15 August 2016 – 182 666
Nourlangie Region, Kakadu National Park
We all settled in for a good night’s sleep, as there were
very few bugs. Unfortunately, another
caravan pulled up extremely close to us just before dark – they came in so fast
and close to our van, I thought Drew and I might lose our bed end. This female
couple decided to have a screaming match (one screamed and the other whined and
cried) at 2:30am in the morning, that escalated into domestic violence. Drew phoned the police about 4:30am when
things became physical and they hadn’t settled in response to his bellows,
however they continued until they left at 7am.
After a very tiring and stressful night (with Hayden sharing our bed for
our mutual reassurance), we headed for the Bowali Visitor Centre to find out
about booking a Yellow Waters sunrise cruise. They do not do bookings, however
the lady gave me the phone number and we were able to make a booking for
tomorrow.
Burrungkuy (Nourlangie) Rock
Art Sight was our next stop for a Ranger- guided rock art talk. These activities are included in the Kakadu
Park Pass – this particular activity was scheduled for two hours but took
closer to three and was amazing!! Our
Ranger guide was “Rachel” and she did the talk in three sections, one section
on the escarpment and how this related to the dreaming creation stories, one
section on the skin system (which has guaranteed no more than 1/64th
common blood between couples, and maintained the genetic variance in small
groups), and one section on the archaeology done at a shelter site, showing
continuous occupation in that particular shelter for 20 000 years (including
three major climatic changes and one ice age).
This talk was great and worth the cost of the park pass on its own.
We had planned after this to go to a session
on traditional weaving, however we were all exhausted from our very early
start. After lunch, we all had a sleep
and I had a great deal of difficulty waking up.
We spent some of the afternoon chatting to a Danish family camped near
us, and the boys played Lego – the universal language of boys, that needs no
translation. I cooked up some dinner to
have as a picnic and we headed to Namurlandja for another Ranger guided walk
with Rachel – this time talking about Anbangbang Billabaong and its connection
with the escarpment country. At the billabong, we saw Jabiru, magpie geese and
a crocodile. The magpie geese are very noisy. We then climbed up onto a
sandstone outlier to watch the sunset change the colours of the escarpment
while we ate our picnic dinner. The view
was beautiful!
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