This is most of the area I traveled. Yes, I could have gone by air, but it is more costly and this way I got to experience the area and meet people.
LeaveCairns by bus at 2 pm—change several times for a 14 hr bus ride to Mt Isa. A dismal mining town where I have an 8 hr. layover. I will be staying overnight before the next bus ride which is 14 hrs to Tenennt.
Leave
Next leg is 20 hrs to Darwin . Good thing they stop often enough and these Road Stops have coffee/tea and good sandwiches and pastries.
Somewhere into this part of the trip, the bus pulled over
and stopped. Both drivers (we have to have a relief driver on these long hauls) got out and started tinkering with the engine….after about an hour we were under way again. The area was so desolate, and I heard horror stories about waiting 6 hrs for another bus, etc.
The heat is like a bad Mississippi day in August—and this is the best for Darwin . There are young people backpacking all over. They are from every country imaginable and carry such loads you would not believe. Backpacker Hostels meet them at every stop and they can stay for $8 to $15 per night in dorms or sometimes separate rooms. They let this ‘lil ole lady from America ’ go along and I was treated very well.
About Darwin :
The settlement in the Northern Territory was just as troubled and violent as elsewhere in Australia , with Aboriginal groups vainly trying to resist the takeover of land on which their way of life depended.
The road south to the railhead at Alice Springs was surfaced, finally putting the city in direct contact with the rest of the country. Darwin was attacked 64 times during the war and 243 people lost their lives.
Families were sent to Alice Springs for safety. Medical facilities were moved away from Darwin and personnel were housed in the outback in tents and makeshift hospitals.
I am leaving tomorrow to see Kakadu. I will be with an outfitter for 3 days and 2 nights. We will be camping and they furnish everything and feed me.
Here’s a little about the Aboriginal culture at Kakadu.
Kakadu is a cultural landscape shaped by the spiritual ancestors of Aboriginal people during the Creation Time (Dreamtime) These ancestors or “first people” journeyed across the country creating the landforms, plants, animals,… Kakadu National Park covers almost 20,000 sq kilometers, and includes the traditional lands of a number of Aboriginal clan groups.
During the ‘monsoon season’ the Aborigines live in the rocky areas. During that time the elders teach the children about their heritage by drawing on the rocks. Here’s some of the drawings and the one of a large figure is (to me) just like a petroglyph I saw out West.




































