Sunday, September 5, 2010

Thanks for sharing the ride

Leaving home, Saturday 17 July 2010


18,075 KILOMETRES

7 WEEKS ON THE ROAD

40 DAYS OF RIDING




Arriving home today - Sunday 5 September 2010

I rode from Apollo Bay to Melbourne today via Stonehaven where Michelle and Darren provided a sumptuous lunch for me and other guests.

The ride down the Great Ocean Road between Apollo Bay and Lorne after torrential rain and gale force winds overnight was a slow ride, dodging unliftable rocks, very substantial landslips, fallen trees, and more than the usual number of motorists on the wrong side of the road.




The great joy of the ride was of course in doing it, not in finishing it.




Thank you to all of you who provided acts of kindness during my ride. Please come to Melbourne so I can reciprocate in some way.



Thank you also to those who provided comments on the blog and emails to me about the blog and the ride – you are the people with whom I knew I was sharing my ride, and that sharing added greatly to my enjoyment of my 7 weeks on the road.


 
Those who rode with me some of the way

BRENDAN

Melbourne to Nowra


MIKE

Melbourne to Orbost


ROB

Brisbane to Nambour


JOHN

Near Adels Grove to Gregory Downs


LIZ

Broome to Derby and return


KYM

Adelaide to Millicent


NOEL

Cape Bridgewater to Apollo Bay


ALAN

Apollo Bay to Stonehaven



Honour roll of those who kindly provided hospitality to me


Joc and Tom

Susi and Peter

Angus and Hiromi

Henry and Betty

Brian and Susie

Helen and Tim

Jill S

Jan and Rick

John and Heather

Gary and Merry

Adrian W

David and Jean

Ian and Deb

Ness and Adam

Rob M

Clark

Catherine and Martin

Kym and Jo

Margaret

Michelle and Darren



 
Honour roll of commentators (in order of appearance)


Georgie L

Griggsy

Jen W

Jess L

Genevieve R

Brian M

Rob A

Liz L

Mike L

Brian W

Hunto

Rod J

Alan H

Tony N

Noel L

John and Heather P

Susan P

Dan H

Jack A

Cathy S

Tim McF

Andrew L

Annie M

John R

Deb S

Doug S

Michelle M

Eric F

Annaliese A

Althea W

Redrider

 
 
I must confess to a certain level of curiosity as to just who has been sharing the ride with me via the blog. If you haven’t already communicated this to me in some way, and you are minded to help satisfy this minor curiosity of mine, please send me an email at:   johnlangmead@gmail.com


The rewards for doing so will be immunity from the slide night (unedited, longer than a Wagnerian opera but less interesting), and an undertaking from me not to mention the ride to you ever again, unless asked.





Thanks for sharing the ride.


John Langmead

5  September  2010.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Streaky Bay to Apollo Bay

There is something utterly untamed and beautiful about the west coast of South Australia. The arid limestone cliffs are surrendering in slow motion to the endless Southern Ocean swells. The sea here is deep, blue, clear and teeming with life. These photos were taken at Venus Bay.






















It is said that on the very south of the Eyre Peninsula, there has never been a drought. This is entirely believable on riding through the area in Spring. Crops appear to thrive even though fringed by miles of white sand dunes and limestone cliff-tops devoid of any vegetation.




Bays like the one on the photo below abut every headland on the west coast. I have fond memories of swimming at such beaches many years ago. I can still recall the chill of the water, its absolute clarity, and the fact that we invariably had the beach entirely to ourselves. It was always in the back of my mind that in swimming on the west coast I was potentially part of a food chain. Great white sharks are plentiful in this part of the world but most of the time appear content with the more traditional fare of fish.


A quintessential West Coast bay.

I have been asked by many people about the range of the GS. It has a 20 litre tank which will take me between 250 and 300kms depending on load, headwind, and throttle habits. Distances between fuel stops have exceeded 300kms on many legs of this ride. I have carried two flexible bags designed to hold fuel – an 8 litre and a 12 litre bag. Mostly I have only needed the 8 litre reserve. There were difficulties in handling fuel in a flexible bag with the lid off and trying to invert it to pour fuel into the motorbike fuel tank (try it – when you hold the bag by both top corners the weight of the fuel causes the corners to come together which ejects fuel). But these problems were overcome with a piece of dowel to support the top of the bag and keep the corners apart, and one metre of plastic hose. Not a drop of fuel was lost during refuelling in this manner.




Canola dominates the palette of the Eyre Peninsula landscape in Spring. It smells unpleasant, but attracts photographers in droves.







Liz and I lived in Port Lincoln for three years. In riding from Streaky Bay to Cowell via Port Lincoln, I traversed the two sides of the inverted triangle that is the Eyre Peninsula in a single ride - something I didn't do when I lived there. Around every corner and left and right on every horizon were reminders of wonderful times.


The east coast of the EP is a complete contrast to the west coast. It is on the shores of the Gulf of St Vincent, and beyond the reach of ocean swells (but not beyond the territory of the great white pointer). The waters here are quiet, the beaches sandy and cliffless, but the hinterland is clothed in rich wheat, barley and canola crops. I recall snorkelling off Tumby Bay years ago for scallops, which were then cooked on a camp fire on the beach, with cut up bacon and Worcestershire sauce on top. Warming up by that fire and eating our ‘scallops kilpatrick’ – that was a moment with no room for improvement.


This roadscape is typical of the southern but not the northern EP.

One of the reasons the southern Eyre Peninsula remains a well kept secret is that the Eyre Highway between Port Augusta and Ceduna cuts right across the top of it avoiding Port Lincoln.  The road to Port Lincoln which goes SW through Whyalla is so boring and desolate that even Burke and Wills would have turned back if not before reaching Whyalla, then certainly upon getting to its city limits. It is a mini Pilbara – overburden from iron ore extraction has risen to form strangely unnatural shaped hills, the towns and ports are heavy and dirty with industry, and the saltbush plains are simply unattractive. But the rewards for the well-informed, the truly adventurous or the merely obstinate who push on to Port Lincoln are great.


In Adelaide I spent a very relaxing two nights with Kym and Jo.

Kym.
 
Kym rode with me on his Yamaha Virago to Millicent. We had light misting rain through the Adelaide Hills, where once again the Arum Lily appears wild and in abundance.

The Adelaide Hills.
Robe bakery.

Provincial bakeries are a mainstay of the touring motorcyclist.

My brother Noel and I had arranged to meet in Cape Bridgewater, just west of Portland, on Thursday afternoon.


The GPS wanted me to ride into Portland and then reverse direction and go back to Cape Bridgewater. So at a point on the Princes Highway when I was due north of Cape Bridgewater, I took a likely looking dirt road to the right with the intention of finding a more direct route to the Cape. It turned out to be a 4WD road (or series of roads – many turns were required) which was very sandy. Once again I found myself 3WD short on my 1WD GS. But with the tyre pressures lowered to 25psi, the suspension set to maximum range and softest ride, I spent a final and very enjoyable 30kms standing on the pegs of the GS in the solitude of the coastal scrub north of Cape Bridgewater. Navigating successfully to Cape Bridgewater involved ignoring virtually every suggestion made by that British woman on the GPS. She is clearly out of her depth off main roads, and should be ignored in such areas.


 
While on this road I came across a mother duck waddling along with 7 or 8 ducklings behind her. As soon as I appeared, the ducklings headed for the scrub and the mother took off and flew at low level (2-3 feet) straight down the middle of the road keeping just ahead of me. She was constantly looking back at me. There was no reason why she couldn’t have climbed left or right and turned back to her ducklings. But she just kept flying at my speed and leading me away from them. Eventually I stopped to give her a chance to desist in her elaborate decoy strategy and to give her some show of reuniting with her ducklings before sunset. After I stopped she climbed and peeled off to the left and presumably went back to her family.



Posties get it easy in the bush.

Eventually by continually turning south on a series of dirt and sand roads, I came out on a small bitumen road on the western tip of Cape Bridgewater.




Cape Bridgewater is a tiny settlement, on a vast bay which faces south east. There was a strong onshore wind this day.




The crescent shaped bay with its many kilometres of 60-70 foot dunes is a perfect coastal hang gliding site. The steady 20 knot sou’easterly which blew for the entire period of our stay was the ideal wind for hang gliding - only seabirds were taking advantage of it.


















The views left and right from the verandah of Seaview Lodge.









The entrance to Cape Bridgewater.
















Room 3, Seaview Lodge, Cape Bridgewater
 
Seaview Lodge is a very nice B&B, most capably run by Dennis. But Noel and I needed a D, B&B. So Noel arrived with two large rump steaks purchased in Portland, a Greek salad complete with fetta and olives, and an apple crumble and whipped cream. They were all in the bag on the back of his bike. We dined like kings on Thursday evening (Noel cooked, I was on standby in a consultative capacity, not needed as it turned out; and I found something more suited to my culinary skills in the form of dishes). We were the sole occupants of the Lodge, and had the dining area with its open fire to ourselves.
 
 

The steaks arriving in Cape Bridgewater on Thursday afternoon.
 
The west coast of Victoria usually enjoys regular rain in Spring, but at the moment it is absolutely sodden. The State of Victoria has received most welcome rains in past weeks, and indeed is in danger of floods in certain areas today. The paddocks we rode past all had water lying in them, dams on farms were overflowing, and in places the water encroached on the road. Despite the many years of drought, this much rain in such a short time is in danger of wearing out its welcome.







L to R

The GS, me, my brother Noel, the Yamaha FJ1200, at Port Campbell.

Just east of Port Campbell on the Great Ocean Road.
GOR just past the 12 Apostles (so called; there are in fact only 8 remaining).
Over the last three years I have ridden the Great Ocean Road more than any other road. I particularly like the view from this spot and have often stopped here.
The mighty GS in one of its natural environments, the temperate rainforest in the Otway National Park.


The GOR just east of Lavers Hill, in the Otway Ranges.
 
 

Castle Cove, near the Aire Valley (where there were more Arum lilies growing wild). Another favourite spot of mine.



Arrival in Apollo Bay on Friday. 17,850kms down, 200kms to go.


Apollo Bay and the west coast.  Where I like to be.










 I will ride the final 200kms from Apollo Bay to Melbourne tomorrow.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

The Last Left Turn

It seems remarkable to me as I tap this out in Streaky Bay on Saturday night (August 28), that after breakfast Thursday week ago, I was saying goodbye to Liz in Broome and heading off for Port Hedland and Perth. I have ridden on 9 of the 10 days since then, averaging 605kms per day. The longest day was 735kms (Coral Bay to Geraldton) and the shortest 347kms (Perth to Margaret River). I have covered a total of 5,446kms since Broome. I have done 16,000kms since leaving Melbourne on Saturday July 17. I have been on the road for 43 days, and on the bike for 34 of them.


I am not a finely tuned athlete but I am feeling much fitter and fresher than I probably deserve to at this point. I attribute it to the wonderful design and engineering of the GS – hundreds of kilometres of bumpy bitumen on some of the less well-maintained sections of road have left me feeling no different than after the same distance on freeway quality roads. That suspension with its variable settings is worth its weight in gold. Also, the riding position puts no weight at all on my arms and wrists (or shoulders), which over 6 weeks is important. The right wrist (the throttle hand) certainly tires more than the left, but the simple throttle lock I installed before leaving allows me to give that hand a rest from time to time, and I am sure this has prevented right wrist issues developing. The new Shoei helmet with its flip-up  chin guard, is working very well. It is comfortable, and makes taking photos or having a drink very convenient.

While I am in a rare mood for mere facts, I make he following observations about wildlife as a road hazard. The kangaroo is truly ubiquitous, but appears to die mostly at night. Rabbits must all be on leave, as few have been spotted dead or alive. The emu is not that numerous near roads, but is totally wacky when encountered. The Cassowary is a figment of the imagination of those promoting tourism in the Daintree. The only camels sighted had bright blue and red saddles and were carrying fare paying passengers in a commercial operation in Broome. The wombat is of course nocturnal, and so has not been spotted by me on this ride. Cattle are all over the place, and must be watched carefully. The young ones in particular are skittish and unpredictable. They are all large. Goats were seen in great numbers south of Carnarvon, but appear to have more road sense than most other creatures which make appearances near roads. Road kill presents a particular hazard in the form of the birds feasting on it. As you approach an item of road kill the crow (or raven to be precise) leaves first, then the lesser raptors such as the kitehawk take to the air, and the magnificent wedgetailed eagle is always last to leave. I have got into the habit of braking fully and being prepared to stop unless the eagle clears the road before I get there. They leave late, they leave low and slow, and their flight path is not necessarily a self-preserving heading at right angles to the road. The eagle can fly towards you, or away from the road then back towards you. They seem loathe to give an inch over their possession of the road kill. They would be a bad look on my helmet or chest at speed. And finally, salties. They are everywhere and they will kill you and eat you, whether you are on the road or not. They are the apex predators’ apex predator.

Coral Bay marked the change from being north to being south for me. The ocean water was cool, as was the wind off it. There was a hint of swell in the sea. The morning chill eased as the sun climbed, but only to mid teens, not to the high 20s and low 30s of previous weeks. My jacket liner was needed, as were thicker gloves. I was no longer in the tropics or the sub-tropics. I was south.




See the black line in the water? That’s coral. That stuff on the beach? That's golden sand, not mud.  That Barrier Reef crew should come over here and take a few notes.


The elegant little boat ramp at Coral Bay provides access to coral reefs offshore, such as can be seen on the horizon.


I saw enough of the Ningaloo Reef area and the Shark Bay area to know that I will come back to these places with Liz.



This dirt road between Normanton and Burketown has stuck in my mind as an archetypal outback dirt road.
So after several weeks of variations on the above dirt road theme, it was a refreshing delight as I approached Geraldton to see green pasture, good bitumen, plenty of natural growth and evidence of moisture in the skies.
Do not select your motel after dark.


The Pilbara saw the land being tortured to yield up its bounty. Between Geraldton and Perth the earth yielded gentler and more aesthetically pleasing riches.









Jurien Bay was a pleasant surprise. It was there I met Karl, Jacqueline and David – see you all in Stuttgart.


A most pleasant few days were spent in Perth with Catherine, Martin and their girls Hannah and Isabelle (and Elly). Thanks for the great hospitality.




The new left pannier was available in Perth and was fitted to the bike. The back tyre was replaced and I expect the front tyre will need replacing in Adelaide. The GS also received its well-earned 60,000km service, and my replacement GPS was wired into the bike. When I left Perth on Tuesday morning the bike was once again in excellent repair and the engine was purring.



Driving through the Margaret River area was like driving through parkland. Knee-deep green pasture, magnificent eucalypt stands, and Arum Lilies growing wild at every turn. What a contrast to the harsh environments of the last few weeks.

 

The only stretch of road between Bunbury and Augusta where a winery or part of a winery was not actually visible.


This is where the spares are kept for the WA emblem.

Storms were approaching from the west as I rode down the west coast south of Perth, giving dramatic backdrop to the shores of the Indian Ocean.








South of Yallingup there was an abundance of west-facing bays like this one.

In music, a grace note is a note which does not contribute directly to the melody or harmony, but is a short almost insignificant note which nonetheless adds beauty to the whole. It would not surprise me to learn that Gracetown just north of Margaret River was named by someone with this in mind. A handful of houses nestled on red soil overlooking an emerald bay, with the powerful Indian Ocean swells arriving with unabated momentum from half a world away.


Gracetown

The tranquility of Gracetown was shattered last week when a lone surfer was killed by a shark at a popular point break.



The shark attack occurred in the waves to the right of the point just visible to the left of the vertical post in the photo above. Nick was a father, husband, son and brother.

The notice, pinned up a couple of days after the attack, urges surfers to go out and get a really great wave to honour the spirit of the surfer who died. When I was there they were doing just that in droves.

There was a solid overhead surf pumping when I stood on this lookout, and there were a dozen or more surfers off the point revelling in the conditions.

Every surfer knows the risk, and willingly takes it. It will always be so.



I stopped the motorbike deep in this forest, and just sat for a while. It was early morning, moist and cool. If you have never breathed deeply in a eucalypt forest in the early morning, I suggest you make arrangements immediately to do so.



Margaret River is full of rather twee guest houses and B&Bs. I believe however that some of them are really comfortable. I spotted the bike above which is somewhat like mine, in such a place. I of course camped that night on a rocky headland with salt spray hitting my tent as the relentless cold westerly winds blew low scud across the cold sliver of a new moon and chilled me to the bone. Or did I just dream that in my king sized bed in a twee B&B with the electric blanket on 8......?



I came across a few roos on the outskirts of Margaret River.

“As a matter of fact I do pump iron. Why do you ask?”


“On your marks, get set.....just kidding. Do you like the profile?”


“Hey, watch this! Wanna see a handstand?”

He was still performing as I rode off.


Footnote for those unfamiliar with the literary device of ascribing words to creatures which speak very little or no English (and you know who you are): the kangaroo in question did not in fact say any of the above things. I made them up.


The Indian Ocean west of Cape Leeuwin, on the very SW tip of Australia.

This is a wild place.

I made the last of my three left turns on this ride at Cape Leeuwin. I am now done with north, west and south. Easterly headings will see me in Apollo Bay by Friday of next week. This is a week earlier than originally planned, but the trip ends when it ends. I have no agents importuning me to arrive home at a time convenient to the press, the prime minister (whoever that might be) and a welcoming throng. Welcoming family and pug crosses will do me nicely.


I will ride to Port Lincoln tomorrow, and possibly beyond. I plan to be in Adelaide by Monday night or Tuesday morning. I will leave Adelaide on Wednesday with company at last – Kym is going to ride out of Adelaide with me for a distance yet to be decided. Regrettably, my brother Noel could not join me in Ceduna, which is as big a disappointment to him as it is to me. He will join me however in Victoria somewhere west of Apollo Bay.

The Starburst Palm.

 

They do have some big karris in the southwest. In Victoria, such a sight would be marred by signs saying ‘Trees near edge of road.’ I kid you not, such signs exist.

In WA, the trees are left to convey this message all on their own.


Some parts of riding around Australia on a motorbike are less fun than others.

Rainwater puddle deep in the karri forest in SW Western Australia.


Saltbush plains near the Nullarbor. I feel dutybound to report that on the Nullarbor, the arbors number a little more than null. But generally, it is a flat treeless plain as advertised.

Border Village, yesterday evening.


I woke at Border Village to find frost on my bike, a heavy fog, and 1-2 degrees C. The fog was particularly thick at the border, but looking straight up I could see that it was not very deep, and there were already areas of white glow where the sun was making inroads so I headed off expecting it to burn off pretty quickly. If I was in an aircraft, I would certainly have started up and taxied out in expectation of having enough visibility for a takeoff.




My first few kms along the Eyre Highway in fog were pretty slow. As the fog started to thin, I got a few sightings of the coastal cliffs with sloping ground above them, and the great Southern Ocean below. At one spot there were white tendrils of fog flowing in slow motion down the low points in the sloping ground and spilling over the cliffs into the sea.



The fog did burn off quickly to reveal a sparkling blue morning. When I got glimpses of the water off the cliffs in the Bight, there was a sizeable glassy swell rolling in.



This is a web which can be seen from outer space, and which only traps the occasional blind insect which stumbles into it. The web is the handiwork of the generally unhappy looking Nullarbor Slim Spider.




The last time I visited Nullarbor Roadhouse it was with Lizzie in a Cessna a bit like this one, only faster (a Cessna 182RG).


A few kms past Nullarbor Roadhouse is a turn off the Eyre Highway to the Head of the Bight. For many years Southern Right Whales have used the waters close to the cliffs here during the winter months as a nursery.









You really had to be there.  There was no room on the bike for a telephoto lens unfortunately.

Remarkably, near the cliff-tops where these photos were taken is an official little hut which is the only access to the track to see the whales, inside which adults get charged $12. I inquired politely before paying as to the exact nature of the value added to the whale watching experience by such payment. I was told that it funded the hut. I suggested that the hut added very little if anything to the experience of looking out to sea at whales. Then I remembered that I am a peaceful person and not a troublemaker, and bade him good day and moved on smiling and whistling (alternating of course, as I can’t do both at once) to my hut-enhanced whale-watching experience.



At Penong on the west coast of South Australia, they tap the water in the artesian basin with great gusto.


This is one of the runways at Ceduna Airport.
I took this photo because when I lived in South Australia I landed on this airport many times. I have landed here in dust storms, driving rain, strong winds, thunderstorms, and at night with kerosene flares lined up down both sides of the runway. Fortunately, such events were all on different occasions.


The groundsman at the airport back in the late 1970s was a young fellow with a family, who used to get overtime if he had to put out the kero flares for a night landing. So on my fortnightly flying trip to Yalata (west of Ceduna) I would defer my departure from Yalata to dusk to ensure a night landing at Ceduna, which kept me current at night flying, and the groundsman with a bit of overtime pay. He generally gave me a lift into town to my motel after he had collected the flares and stacked them away.

On one occasion I landed here with two student pilots in a C172 and the wind was blowing 40 knots right up the strip in the photo above. There was a flight service unit at the airport, and they informed us by radio that 40 knots was the steady wind strength – no gusts, just 40 knots. The sky was blue. 

We landed and stopped short of the first taxiway to the right in the above photo (just before the three white cone markers on the edge of the strip), and were faced with the dilemma of taxying with a 40 kt side wind. An aircraft on the ground in such a situation gets much more lift from the wing into wind than from the partially shielded wing on the downwind side of the aircraft. Net result, the aircraft wants to flip. My two student pilots were rather large lads off the land, and they exited the aircraft while it was still pointing into wind. One got hold of the wing tip, and the other leant his considerable mass over the left wing strut. I then taxied at less than normal walking pace to the square of bitumen outside the flight service office, and parked into wind. That square was no more than 30 or 40 paces wide.

For departure, I deemed the crosswind taxying option more hazardous than taking off directly into wind straight across the bit of tarmac outside the flight safety office which was for parking only. So the three of us climbed aboard. The airspeed indicator was showing 40 knots before I had started the engine. I fired up the engine, applied full power and we were airborne before the edge of the tarmac. I never heard any more about that takeoff.



Streaky Bay. Delightfully peaceful. As the wind died late this afternoon, the cloud cover moved to the east allowing the setting sun to put on yet another show.



This photo was taken half a dozen paces from the front of my unit.


As the tide receded, I walked out into the bay with the pelicans.

My favourite feathered aviators and I were standing in two inches of water for these photos.













The seagull in this final photo had a most curious technique for locating food in the wet sand. He would literally run up and down on the spot, his webbed feet making a clicking sound as he pounded them up and down on the wet sand. He would then stop and pick up whatever food it was that was that unwisely popped its head out of the sand to see what was going on.



Sunset in Streaky Bay, South Australia, on Saturday 28 August 2010.


A feeling of contentment is unavoidable in this place at this time.