Sunrise at Cape Hillsborough |
Pound for pound, today was the best day of The One Day Tour, thus far. No doubt, others will compete with it and in the end, it will be impossible to tell one glorious, highlight-riddled day from another. Enough that this will be one of them.
Let me try and explain why.
For starters, I slept well.
For some reason, bladders don't work normally on the road or rather, they work to a new normal. What is one visit to the toilet at home, if any, during the hours of sleep, becomes several when the toilet is now up to a hundred metres away. Don't ask me why unless you are developing a thesis.
Last night, I was on a home footing and even better, so was Sue.
As a result, I woke bright-eyed just before sunrise, with deep purple and crimson messages written on the first ten degrees above the ocean horizon. We bounced from bed - me dressed, Sue still resplendent in Friesian flannelette - and took ourselves to the beach, eager to be alone with one of the rare treats of an Australian sunrise and one almost unique to the beach at Cape Hillsborough. In the hour before sunrise every morning, kangaroos gather on the beach to rake the wet sand for mangrove seed pods to supplement a diet left short of key nutrients they would normally find in the bush. How they discovered buried in the sand in the first place is one of those adaptive mysteries of evolution.
As we emerged from the short track to the beach, there they were, about six of them in a group ... as were about fifteen humans, variously arranged on chairs with binoculars, cameras and hot coffee. It's the reason why some people come here, because at sunrise, when the new sun eases it's way through the early stages of the white light spectrum, the coats of these macropods glow a rich browny red in the first rays. Taken in that light, in this unusual and normally unexpected context, it's an event not to be overlooked.
Of course, before we arrived at that point, there were range of colours to be sumptuously enjoyed above the horizon and glows spreading from the tree tops and down the cliffs as the sun climbed out of bed.
It was an hour of silent appreciation.
As we turned to leave the beach, later than most, an English voice called out, "Peter ... Peter ... it's Ross."
It was Ross and his partner Chrissy, whom we met at Mt Morgan and were subsequently mentioned in these dispatches. Small worlds shrink further on the road and it has been our luck, over many trips and incumbent years, to be blessed with repeat meeting to be with those we would have chosen to catch up with again.
To recap, Ross and Chrissy are from Oxford (the place not the institution) in the Old Dart and are in Oz on a working visa but are currently doing some road miles to add to their already impressive back catalogue of Australian experiences.
After a quick exchange of what's what, we agreed to meet up for drinks this evening. This day was unfolding nicely and we still hadn't had breakfast.
After gobbling cereals and yoghurt, we donned the walking boots and set of on the Andrews Point walk, only typically for us, in the reverse direction. This was to take advantage of the low tide, as the traditional end of the track is across rocks and beach that submerge as the tide returns. We struck out for Wedge Island, by the shortest possible route across the sand, covered in Sandballer crabs, to reduce the percentage of rock walking we would have to do. All went well until the sand turned to softer sand, which morphed to even softer sand and then to grey mud. Keen for company, it buried each successive step further into itself, until my ankles were only just visible among the spiral trails of the Acorn worms. It might have been an easy retreat but it wasn't, as the first turn and step to firmer ground was a philosophical one only. If only my boots had shared my feet's desire to depart. They stayed and so did my lower half, while my top half's momentum carried my weight forward and very nearly resulted in an inglorious, face first plop into the grey goop. Luckily Sue's arm shot out in support.
Applied strength eventually released me but it was a sloppy slow trip back to the rocks, the first ten or so metres of which were covered with razor sharp oyster shells.
Wedge Island |
Following our escape, we made our way across the rock causeway that links to Wedge Island while the tide is away on Moon assisted duties. The views back to the beach were pretty but not quite worth the effort made to enjoy them. We returned the way we had come - extant the mud - and started climbing the stone steps which marked the end of Andrews Point walk ... remember, we were doing it backwards. It was a sharpish climb, with pockets of rainforest along the way and a series of small lookouts, each with its own special view. In the places of filtered light, beautiful butterflies with variegated blue wings rose in clusters every few meters. Trying to capture them in photographs or video was a bit like holding onto lightning but the experience would have been enough. There was something quiet serene about their erratic, silent flight, especially in the masses they gathered and moved in.
Each successive lookout gave us a new set of gasps until we reached Turtle Lookout. Here, at the highest point of the walk, our view extended, literally, from east to west, a full 180 degree field of vision which faced south to Mackay. Blue sky, blue green water.
Below us, way below us, four sea turtles dived and surfaced in their own time, oblivious to our presence, gobsmacked above. A dolphin was conducting rolling parabolic dives off the point and a Brahminy Kite floated past us several times. There were butterflies here too: the blue ones who had buzzed us all the way up the track, orange ones who darted about low to the stunted vegetation and just a few white ones.
The crowning glory was a huge sea eagle, which we first spotted far off to the east and watched in awe as it floated closer and closer, until it passed immediately overhead, perhaps only twenty meters above us. It was a breathtaking communion.
Certain that we had seen the best the walk could offer, we were again stunned just five minutes past Turtle Lookout, as the vegetation disappeared on our right hand side and opened up a vista across the small bay to Cape Hillsborough. It was a view which remained constant for the next two hunted metres before we again descended.
We could have stopped the day right there and not have been short changed but decided instead to find the Old Station Teahouse, back along the road which bought us here. The business gets its name from its building, which was originally the railway station at Marion, in the Pioneer Valley west of Mackay. The owners, Michelle and Dwayne, bought the building through tender and transported to its current spot, which they had previously traded as a nursery. The Teahouse now provide a variety of well prepared, tasty dishes for lunch and a great cuppa (my personal favourite being French Earl Grey). Michelle was good enough to listen to my dietary restrictions and design a meal specifically for me, ex menu: a really delicious, healthy ham salad.. Access to wifi allowed me to catch up on absent blogs and photos and then they joined us for a long chat about the area, places we might visit and Dwayne's plans to take the family on the roads of Australia. It was a three and a half hour complete and delightful surprise.
The Old Station Teahouse |
By the time we returned and read for a time, it was back down to the beach and another incredible sunset of pinks and orange. If only we hadn't needed to make plans for the Anzac Day weekend, we would have stayed here for longer.
We will definitely return!
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