Central Queensland Adventure: day 4 and 5

Continued from Day 3

We had planned to head back up stream to check those promising lines on the map (which looked deep and dark from the Spur) but trudging up and down bloody Boowinda Gorge had left us battered and weary. The thought of bashing our way further up stream for more dry canyons had lost its appeal.

We decide to pack up camp and head back to the car to look for something wet.

Kylie had worked out Blackdown Tablelands were almost exactly between Carnarvon Gorge and Rockhampton so it seemed like a good idea to check it out.

A quick google show some beautiful waterfalls and plunge pools, though the latest posts said it was much drier than usual.

The park had also been evacuated the week before due to a fire in a neighbouring park but as luck would have it it was reopening today. Winning.

We jump online to try and book a camp site. Qld NPs do a great job at maintaining the parks up this way, walking tracks were family friendly with informative signs and toilets were plentiful and clean, but their online booking system is a PITA.

Anyhoo we eventually get it working and the whole camp ground is booked out!!!

Hmmm, surely if the park is just reopenning some of those people would have canceled or changed plans.

I eventually find a number to call and convince them to reluctantly take my money. We’ll take the chance says I.

If the camp ground is full we’ll find somewhere else and you can keep the $15 as a donation…

There’s 2 other groups in the entire camp ground as we roll in.

We check out a walk to another art site then set up camp for the night

Day 5

Apparently Gudda Gumoo is a seasonal waterfall and we’ve got it as it’s drying out Anyhoo we are keen for a look.

Heading down the tourist track we cross a couple of creek beds. They are as dry as uncle Geoff’s sense of humour.

But wait!

I hear running water.

A steady stream of water tumbles 20 or 30m into a large clear swimming hole.

A less formed trail heads down stream.

We follow it down and catch a glimpse of the usual instagram pot holes. They look dry.

I’ve discovered Blue mountain anchors have a distinct lack duck tape.
And whatever this thing is

an even vaguer track continues along the cliff edge.

A couple of tracks head down to the various levels but we forge on. The track is now more a vague sense someone, or something has walked here before.

Finally a weakness in the cliffline allows a tricky descent.

Another very tricky scramble breaks the next cliff.

More secluded waterfalls and swimming holes reward our efforts
And yummy native raspberries

The valley has stepped down 20 or 30 meters at a time and it seems like there’s a hidden pool on each level.

We’ve made it down to one of the bigger shelves. Below us the arse drops out of the world

The water tumbles 100-150m down to another large pool. Below that we can make out another drop and another pool….

If this was anywhere near the Blue Mountains or Southern Highlands it would be a must do abseil trip. But it’s Queensland and well, Abseiling, stepping off track, not paying for a guided tour or wild swimming!!!

After a swim we linger in the sun and have lazy brunch before smaking our way back up through the cliffs to check out some of the upper terraces.

The locals have put some work in to get down to this one a couple below the usual ‘Gram shots.

And so ends our excellent adventure to central Q. L. D.

It been a blast and remember as Alice Roosevelt Longworth said…

Fill what’s empty

Empty what’s full

And scratch where it itches.

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Central Queensland Adventure:Day 3

Continued from day 2

Day 3 would see us back on the tourist trail for the most part. We’d planned to get up to Battleship Spur, nearly 600m above our camp, before the heat of the day. Then check out Boowinda Gorge and it’s side creeks

Both were listed as star attractions. The young couple we had shared camp with came back raving about how beautiful Boowinda Gorge was and a steady stream of people had made their way either up to or down from the spur on their journey along the great walk.

So up we go. The path up to the spur starts up Boowinda gorge but we don’t really take notice as we’re nervously excited about the haul up to the spur.

A side gully acts as a pass out of the gorge. It’s steep, reminiscent of the scramble out of Tigersnake canyon. but once through the lower cliff line a well maintained trail makes it’s way up and along an amazingly varied spur.

Think the Thuratt Spires with a tourist trail…

Wide open grassland alternates with almost razorback spur. Fine white sandstone changes to conglomerate and an out crop what appears to my uneducated eye as quartzite. Speculation around the geology distracts from the slog up.

And the views from the top?

Worth every grunt and groan
Gadget looking back over the lower end of Carnarvon gorge. The mouth of which is 10km away and 700 or 800m below.

Now back down for lunch in the cool of Boowinda gorge.

Running on a high we start making our way up the gorge.

It’s a bloody soul destroying slog

Think of walking up the Wollemgambe. Only it’s dry as a nuns nasty and instead of sand it’s littered with baby head sized river stones. And the river stones haven’t been tumbled enough to make them smooth so they are jaggered. And they move beneath your feet. And the bigger ones give false hope with 3 or 4 holding firm then the next rolls just to mock your ankles.

Still so many Carnarvon glamour shot are from Boowinda gorge.

We press on.

Several times we consider just turning around but we’re a stubborn couple.

I guess the PC term would be “determined” but it was pure stubbornness (and a view of our white slot at the start we glimpsed from the Spur track) that kept us going.

Finally we get to the junction towards the top of the bloody Boowinda gorge and by some miracle there’s clear running water. Not much but more than we’ve seen in the side creeks since Wards Canyon.

We take the right branch. It’s a low quality slot but it has clear flowing water. So there’s that.

The water is far clearer than this shot implies but I was well and truely over this bloody Boowinda gorge to bother trying to photograph it well.

We get to a point we could have scrambled in from the top (It would have been much easier) but it got far too steep for us the reach the mysterious white walls a few hundred metres up the escarpment.

We retreat back and try the right branch. It was shit

We trudge back down and check out all the side creeks along the way. Some had canyons like sections but after the quality slot canyons of yesterday they were a major disappointment.

Back down past the Spur exit and I don’t know if it was the different light or just we were paying more attention but we had to admit the bottom was nicer than we originally gave it credit for.

Like, if you had never been in a proper slot canyon before you’d be impressed

Like a wider, version of The Dry Canyon

If you are going to do Carnarvon gorge try a cooler month and hope for a good bit of rain in the days before you get here.

Finally out of what my mind I will always call Bloody Boowinda Gorge we paused for a bite to eat. All the trudging over loose river stones had zapped our energy.

It would have been easy just to return to camp but it was barely 4:30pm and there was another long gully about a kilometre down stream that had a name (At least on one map we had stumbled across) so we couldn’t help ourselves and went for a look.

The gully was scrubby and hard going but it keep promising to canyon up just up ahead. So we pressed on.

At least it was wet

We trudged on until we started to loose light and so left this intriguing chasm to its secrets and made our way back to camp.

Continue to Day 4

Central Queensland Adventure: Day 2

Continued from Central Queensland Adventure Day 1 part 2

Ever since my episode of heat stroke/ dehydration a few years ago I struggle a bit in the heat and yesterday was hot.

We plan a lazy start for day 2 and then some exploring.

There’s a waterfall marked on the map, googling before we came showed some photos of a fairly shit looking waterfall but with the other side creeks being so dry we though we might as well check it out.

We boulder hop and scrub bash up stream.

Canyon 6

The mouth of the side stream is bone dry, it’s not looking promising but we head up. A cool breeze comes down,then we round a corner and…

Bam!

If it had a couple of inches of water running down it would be a match for the section in Claustral between the Hulks Fist and Thunder canyon.

And it kept going

I wanted to call it Betty. Kylie wanted to call it Jon. Which is ridiculous. Everyone knows the correct response to calling it Betty is to call it Al.

You mean Al, says I

Jon, says Gadget.

What ever

Further up it had a Bowen creek feel. Only dry as an English backpacker waking up on Bondi beach in the noon Sun on New Year’s Day.
You could see by the moss that it had water recently.

The map showed this creek cuts its way up high up the escarpment but so far a few easy scrambles were all we needed to make our way up.

1 thing I learnt this day though was the location of the creeks on the topo were accurate. The contour lines in the gullies however, were a guess at best and complete fantasy for the most.

We made our way up a kilometre or 2 of slot canyon before getting blocked by a large chockstone. No shitty waterfall to be seen.

We could not believe several blogs had photos of the waterfall but we had found no hint of this anywhere. I guess bushwalkers use a pass up beside the canyon to access the falls and maybe as another pass up to the great walk.

We head back to the gorge and onto the next.

Canyon 7

Further up stream our next target didn’t look like much. A scrub bash into a wide gully. Then a gap in a side wall gave a hint of something.

I almost didn’t bother but I’m going to duck up here for a look, says I.

I’ll come too, says Gadget.

It’s a shallow canyon but it won’t go far. It’s running parallel to the main gorge cutting back downstream but going up…

It might not be as pretty as the previous one But again it is deceptive and just keeps going. Twisting and turning, cutting deeper into the walls.

It took a couple of sketchy climbs but we made it up to where it begins to open out and then retraced our steps to once more bash up the gorge

Canyon 8

A beautiful big Carpet Python guarded the way. It’s curled up in the shade with a full belly getting ready to shed.

The next canyon started with promise

But a few hundred meters in we are blocked by a 8m dry waterfall.

There’s some promising looking lines on the map further up the gorge but it’s getting late and we are fairly cooked from all the boulder hoping. We decide to head back down to camp.

But along the way there was 1 gully we had skipped, originally planing to do it tomorrow. But we were here now so pop in for a look.

Canyon 9

Another dry slot canyon greets us

The map showed this as one of the longer ones on this side of the gorge upstream of the big bend camp but as tired as we were from all the boulder hoping in the heat of the gorge we were keen to see how far up we could push it.

More dodgy scrambles/climbs were needed. We took a bit 3mm amsteel rope as a hand line to assist getting back down.

Finally we couldn’t get any further up so made our way back to camp content with a big day in the heat.

Continue to day 3

Central Queensland Adventure:Day 1 part 2

Continued from day 1 part 1

We make our way back to the camp ground and park in the over night car park.

Our plan now was to hike up to the remote camp ground at the Big Bend , a bit over 9km up the gorge.

Along the way we’d do the side trips to the touristy stuff.

It was already 35°. We stock up on water.

Canyon 4

The Ampetheter.

Is it a canyon? I don’t know

Is it touristy as all hell? I don’t care.

I was pretty keen to see this one. It’s just off the main track.

It’s a short but impressive slot
Kylie climbing the ladder access
A short but impressive Hall leads to an otherwise enclosed chamber

Back on the main trail we head up stream.

The next thing on the tourist map is Wards Canyon. Just before it is a break in the cliffline and a small stream, the first we’ve seen with clear water.

And if you are good at spotting trails you may spot a vague track leading up beside.

We dump the packs and go for a stickybeak.

The soil is the finest white sand I’ve ever seen. Almost as fine and white as the cliffs towering above.

The trail continues up but it’s a wide gully. I guess it’s used as a sneaky short cut up or off the great walk or sumfink, we head back to the trail

Canyon 5

Wards Canyon.

Wards canyon looks like the most adventurous canyon in the lower gorge. However you can only access the very lower bit. I think tour company’s might run trips through it so it might be worth applying for a permit

It’s pretty and hosts the only known non-coastal population of King Ferns, Angiopteris evecta, in Queensland.

The Art Gallery

I couldn’t find the indigenous name for the art cave which is a shame. It looks like it was painted yesterday but archeological studies found evidence it’s been in use for at least 3500 years, sites just over the hill date to 19,000 years.

And on we go.

Pitjara Cave

It has another name on the tourist map but this is the name on the old topo. The art is top notch.

And finally we make it all the way up to the camp and stumble into one of the only semi secluded spots at the camp. Winning!

We haven’t done a huge amount of Ks, probably only 15 or 16 but it’s bloody hot so the myriad of No Swimming signs at such a beautiful hole were a little soul crushing.

So we set camp and relax in the shade

Home for the next few nights.

Continue to day 2

Central Queensland Adventure:Day 1 part 1

27-09-2023

Gadget and meeeeeeee

Gather around friends, adventure family, misfits and, vagabonds I’ve got a story to tell.

Or sumfink

30 odd years ago when Jameison published the first edition of Canyons Near Sydney he included a short section at the back for other canyon areas with a short paragraph on Carnarvon Gorge saying it had sandstone slot canyons similar to the Blue Mountains.

The only description was try starting at the homestead, make your way up the gorge and look for a routes up.

My curiosity was pipped and it got filed in the back of my brain.

Since that time it’s become a tourist mecca with a wilderness lodge going in around 1996 and National parks developing a good trail network. But I had a feeling there’d still be some hidden gems.

So when the stars aligned and Gadget and myself found ourselves with a week off I said fugg it, let’s go.

Of course abseiling is frowned upon in QLD national parks. There are permits but from all accounts these are about as hard to obtain as diamond impregnated rocking horse shit.

So our plan would be to just have a look. Scramble up from the bottoms or down from the tops as far as possible then retreat.

Day 1 though would be the touristy stuff. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

We rock into the NP camp ground late Thursday night. Not realising the nondescript pop up gazebo was the visitor check in we cruise past and pull into a random camp site to get our bearings.

Hey Kylie, what number site is on our booking ? says I

9, says she

You’d never guess what number we had pulled into at random.

Ok, most of you guessed 9. But Shit yeah! good start to the trip.

Not a bad view out of the tent

Our first target was back up the road a bit, Micky Creek Canyon.

Micky Creek is on all the maps, tourist brochures and instagram posts but 1 person I spoke to said the side creek next to it was betterer.

Canyon 1

Weirdly Warrumbah creek is sign posted and has a tourist trail that leads to the mouth of the canyon but there was zero info on it.

A short way from the end of the “formed trail” we find ourselves in a proper slot canyon

The start was impressive but it was dry as a dead dingo’s donger.

The further we scrambled up the better it got. We met a guy who said he had visited in June and it had been flowing.

Note: to self September is a shit time to visit. Hot as hell and dry. you could see the moss drying on the walls, with a bit of water the colours would pop.

It got a little damp as we scrambled higher but the water was manky
The canyon just kept going

About a kilometre on we come to a long section of stinky pea soup looking water. We thought about trying to bridge over it but the walls were slimey and it’s our first canyon on our first day and it already exceeded expectations so we headed back down.

Canyon 2

Micky Creek right branch.

Once again the tourist trail takes us to the mouth of Micky Creek canyon. It ends while the creek is still a wide gorge but soon after there’s a junction and we head up the right branch.

It soon starts to canyon up
There were a few tricky scrambles to get up into the good bit

Eventually we got to a scramble that,while confident I could get up, I wasn’t overly keen on getting back down the slippery stone without a hand line. so once again we decided to turn back down.

Canyon 3

Micky creek left branch had a short section of canyon just upstream of the junction. This seemed to be the source of all the brochure and instagram photos. It was pretty but short. We continued up and it was narrowing but it wasn’t long before we were stopped by another scramble ropes would be handy for.

Continue to Day 1 Part 2

A little Blue Mts surprise

02/09/2023

So I kinda like visiting the little canyons most people would not bother with.

Part of it is seeing beautiful places most people don’t get to and part is just getting out and exploring with mates.

When Tom posted photos of this one on https://ozultimate.com a few years ago it caught my attention as I had a reasonable knowledge of the canyons in that area but didn’t recognise this at all.

Then a month or so ago a YouTube video was posted that had a few clues.

10mins of comparing images in the video and the areal images on sixmaps and I was confident I knew how to find the start and how to get out.

Anyhoo it had been so long since I’d dragged friends out on a scrub bash to a low quality canyon that they had forgotten the pain and agreed to come again.

Was it scruby? Yes it was
Was it low quality?
The canyon section was pretty. Pretty short. But actually pretty.
Wetsuits were over kill. I thought there might be a bit more flow in the falls after last weeks rain but most of us stayed dry above the knees.
Just a few abseils and a short hallway and the canyon opened up
Then it was back up the ridge and we avoided some of the scrub back to the car

A bit under 2.5hrs car to car with a large group and giving Muz some abseiling refreshers along the way.

They are all worth exploring at least once.

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