Posts filed under 'trekking'

Bruce Elder review

1 comment March 16th, 2010

bruce elder

COntinental Divide Trail versus Appalachian

3 comments March 15th, 2010

Ok – to all you trekkers out there.  I am trying to decide between these two trails, and I could do with a little help.

My major consideration is walking something that is good to write about.  From this perspective, it would seem to me that the Appalachian is a great one – offering lots of weird and wonderful characters along the way, and plenty of scope for writing.  But the Continental Divide Trail seems a truly beautiful walk, and challenging in other ways.

I guess I am more interested in encountering people than wildlife – I draw much of my fascination in travel from finding odd and intriguing characters, and although I love my time out walking in solitude, I love also the constant company of those I encounter.

Having never spent a long time in the States, I would love to hear from anyone who has walked either of these trails, and could give me a little insight into the relative merits.

Email me directly, paula@constanttrek.com, or just add a comment to this site.

Thanks…

Paula

TV and a festival

1 comment March 3rd, 2010

It has been a busy week – a great one, too.

ABC TV got in touch this week, and have invited me on to the Talking Heads program, which I am thoroughly over excited about.  I really do need to learn to be rather more cool about these things, but it’s not in my nature unfortunately; I just raced off last night to have a beer at the local pub and tell all the blokes about it.

You might get a laugh at the reaction, the discussion went something like this:

Paula: Guess what Dicko?  ABC want to interview me!

Dicko (local pub goer):  About what?

Paula (somewhat deflated):  You know, that walk I did.

Dicko:  What walk?

Paula: Um, the one I wrote the books about?

Dicko:  Did you write a book did you?  Huh.Yeah, well, that sounds good, doesn’t it.  Hey – by the way, I think your starter motor needs looking at, I could hear the vehicle labouring the other day….

Yep.

Let’s just say it is safe to assume that fame is not likely to bowl me over in my hometown any time soon.

Equally as exciting, the Melbourne Emerging Writers’ Festival also got in touch, and I am going to be a panelist for their Travel forum at the Festival later this year.  This is the first time I have been involved in a writers’ festival, and I am seriously looking forward to it.  I’m a little worried I will be thoroughly outclassed by a multitude of black clothes wearing, terribly serious intellectuals, who read Kant in the original whilst watching European arthouse films – this is Melbourne in winter, after all – but I shall endeavour to hold my own.

You can come and have a right good laugh at me if you want.

For something entirely different, this weekend there are two fabulous events on in my hometown.  On Saturday, the famous (infamous?) Merrijig Rodeo is set to have the district looking even more like an audition for Brokeback Mountain than it usually does; and on Sunday, everybody with a semblance of brain and tastebuds will head out to the base of Mt Buller for Picnic in the Park.  It is such a wonderful day – every food producer and winemaker in the district has a stall showcasing their wares, and one simply wanders through glorious surroundings eating beautiful things and tasting divine wine.

Tough call.

I guess I am shamelessly plugging Mansfield and Merrijig, but honestly, we are so lucky to live somewhere so magnificent.  Every day I look out the window at the mountains changing colour with the day, and listen to the river burbling at the bottom of the yard, and think that it is nigh on impossible to envisage a more stunning place to rest and relax.

Graeme comes up when he can, and I go to Melbourne often to see him and the kids – but even though the Dandenongs are beautiful in their own way, nothing is quite so peaceful and soothing than the place I grew up.  Not to mention all the wonderful people I love who live here.  No place like home, I guess.

For those who have ordered books from me this week – for some odd reason there has been a real rush on – there will be a slight delay whilst I wait for more books to be shipped from Melbourne.  I apologise for any inconvenience, and they will be delivered within the next ten days.

Have a great long weekend….

A new walk

3 comments February 25th, 2010

Oh, I’m so excited!

This post is a combination of a promise I made to a reader a while ago and have yet felt able to fulfil; and also by way of sharing the excitement of new ideas.

Some weeks ago, I received this email from Melissa Layton after she finished reading Sahara (here in part)

What I really wanted to read about, however, was how you fitted back into life after the trek. How you felt and feel now. I’m sure others would also be interested in reading about that as well. I’m sure that the trek completely changed who you are and made you interact with the world in a different way. Perhaps that internal change is still happening. Anyway, it would be interesting to read about if you would like to write about it.

I promised her a response and asked her permission to put the email on here, as I am frequently asked the same question.

It is one I have had great difficulty in answering; not least because sometimes it has had me close to tears!

Coming back was far harder than I ever thought it would be.  After the initial rush of relief that I could eat what I wanted, sleep when I wanted, and get my body well again, other things began to creep in.

It became clear after a couple of months that my walk would not continue that October as I had planned.  This was devastating; I didn’t want to start writing Sahara because I felt that if I did, I would somehow curse myself and not be able to finish – and yet I wanted very much to describe how it was out there.  I came home to the launch of ‘Slow Journey South’, and yet it felt like a lifetime ago.  I was doing interviews about a journey that was long over, not to mention a marriage that was long over.  I didn’t enjoy that experience a great deal.

My father became terminally ill only weeks after I came home, and I spent the following Christmas in the UK with him.  He died the following January; it was awful for all of us, and particularly for his wonderful wife, Ela, who did not get the time with him they so deserved to enjoy together.

I came back to Australia and moved into my partner (Graeme)’s house.  Suddenly I had two teenage children, Graeme’s mother, two dogs and a whole new life to contend with.  With the best will in the world, I reckon the Sahara was easier!

I settled in to write the book, and found it dreadfully difficult.  Slow Journey South had rolled onto the page effortlessly.  The start of Sahara really dragged, for me; I hated – and I really do mean hated – writing about my marriage break up.  It was traumatic, embarassing, worrying, and just plain hard work to do.  It was also very tough walking out of the study and coming downstairs to a life where nobody knew how it had been, except Graeme to some degree; I talked about the walk very little (outside of media) when I got back, and so not many people had much understanding of what I had really been doing for the last couple of years.

I also hadn’t really lived in Australia for nearly 8 years.  I had few close friends, and those I fell back in with, had not been at all close to the walk.  Sometimes it felt as if the whole thing had never happened, had been some kind of bizarre dream.

I had a lot of bad dreams.  Graeme, who has done some pretty hairy adventuring in his time, told me more than once that he thought I was suffering a bit of post traumatic style fall out.  Of course, I was dreadfully disparaging about such comments, and promptly told him I thought that all of that was a load of old bollocks (as I sucked heavily on another bottle of red).

But there was no getting around some of the stranger, and funnier things: I spent months falling out of bed in the middle of the night, being used to sleeping on the ground; Graeme woke up more than once with me poised over the top of him with an imaginary knife in hand, certain he was a bandit come to steal my camels; and I frequently had a weird, repetitive dream that simply involved terror, and flames.

It was only when I finally wrote my book that I realised that dream was about when I was unconscious, and sick.  In all that time – over a year by that point since the walk – I had never remembered that time.  I’d been asked so often when it was that I was most afraid, and found the question impossible to answer – I usually said that I wasn’t really.  The real answer is that it was then.  When I was sick.  I have never been so terrified in my life.

But there were other things that were strange, and sometimes sad.  I would walk down a city street and see a woman who I knew, from her features and dress, was from one of the cultures I had walked through.  I would feel a rush of recognition, and smile in anticipation, ready to greet as I would in the desert; only to find her turning away hastily from my approach, probably wondering who the weird white woman was – but for different reasons than before!  I felt alienated from both cultures – my own, and the ones that had welcomed me so kindly.

In the meantime, I was trying to work out how to financially survive.  I discovered that teaching wasn’t an option anymore without further training.  I began doing some speaking work; but I found (and still find) it hard to self promote.  I love the talking aspect, it is the sales pitch I struggle with!  And above all, I began to recognize that the Sahara simply may not ever be a real option for return.

My life was on hold, and I got pretty down.  I wondered what to do with this website, what to do if I had no walk, what the hell to do in general.

I finished writing Sahara in September 2008, and went to Broome straight away.  I needed to clear my head, and I had got into my mind that if I wasn’t walking with camels in Africa, then I could certainly do it here instead – something I had thought of often out in the Big Empty.

But several months later, I began to realise that something was missing for me with this walk; something didn’t really feel right.

Last year (as I have heard it was for a lot of people!) was a serious low point.  I found it hard to feel enthusiastic about the book coming out – I was terrified that people would judge me harshly, or that I had not described the walk well enough.  There was so much that I had to leave out of the book for sheer want of space, and in a journey which felt like every single day was a huge adventure, it seemed impossible to convey the whole.

In many ways, I felt that if I let go of the Saharan walk, that I was giving up on everything I had fought for.  Any other project seemed a real waste of time; all I wanted, I told myself, was my ending, the point when I KNEW the walk was really over, and could get on with life.

It had been so long since I finished the book until it came out, that I had stopped talking about it much at all.  As I said, for a lot of people – even those close to me – the walk was something I finished ages ago; not something that still lived, breathed, and me up inside.  By the time Sahara was released, my confidence was at rock bottom, and I really doubted that anybody would be very interested.

I can’t tell you what a difference the book has made.  For the first time, friends I haven’t heard from in years have phoned up, and laughed when they told me it was just like sitting in the pub and hearing me talk.  People I am close to finally understand how it was for me out there, and that is just the most enormous relief.  Every email I get from readers raises my spirits a bit more; every affirmation that the book is interesting boosts me up and encourages me to think forwards.

So, as to how do I feel now?  Well – right now, I feel better than I ever have since the walk finished.  I live half my time at Graeme’s and half up at my home town of Mansfield, which I completely love.  Graeme is completely supportive of anything (or any mad idea) I get in my head, and so I feel free to dream and scheme.

Right now, that dreaming has led me to begin researching and planning a walk along the Appalachian Trail in America.  I have heard about it often, and more than anything, I just want a simple walk that helps to clear the cobwebs away.  I don’t want a massive expedition, just a well planned, physically challenging, socially interesting walk that I can enjoy, and write about.  the trail including the Canadian section (IAP) runs just under 3000 miles, so it offers plenty of time for navel gazing, my favourite occupation.  I don’t want to stick my neck right out and say: yep, this is definitely what I will be doing next March; but right now, I feel pretty good about it.  I will keep you posted.

In the meantime, I am planning on working back at Mt Buller during the ski season, mainly because my stepdaughter Chloe will never forgive me if I don’t get her free tickets to snowboard.  Oh, I should have added that – the kids have been one of the greatest joys about living back here.  Even if they do think I am barmy.

I finally feel as if things are beginning to take shape again, after what has felt a long time in the wilderness.  I just finished reading the audio version of Sahara out loud; it was far, far harder than I thought it would be, and to my utter mortification, more than once I had to leave the little recording room for a breath of fresh air when the emotion got to me.  I think it may well be the most cathartic thing I have done, and the reason I am feeling so light and unburdened.  Somehow reading it was far more powerful than writing it, and in doing so, I think I put a lot of demons to rest.  If you ever listen to it, do forgive me on the last page.  It took me about ten goes to get through those paragraphs.  I’d never been able to read it since I wrote it, and it was bloody hard reading it out loud.

So, after beginning my research, I came across this guy: Ray Jardine.  And became kind of obsessed!  I wish to hell I had stumbled across him before I set out from Trafalgar Square.  Without rabbiting on, he pioneered a system of trekking ‘ultralight’ – hiking with incredibly light, efficient equipment, that he has designed himself.  I am taking his approach right on board, and plan to use all his gear on the AT – which, incidentally, he is walking again (for the third or so time) next month.

I have that rolling feeling I get when ideas begin to really come together, and make me excited.

So I guess that – today, anyway – when you ask me how I am feeling, I would say:  fantastic.  And if you asked me what the next book will be, I would say: about nutty Yanks on the Appalachian Trail (please please don’t send me hate mail, lovely American folk, it is a bad Australian joke).

And in the meantime – thankyou, every single person, who has bothered to write or talk to me about Sahara, and how you enjoyed it.  It means so very much to me.

Cheers.

Still alive, sorry!

4 comments February 18th, 2010

I have been away from my blog for way too long. The reasons are predictable – I have been in the darkness for a long time, unsure of where I was headed, or how, and I never feel much like writing when that happens. But a couple of interesting things have happened of late.

Firstly, a young man by the name of Christian Bodegren set out from Cairo with camels last October. He had planned to walk my route in reverse, and I was watching him keenly, not least because I felt that if he succeeded in getting into Niger, that I would be duty bound to follow! But as of this week, Christian has announced that he is halting his expedition, having walked from the Red Sea into Libya. He is facing all the same bureaucratic nightmares I did in that part of the world, and is unsure if he will be able to continue.

Another adventurer, Mikael Strandberg, has also put his planned expedition on hold. He had proposed a mammoth trip from The Middle East across into the Sahara of Northern Africa. After two solid years of planning and fundraising, he has been forced into reconsidering, as a result of funding and bureaucratic issues.

All of this may sound like I am gloating over the misfortune of others. But that is not even close. Both these gentlemen are wonderful people, with solid experience and generous spirits. My heart goes out to them both, as I know firsthand the dreadful, crushing disappointment that heralds the end of an expedition, or idea.

I have dealt with it a lot the last couple of years; trying to go back to the Sahara, and finding it impossible; trying to organise a walk through the Australian desert, and getting utterly fed up with the bureaucratic issues involved in that. Most of all, I guess, beginning to realise that I didn’t actually WANT to walk through the Australian desert – and nor did I want a big ‘expedition’.

At the moment, I just want another low key stroll. I am thinking about doing another Camino, or maybe the Appalachian trail. I am thinking about a lot of things that don’t involve big money, or big dramas. I just want some space to clear my head, and maybe to write another book.

I have been really thrilled with the great reviews and feedback for Sahara, and it also feels like time for me to let go of that experience, and that book, for a while. I need to redefine myself, and find what my next adventure is. I am beginning to realise that trying to fight the need inside me to walk, is like trying to hold back a tidal wave. I am stupidly independent. I have found a few online reviewers who have described me as ‘selfish’, and I rather suspect they are right. Compromise is not my strong suit, and I like doing things my way, and doing what I know I need to. Those are selfish traits, and I am increasingly claiming them as my own. Oddly, I find, men are rarely accused of being selfish. They are ‘driven’, or ‘powerful’, or ‘success oriented’. But women who chase what they want – well, we are ‘selfish’.

I decided very recently that selfish it is. Being selfish cost me my marriage, and gained me a walk. No matter what the hurt, I would make the same decision again. And right now, it is time for me to be selfish again; for I have footsteps yet untread, both in my heart and on the earth.

I need to find a way to walk them again. And as soon as I do, I will let you know where….

UK and USA readers: buy ‘Sahara’ by Paula Constant here!

9 comments October 26th, 2009

cropped booksWell – it is still looking a little messy, but you can now buy both books (signed) from my site.  Please note that at the moment shipping costs are set only for the UK and the USA, so if you are buying from South Africa or Australia, please email me so I can adjust the postage accordingly.

I can also add a personal message to books if you would like – again, just email me.  I hope this helps out with all those overseas who have been asking how to get hold of a copy…

Cheers

Paula

2 comments October 13th, 2009

Well – the media began this week, and so far, it has been wonderful.

I appeared on Richard Fidler yesterday, and I love being interviewed by him – he is wonderfully well informed, funny, and engaging. Today, I got my first review, from the Courier Mail in Queensland, and I am thrilled to reproduce some of it below.

The Australian newspaper is also publishing an excerpt from the book in two weeks’ time in their weekend travel section, so I am pretty excited about that.

I am still deep in trying to organise the Australian walk, and enjoying very much the ride of Sahara. I hope you all enjoy reading it….

Courier Mail Queensland, 11/10/09

Tired expressions like “up close and personal” and “blow by blow account”, even the author’s surname take on fresh vigour in Paula Constant’s travelogue. However, “there but for the grace of God” does not apply, because surely no other female would even think of undertaking her arduous walk throught the western Sahara – 7000km from M’Hamid in Morocco through Mauritania and Mali to Tillia in Niger. She loves the desert – the Big Empty, she calls it – for its variety, its beauty, the solitude it affords her, and the self-knowledge it develops in her. She is taken into the tents and the hearts of the nomads. But the trek also requires handling camels; learning desert lore; selecting compatible, competent guides; coping with bureaucracy.
There is exhilaration, but there is fear (bandits, landmines), discomfort (prickles festering in the skin), severe illness. The trek costs Constant her marriage; sometimes, she thinks, her sanity.
Reaching a town means supplies, a beer, perhaps speaking English and, assuming technology functions, contacting her Australian family. Poised, sometimes uncomfortably, between being tourist and native, Constant observes the daily lives and customs of the Saharawi, Tuaregs, Arabs, their racial tensions, the status of women, political and religious attitudes with unique insight and tolerance and her book is enlightening for everyone.
– Barbara Baker

‘Sahara’ is out

6 comments September 10th, 2009

sahara-jacket

It seems a little as if it has taken forever – but I finally got posted a copy of Sahara, my new book, last week. It officially goes into stores in the first week of October.

I know there has been a dreadfully long gap in posts.  I have taken some time out to do some different things, and this post is coming to you from my hometown of Mansfield.  I have spent the last few months here, working on Mt Buller through the ski season.  It has been bliss to be home, and I can’t wait to move back full time.

But the walking stuff is still hanging on in there.  One of the reasons I haven’t posted is because I was waiting to see what the outcomes would be – but I am still waiting, and can’t put it off forever!  In short, I am working with a documentary maker, on a pitch to major networks for a series focussed around the Australian walk I have been planning.  There are also plans in place for a one hour documentary using the face to camera footage I shot in the Sahara.

But I have had so many false starts and hopes that to be honest, I just didn’t want to rave on about things in case they didn’t come off.  So the simple position is that we are putting everything into pitching this next walk, and if all goes well, I will be out there doing it next year.  If not – well, new plans, I guess.

Several months ago I returned to Broome to pick up our Landrover and drive back to Melbourne.  Two very good friends, Lyn and Damien Fry, kindly offered to share the expense and driving.  I had all but given up on my Australian walk; but that week of driving through the most magnificent country I can ever imagine, brought back my hunger for the desert in a massive rush, and suddenly I wondered what the hell I was doing giving up something that is so important to me.  No matter what else I may feel, this walk still does feel unfinished.  Deep in my gut.  And I can’t just get rid of that.

So I am doing everything I can to get it off the ground for next year, and I really hope with everything I have that we pull it off.  It isn’t the walking that daunts me – it is all the sales work needed to pitch it that I find difficult.

But in the meantime, I have this beautiful new book to distract me and to wallow in for a while!  I feel incredibly nervous about this one, probably because it was such a raw journey that I feel it is a very different book to Slow Journey.  I am afraid it is difficult to see it objectively when you have lived it, written it, and just finished editing it!

But the feedback has been great so far, and I hope very much that you enjoy reading it.

Oh, and if you live in Mansfield, I am doing a talk in the local library to celebrate the book’s release, on the 9th of October at 7.30pm.  There will be wine and cheese if you need a bribe….

I will be more vigilant in updating from here on in.

Changes again

8 comments March 4th, 2009

I have put off writing this for weeks.  I just couldn’t face it, but it has to be done sooner or later.

My Australian walk isn’t happening.  In short, my second book is coming out in October this year (which is really great news, and I am very happy about) but which also means I have a lot of editing to do, not to mention publicity stuff when it actually comes out.  I was getting increasingly stressed about how to combine the two, as I had hoped to have the book out slightly earlier which meant I would have had it all done before I left.

But sometimes things are not to be.  I have absolutely wonderful publishers who are incredibly supportive of me and what I do, and they have bent over backwards to put the book out this year to free me up so if I want to, I can walk next year.

I don’t know how I feel anymore.

On one hand, I want to walk more than anything.  Some days I wake up just craving that space and solitude, the rhythm of desert days.

But time away, time with myself, and lots of long beach walks have made me question exactly why I want to do this one.  I was unable to pull together the finance that would have made the students’ trip work, and without that, the walk seemed an empty thing.  Maybe it has been the bushfire tragedy that has struck so many places close to my heart, but somehow for the first time my desire to walk just seemed – selfish.

There are a lot of things I want to do in life; not least write lots of books, about all sorts of things, not just myself and walking (thank god, I hear you all say).  I also want to have children.

At this point I have to step back and ask myself if doing another long trek is the right thing for me.  I remember, long ago, when I was in between desert walks, my Dad asked me:  “If you won the lottery tomorrow, what would you do?”  Without a moment’s pause, I said:  “I would be back on my walk before you could blink.”  And I knew it was true, knew that right then, all I wanted was that walk.

I asked myself the same question yesterday, walking along the beach.  If I won lottery tomorrow, what would I do?
And I thought: I would buy myself somewhere really nice to write, and spend the next few years churning out all the book ideas that have been brewing in my head in the time that I have been walking.

And that really made me think.

Because if walking is no longer the first thing that pops into my head, then maybe that is why it is not working out for me to do it right now.  And if that is the case – then I need to focus on what IS the right thing for me to do.

Maybe all of this sounds weird and hippy trippy, but I am a great believer in doing the right thing  for yourself, and I reserve the right to change what that thing is.  Five years ago, it was right for me to set off with a backpack and walk 12000km.

Now, maybe it is time to hang up my sandals, and get on with other things.

I am undecided.  And the Sahara still sits in the back of my head like an unfinished book.  The Australian deserts still call out, and I am still drawn to that walk, the walk in my own country.

But I fly out of Broome in a couple of days and back to Melbourne (bleeuuggh) – although of course I get to be with Graeme and the kids, which is great.  And I have the rest of this year to write more books, enjoy the launch of the second one, and think about whether or not I really need another long walk.

See, when I write that, I can’t bear to give it up…

I hope you stay in touch.  I know it isn’t so exciting when there is no walk happening; but for now, it is what it is.

Broome again, but even more fun

2 comments January 13th, 2009

stuffing saddles...

stuffing saddles...

Merry Christmas and a happy New Year – and huge apologies for the long break between updates.

I am up in Broome again, after going back to Melbourne for October and most of November. It was wonderful to step back off the plane into the dense richness of the Wet season; God, I love it. And this time it is even more special, as Graeme and his two kids, Chloe and Taylor, have also come up for a month.

It is the very quiet season for camel treks on the beach and so I have had a bit of time to spend with Chris (my mentor for this next expedition, who runs Ships of the Desert camel treks) whilst he makes my saddles for the next expedition and I assist. I would like to say that he is teaching me how to make them, but the reality is that I am simply a passionate observer of a master at work, and help where it is possible for me not to muck anything up! I punch a hole here and there and stuff some straw in, but Chris is awesome at what he does, and I feel much safer leaving the construction of my equipment in his capable hands.

Here he is, explaining what he does as he goes; and that is me, stuffing straw into the leather – one of those ridiculously basic jobs that needs any old hack to do…

Chris in his element doing what he does incredibly well

Things are moving quite slowly in terms of getting the schedule together for the walk in April; it is taking me longer than I thought to confirm the route I want to travel, simply because I am unsure of exactly what I will be up against at that time of the year in the region in question – eg: if I am too close to the Fitzroy I run the risk of encountering a croc or two, which doesn’t turn me on in the slightest; but conversely, if I drop too far down south, I will be right in the Great Sandy, and reliant on water drops to get through. I also want to trace the route of a couple of explorers who passed this way, but in the fashion of explorers, poor sods wandering into the depths of nowhere with little or no guidance, their routes tend to wind about in the most circular fashion, and through some incredibly tough country (when you look at where they ended up one wonders how Australia was ever mapped at all – God they must have been determined). I am extremely keen to remain in their footsteps, but I am still weighing up what is actually viable and what isn’t.

Chris is extraordinarily helpful in this as in all things. In every piece of advice he gives me, from camels to equipment to packing systems, I am conscious of all that I missed in my previous camel treks, and wonderfully grateful to have found someone prepared to give up their time to help me put together a trip exactly the way I want it. I am frequently in awe of the sheer practicality of his ideas, most of which have been developed after years of trekking and experience to further improve and fine tune the art of walking, something I am right into after years of doing it in various ways.

view from the beach shelter at Cape Leveque

view from the beach shelter at Cape Leveque

In the meantime, we have had a wonderful time being on holiday in Broome. Luckily for me, since my camera cracked up, both Chloe and Taylor have taken to the image business with a passion, and I have to say their efforts are probably far better than mine anyway. For two teenagers rather more interested in playstation than natural wonders (who isn’t at 15) they have

taylor's pic Cape Leveque

taylor's pic Cape Leveque

done an extremely good job of making the most of Broome and everything around it; we just came back from an overnight trip at Cape Leveque, which is more than a little warm at this time of year, and I am astonished at the quality of photos Taylor got with a camera he only picked up a couple of

taylor's pic

taylor's pic

days ago…guess maybe I should be paying him to come on the next desert trek.

Many people find the Broome Wet season tough to take, but I just love it, and I am glad to say the kids are taking to it with a very good will. Before they arrived I was staying out at the camel camp attached to the camel farm – basic but I just loved it, being a very comfortable open camp (as you can

Camel Camp

Camel Camp

see here, but only after it had been cleaned out for cyclone weather). Very fortunately for me, some friends have gone away for six weeks and needed someone to mind their house and dogs – and hence Graeme, the kids, and I are ensconced in air conditioned comfort, which makes the midday heat far easier for them to take having come up from Melbourne. The beach has been safe enough to swim in – as long as you stay inside the breakers there have been no serious jelly fish around – but even so, it was brilliant to get up to Cape Leveque and swim in jelly-free water. It is eight years since I have been up to the Cape and I had almost forgotten just how beautiful it is, all red rock, white sand, and jewel green sea. At night the full moon rose up over the still

CHloe's pic Cape Leveque

CHloe's pic Cape Leveque

sea and looked like a shining pathway straight to the sky.

Chloe has taken to the local wildlife with abandon – I am going to have to examine her luggage before she gets on the plane to make sure there are no strange geckos, or anything more sinister. She rather liked the idea of taking this little guy home

Chloe and a croc mate..check that girl's bags

Chloe and a croc mate..check that girl's bags

from the croc farm…

Taylor may be in more danger of putting the dogs in his bag to take home – they are two of the more adorable canines I have had the privilege of knowing, and they rather enjoy Taylor hooking along the beach with him on his runs.

Graeme and Taylor after sunset beers and dog swimming

Graeme and Taylor after sunset beers and dog swimming

Graeme will stay up here for as long as time and work permit, and it is bliss to have him with me. I only have a couple of months up my sleeve to work out route etc, and I am glad he is here to go through it with me. It is always infinitely easier to work this stuff out with two heads rather than one.

There is so much to learn for this trek – so much about the flora, what tree is which, what Ironwood (poisonbush – very dangerous for camels) looks like, and how I identify it straight away. Cutting through station fences and retying them; making sure I have really considered exactly how much water I will need (no regular wells like in the Sahara!). In so many ways it is a far more relaxed walk than the Sahara was, but in others, it is a whole new process, and I am just as much a beginner as I ever was.

Which makes me grateful once more that I have Chris on hand to advise and help. I could ask for no better guidance than he gives, and increasingly I am aware of how fortunate I am that he agreed to mentor me. There is no better thing than being taught by someone who has genuinely been there and done that.

And in the meantime, another beer watching the sunset on Cable Beach never goes astray….

sunset, good company, great dogs and cold beer...heaven

sunset, good company, great dogs and cold beer...heaven

I promise to update more regularly.

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