Monday, June 28, 2010

Larapinta Trek - Day 3


Our day starts off at beautiful Ellery Creek


Today we are walking through the vertical-spined dolomite country of the Bitter Springs formation.   These 800 million year old rocks contain fossilised stromatolites, the cyanobacteria that were amongst the first life on this earth.   This trail is again through woodlands and spinifex.




The trail follows the southern side of the Heavitree Range crossing a series of low ridges and hills. The trail is geologically interesting as the boundaries of several different rock types are followed. These are part of the Bitter Springs Formation which is a series of limestone, mudstone, gypsm and halite that was deposited in a shallow sea around 800 million years ago. These were compressed into rock then very steeply tilted by huge compression forces that also created the MacDonnell Ranges. Subsequent erosion has removed overlying rock and exposed the tilted formation. Rock colours are beautiful, inlcuding black outcrops of dolormite, white calcrete, purple mudstone and orange-red ironstone.

















It was a LONG, HOT, difficult hiking getting here - but, we made it up to the top!  Trig Point



I found this shell laying in the sand.  It looks EXACTLY like a shell I found on my brother's property in Northern Michigan, USA.


On our way for a swim at Serpentine's Gorge.   Lookin' sexy in swimsuit and hiking boots!   Haven't bathed in days...woooo hoooo!!







As you can see, my setting up tent skills are quite lacking...  :-)



We were all very impressed at the size of Sophie's bra.



The Royal Throne....

Dinner preparation!


Time to cook!  But, we just get to kick back and watch, since we are on holiday, and the guides are working.  :-)


Yum!  Time for appetizers and wine!


Aboriginal Tjukurpa
Waterhole Tjukurpa

When, in the beginning Tjukurpa, three beautiful young women came down from the stars to visit the earth, they went walkabout.   From time to time, they needed to pass water;  where they did so, they left sacred pools.   If a mortal man should come upon one of these waterholes and drink from it, the liquid would greatly increase his capacity to learn Tjukurpa knowledge.

It is this process that took men out of their primal embryonic state, in which they lived as the Inapatua:  formless and shadowy beings whilst only faint traces of what they would one day become.   The Numbakulla were two sky-brothers who, whilst looking down upon the earth, decided to come with their knives and give final shape to these plastic creatures.   They turned them into men and women and sent them off to populate Australia.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Larapinta Trek - Day 2 - Stanley Chasm

Beautiful Eucalyptus Tree














Stanley's Chasm was utterly amazing!!

















What views!





We were about to find out why there was a warning sign that said:  "Experienced hiker's only"!




















Check out this massive crack through the rock...



Time for dinner!  We drink wine, they cook the food!




Ummm!   Fish cooked in a pit with holendaise sauce!   Not bad for roughing it, ah?


Time to sit around the fire and drink wine...now, that's a vacation!



Tjukurpa - Aboriginal Dreamtime
Frill-necked Lizard
Walek, the frill-necked lizard, led the liard people of Nelgi Island (fify kilometres north of Cape York).   They had yet to discover fire and their cooking procedures, using sun heated stones, were subsequently long and laborious.   But Walek had a sister living in the far off islands of Papua New Guinea from where smoke was often seen to rise.   It was Walek who undertook the long and dangerous journey to his sister's village.  At first, she refused him and then gave him a cold coal, but he persisted and finally returned to a hero's welcome with the gift of file.

Because lizards are connected with thieves (stealing fire) and shape shifting, we might relate this to the little boy who came from nowhere and would never tell anyone about himself.  He was very lovable and was adopted by the tribe, but, soon all manner of things, except the Tjurunga and other sacred objects, began to go missing.   He was eventually caught and was about to have a thrashing administered when a falling spear injured him and he died.   His body was covered with bark but the next day it had disappeared.   In its place, there was only a lizard.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Larapinta Trek - Day 2

Section 1, Wallaby Gap - Simpson's Gap
My camp at daybreak



Packing up....







From Wallaby Gap, we follow the tral west through manficent, shady Bloodwoods and tall Ironwoods, the dominant trees on this narrow alluvial flat.   We may catch sight of a shy Echidna or Black-footed Rock Wallaby as we approach Simpson's Gap.   A short transfer takes us to the stunnig Standley Chasm where we undertake a spectacualr loop alk including an exciting descent (more like tretour!) through the rugged heart of the Standley Chasm.   Then we trasnfer to our wildrness campsite.




We saw lots of these!!


The ladies are ready to go!
















On our way to Scorpios Pool












Scorpion Pool
We followed a track north, up into a small gorge to the base of a small water fall.  Scorpion pool is a temporary waterhole which has high calcium content, as the water is seeping from limestone.   The pool is named after harmless Water Scorpions that live in the rocks below the pool.  It was a stunningly beautiful, magical place.  These pictures do not do it justice.







Fairy Springs Junction




The Larapinta Trail heads west to cross a creek then follows the baeof the Rungutjirba Ridge south-west.   The trail passes through woodland rising gently onto a broad spur then swings north then north-west, climbing steeply onto Rungutjirba Ridge.








Time for lunch!   We had some beautiful birds join us....


Now, we are off to the famous Simpson's Gap...