road.
  8. Road tyres and suspension have less grip in off-road situations, so slow down.
  9. Emergency braking is far less effective on a dirt or travel track, you often skid when braking hard and the car can angle sideways and in extreme cases skid off the road. So slow down.
  10. During dawn, dusk and night-time, slow down. Many Australian mammals are nocturnal.
  11. Do not swerve to miss wildlife, more lives are lost by the dramatic swerve than hitting wildlife. The best way to minimise roadkill is not to drive between dusk and dawn, but if you do, slow down to 30-40kph and hit the animal head-on. Large animals like cattle are problematic, I once saw a Kenworth Double B semi-trailer, with a bullbar, disabled after hitting a cow, if is was a car the driver would probably be dead or severely injured.
  12. Know your wildlife and your surroundings.
    1. Emus often travel in groups of 2 or more, so if you see one emu, look for others. If they are located on different sides of the road there is a high probability one will cross the road. Once you see one, immediately start to slow down. Even if they are one side of the road, emus can use a zig zag pattern to avoid capture, so they may cross or recross in front of you. Track the emus until you safely pass them.
    2. Some animals like wallabies can be blinded by headlights at night. When blinded the animal freezes and you must either brake or swerve to avoid – a gentle swerve only so you do no lose car control. Some drivers think the animal is dumb, which is not the case, they are blinded. If safe to do so, turn down your lights and they will often run away.
    3. Kangaroos and wallabies also swerve or zig zag to avoid capture, and they can swerve in front of your car. Sometimes they will start to cross the road in front of you, stop, then go back. This significantly increases the chance of hitting them.
    4. If there is fencing close to both sides of the road and there is a kangaroo or wallaby be very, very careful as the animal is trapped by the fences and may panic and the chances of a roadkill shyrockets. The incidents of roadkill in this scenario seems to be much higher, and they can be multi impacts – the most I have seen is 3 wallabies at once.
    5. Feral goats rarely pose a risk, they seem to be smart enough not be hit. I have only ever seen one dead and the experienced outback drivers were very surprised.
    6. Wombats tend to run to the side of the road, get into cover, often just leaving their backsides showing. In their burrow they use their backsides to crush any intruder into the roof of the burrow. However, I have seen the “backside” gesture done in the middle of the road, while the wombat remains stationery. So beware, as wombats can do a lot of damage if hit. Its like hitting a slab of concrete.
    7. Speed, a car travels much faster than any predator, so animals struggle to react in time and a collision occurs, so slow down.
  13. Even when you take all these precautions, you only ever minimise the risk of an accident, you cannot eliminate it. After 150,000km, much in remote parts of Australia, The Doc has run over a small snake which was only spotted just before it was hit, and no he did not swerve. A small bird flew under his car. One possible roadkill of a nocturnal bird, which was slightly hit but hopefully not kill when it run under the car. Several close calls with wallabies and emus, but no hits, because The Doc was driving slowly and managed to avoid a hit! The Grenadier hit a wallaby on its first remote trip.

In summary slow down, concentrate and know your wildlife.

Flinders Island – seascape

No carcasses today, although The Doc did photograph a few including the Bennett’s Wallaby and a Potoroo, at least I think it was. A Potoroo is a kangaroo-like marsupial about the size of a rabbit.

He is a seascape from a beach close to Emita Beach, a beach without a name. Looking this good it should have one. That is lichen growing on the granite. Two pictures stitched together, cropped slightly, some saturation and sharpening. Click on thumbnail to see full size image.

FI-Rocks

 

Flinders Island – Little Penguin

The Doc booked an appointment with the hospital to take out my stitches on Friday. I have about 10 after the operation to remove a skin cancer.

The Doc explored this morning and this afternoon went for a walk, taking landscape and textures photos around Emita Beach and Marshall Bay, including Castle Rock.

He also found a Little Penguin carcass wash up on Emita Beach. It was no older than 48 hours, showing no sign of predation. It appeared it died at sea and washed up on the beach, no signs of rigamortis . Lots of carcasses around Flinders island because of the abundant wildlife, at least was not roadkill.

 

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One of the secluded beaches The Doc visited. Lichen growing on granite creates some awesome colours. Click on picture to see the large version.

FI-Rocks

Flinders Island – wombats

Having visited Flinders Island previously, you hit the ground running. An early change of plans however, because it is a public holiday today, so The Doc cannot buy food. So off the pub for lunch. They are generous helpings and The Doc still feels full at 9pm.

When driving around the Island there was a lot of roadkill, especially wombats. Rowena at the car hire firm had mentioned at least 4 juvenile wombats were being looked after. She described them and they sound quite cute.

A quick rest then off to West End for wildlife, quite a few Bennett’s Wallabies and Pademelons. The Doc is still sorting the photos so only a wombat today, roadkill I am afraid, as the live ones tend to avoid people. They tend to give you their behind, often just running into the bush leaving their backsides showing, one today did a similar thing on the road, which increases the chance of becoming roadkill.

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