Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Moving Southward

Saturday, 2 June 2012
The "Mini Pinnacles"
Beach at Barn Hill Station Stay


Rocks at Barn Hill

Barn Hill Station Stay was our destination today. Situated on Thango Station, a working cattle station of approximately 43,000 acres, stretching 85km along the coast between Broome and Port Hedland and running 8000 head of Brahman cattle, the campsite is a little oasis for travellers. There is a small shop/office and a real "lawn" bowling green, 'well it is grass', and they put on a great 3 course roast dinner on Sunday nights for $15 per head plus entertainment which anyone can join-in with, if they can, and dancing is encouraged. We all took our own chairs, tables, crockery, cutlery and drinks and they served about 150 meals and we all had a great time. The power situation is very limited and you pay for what you get, none of it will run anything with a heating element. We chose no power. The ammenities blocks have no roofs but do have hot water, some provided by black poly pipe lying on the ground during the day. Frogs were common in the toilets and they attract snakes but we were fortunate not to encounter any of the snakes. The view of the beach and ocean is brilliant and the rock formations, known as the "Mini Pinnacles" are great. We tried fishing without success but we did see dolphins swimming in the area so that ended the fishing excercise.

Thursday, 7 June 2012

Cape Keraudren campsite was our destination today after a 12km rough gravel road trip from the main road. There is not much at this campsite, no power, no water and not much beach. The men decided that it wasn't worth trying to fish in this area so we had a couple of quiet days before we moved on to Port Hedland.

Saturday, 9 June 2012
Port Hedland Golf Club was our resting area as all caravan parks were booked out by mine workers or the early travellers. The amenities in the club house were good and we stayed for a few days. Port Hedland isn't the prettiest town in the country but it could be described as interesting. The whole town is covered in a layer of red dust from the iron ore mining operations in the area and as most of the housing is occupied by the mining industry workers who won't be in the town for many years and don't own the houses, many are in need of some tender loving care.
Iron Ore Loading facility
Iron Ore Train
Port Hedland has a large port area for loading ships with iron ore and salt. There is a huge salt production plant where sea water is pumped into large ponds, dried naturally by the sun and then scraped into piles and loaded onto trucks before being loaded onto the ships. The iron ore is transported to the port by very long trains, up to 220 trucks and several kilometres long.
Salt Stock Pile
Iron Ore Ship