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29/04/26 Menindee to Lake Malta Bush Camp

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Sometimes I do silly things. Who thinks it's a good idea, when buying her lunchtime sandwich, to also buy a chocolate bar for later? Who then stuffs it in her snack bag where it joggles around in the sun for the next 4 hours? Who then decides to eat her chocolate bar, clocks that it's a bit squidgy, opens it anyway, and then attempts to stuff it in her mouth whilst still wearing a fly net? Do you know how tricky it is to wash chocolate out of a fly net when you're being very parsimonious about water use? Alright, let's move on. Another of Menindee's old stone buildings. I visited the river on my way out of town. Before the installation of a bridge in 1927 there was no way to cross the river other than by private punt owned by a Mr Turkey Creek Smith, who lived on the river bank and kept a pet sheep to coax recalcitrant stock onto his punt for river crossings.  In 1882 the NSW Government installed a new punt which transported people and stock for free and put quite a...

27/04/26 Bush Camp to Menindee

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 The goats had forgotten all about me by morning, and grazed contentedly past my tent as I lay and watched the rising sun slowly erase the stars.   I puttered around packing up camp, enjoying the peace and quiet, and what do you know along came a farmer on his ATV, puttering in circles across the paddock. This was quite off-putting for any morning activities which required partial nudity, as I had to keep a wary eye on him (could have been a her, I couldn't tell) in case they decided to come and say a jolly good morning. Which they didn't, and I escaped to the road with my dignity intact. The road was brand new and as such quite boring. Construction had cleared all the trees away: there were no random puddles of shade in which to take a breather and no bushes to shelter twittering little birds. Fences marched along on both sides, sternly dressed in barbed wire and netting and I didn't see a single goat that wasn't safely behind them. I dreamed of the motel room wai...

26/04/26 Pooncarie to Bush Camp

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Morning in Pooncarrie. Rain moths spending their short adult lives in fruitless combat with the lights on the ablutions block in Pooncarie. You wouldn't believe it from the photos I've shown of the Darling, but the paddle steamer trade extended well up this stretch of river, and the Pooncarrie wharf was considered flood-proof due to being built on two levels and therefore accommodating large variations in river flow. The grey nomads offered me extra water as I left the campground, careful not to step on any dead/dying rain moths. I literally had nowhere left to store 500ml of water, so I stored it in my stomach and my kidneys will thank me for it I'm sure. I stopped off at the General Store where I bought a salad roll to eat as a treat at lunch time. The thought crossed my mind that I should ask that beetroot be witheld from the roll, but I did not act on it. Instead I took my salad roll, stuffed it into my bag which was jammed under the bungees on the back of my bike be...

25/04/26 Bush Camp to Pooncarie

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The little girl had pink cowboy boots and carried a soft drink in a pink sequinned stubby holder. "Hello," she said.  "You're riding a bicycle." "I am." "Do you have a car?" "I left it behind.  I'm just riding my bicycle instead." She thought about this and discarded it as a train of thought not worth riding.  She held up her stubby holder, pointing to a gap in the sequins.  "One's missing." "So it is.  You'll have to find a new one and stick it on." She thought about that too, then turned tail and ran back into the beer garden of the Pooncarie Pub, where I heard her start a conversation with her mother about where one might procure a sequin and some glue.  Not wishing to meet a mother who had just been given a mission she most assuredly didn't want, I acted like the coward I am and slunk into the Pooncarie Pub by another door.  But that was at the end of the day: let's start at the beginning....

24/04/26 Outback Almonds to Bush Camp

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 I've got a little beef with the weather. It's meant to be Autumn, moving into winter. That means cooler temperatures and a comfortable little tailwind. Instead, a 'blocked high' hangs around like an unwanted guest, saying "I really should go" but all the while puffing out unseasonable temperatures and nasty little headwinds. Good morning from Outback Almonds. That fat moth from last night was a rain moth. The adult moths emerge after heavy rains in late Autumn. They only live for two days during which they do not eat and some of them choose to spend their time banging themselves against lights. Remind me not to be reincarnated as a rain moth. From Outback Almonds I followed the High Darling road which, true to its name, stayed above the flood plain. It was all gravel with occasional patches of sand, through which I walked. I'm being very conservative about sand: I figure my biggest risk is falling off in sand and breaking something, and then I'd have ...