After months of low level preparation my two weeks leave had finally rolled around and it was time to set off for the Flinders Ranges!
Our plan for the trip was to trailer our bikes out to Broken Hill. Why I hear you ask? Well, I have done the inland roads of central New South Wales a million times and spending two full days droning along 1700 kilometres just to get to Broken Hill had zero appeal, not to mention the life it would take out of the tyres.
So I hit the road at 0520am....in the pishing rain! Did I mention that it hasn't stopped raining here in Brisbane all year? No? Well it hasn't and I could barely see for the first twenty kilometres or so but thankfully the roads were pretty deserted at 0520 on ANZAC day.
In fact, the roads were deserted for pretty much the whole 849 kilometre drive to Dubbo, so it was a good quick trip.
I rolled into Dubbo nice and early at about 3pm and checked into the motel. I quickly unloaded my bike and went for a look around town. I lived in Dubbo for four years in the mid to late 1990s so it was interesting to see how much it had grown.
I called Steve via the Cardo helmet comms (how good are these things?!!) and he said he was only about thirty minutes away. I then proceeded to tool around east Dubbo and wandered out the Wellington road ten kilometres or so to wait for him. It wasn't long before a very bright headlight came around the corner and I could see it was a black Africa Twin. Not sure who the dude was riding it though because the bloke was wearing a grey suit. I powered off to catch up and I could see by the rego plate that it was in fact Steve. New gear, eh?!
I rang him again and he suggested we pull into the brewery on the road into town.
A brewery? Here in Dubbo?!!
"Sure, why not" was the obvious answer!
Jumping off the bikes I admired Steve's fancy new ADV suit. Along with his Tech 7 Enduro boots he really did have all the gear!
I must say, I was pleasantly surprised at how nice Devils Hollow brewery was on a warm Friday afternoon. We had nothing like this when I lived here and venues/facilities like these definitely help to retain good people in the "smaller" regional areas. (Dubbo is actually about 55 000 now, up from the ~35 000 25 years ago!)
A couple of quick beers + some takeaways and we were off to the motel to load the bikes onto the trailer, ready for an early start tomorrow. Dinner at the R.S.L. seemed appropriate on ANZAC day and despite being busy it was quick and tasty.
Next morning we were up early and hit the road westward. It was soo nice not to be driving into the rising sun and soon we were through Narromine and on to Nyngan. From Nyngan the skies darkened and we encountered some decent rain.......plus the highway patrol....no conversation was entered into though!
Enough to have several inches of water running over the road at the many causeways along the road. Very unusual for out here!
Cobar was wet but the main street was very busy. We didn't stop there....
Once we got west of Cobar we were astonished at the number of wild goats along the roadside. There were tens of thousands of them over the next 454 kilometres to Broken Hill! We were constantly slowing down for them then having to accelerate again. After a while it became very noticeable that while there were hundreds of dead kangaroos along the road there were no goats. Yep, the goats were far smarter than the indigenous wildlife (no big surprise I guess) so we only slowed for the goats that were right on the road verge from here on in. That certainly cut down on the anxiety!
We stopped for a rest break and when we got going I had the drone follow us for a few kilometres while Steve drove. We got some interesting shots of the nothingness that is western NSW....plus some unexpected shots of a few of the MANY goats.
We unloaded the bikes and our gear into our cabin then went for a drive into town to look around and to find some dinner. The main street was eerily deserted as we wandered around. We grabbed a beer in the Palace Hotel (as apperaed in the movie Pricilla Queen Of The Desert) and checked out the murals that decorated the walls and ceilings.
Then it was back to the cabin to prepare our gear for riding off tomorrow. I had a plan for tomorrow's ride but the days after that....? Lets just see.....
Cheers.






















Looking forward to your tale. We just oved the Aussie Outback and were seriously impressed with just how good those country hotels are, both in terms of the grub they serve and the decor.
ReplyDeleteThat particular bit of the outback is very special. So different to much of the rest of it. I hope our photos do it justice!
ReplyDeleteYeah, goats seem to be the smartest of the roadside critters, sheep are morons. Haven't had to deal with a kangaroo but seen dead wallabys down South and chased an emu up the road once...
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to hearing about the riding...
Ah man I think emu's are stupider than Kangaroo's and they are dumb as a door post.
DeleteOff to a good start, those drone shots really work well, gives a great idea of what the landscape is really like out there, something that's very hard to do from ground level.
Emu's are dumber than Roo's? Damn.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to next post.
Yes, yes they are.
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