Tag Archives: Dongara

Australia day 81 – Dongara to Eneabba Bush Camp, WA

We wake to a lovely, sunny, if rather chilly, morning;  not a cloud in the sky.  Our self-imposed task today is to sort all our gear with the objective of reducing the weight of our backpacks and making life easier for the next leg of the trip.  We plan to jettison what we no longer want and send home anything we won’t need in Indonesia and India . In all we identify 15 kilos of stuff a third of which is straight in the bin.  We box up the rest intending to post it home.  But get a bit of shock when we discover that it will cost over $100 dollars to send it surface mail; probably more than the contents, mainly clothes, are worth.  A radical rethink is required.  The parcel home is much reduced in size and the remainder is donated to the local charity shop.  A more acceptable cost of $45 is the end result.  The lady in the post office couldn’t be more helpful and understanding, taking our change of heart all in her stride as though it was quite normal for people to come in with two huge parcels, changing their minds and coming back a few hours later with one of much reduced proportions.  Our backpacks should hopefully now be much lighter as a result – although  snorkelling and fishing gear as well as swimming shoes and one or two items of clothes acquired along the way will have to be accommodated.


 

The promised email from Amex has not materialised.  So we are no further forward on that front.  Another call to them will have to wait until we reach Perth on Monday.

 

Tonight’s stop is Eneabba Bush Camp, a huge area of bush set well back from the road which we have all to ourselves.  There are no facilities whatsoever here – this is rough camping at its most basic – but at least there is plenty of fire wood.  This looks like an area that sees flash flooding;  a thin layer of white sand covers the reddy-brown earth beneath.  Noise from the occasional car drifts from the highway to compete with unseen frogs croaking in a small gully a few yards from the van.

Continue reading

Posted in Australia, Western Australia | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Australia day 80 – Dongara, WA

Dongara on closer inspection turns out to be a rather attractive little seaside town with a definite sense of community. mingled with a holiday atmosphere.  Situated behind the sand dunes that front the Indian Ocean to the west and bordered by the Irwin River to the south,  the unspoilt surroundings have a windswept beauty.  It is cloudy and distinctly chilly and fleeces are the order of the day.  We are staying another day in here primarily to be able to call Amex again when the London offices open at 4pm local time.  We spend a day dilly-dallying around town, browsing the few shops and taking a short walk on the seaweed-strewn beach which falls steeply into the sea and back into town along the shady and unspoilt bank of the river.  On the sand dunes we pass a couple of women frantically looking for a missing child.   We are about to offer to help in the search when the child is found and there is a tearful reunion.


 

We find a laundrette to do some washing and avail ourselves of two power sockets that are presumably provided for the use of customers, to charge our laptops.  Just outside town there is a small wetland area behind the sand dunes which is very popular with the local duck population as well as several other species including a pelican.

 

At four we are back on the internet for another frustrating call to Amex.  Despite their assurances yesterday, the claims team have not still not reviewed the claim and we seem to be no further forward.  In fact, we have taken a few steps back as Amex are now saying that they will require sight of specific original documentation to support the claim.  What exactly they can’t say at this stage.  This setback is all the more frustrating because all the documentation was faxed to the Amex Assistance in Sydney back in Novemer and we were assured that it would be forwarded to London and that the claim would be paid on the strength of what we had supplied.  Now we must wait for Amex email later today details of the documents they require. 

 

While we are logged onto Skype, Mike calls from his office in Leeds – the first time he has found us online since he signed up to Skype in early May.  By what chance is it that he happens to be logged on at 9.30 am … in the office?  We have a short chat before he is called away to a meeting.

 

Back to the camp area we stayed at last night with a van load of wood collected along the way.   A fire is the only way to keep warm on these cold nights and there is something rather special about sitting under the stars watching the flickering flame dancing and crackling .  Tonight we are on our own.

Continue reading

Posted in Australia, Western Australia | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Australia day 79 – Geraldton to Dongara, WA

Geraldton has an historic centre and pleasant suburbs facing the Indian Ocean.  Otherwise it has little to remark on other than the view of the drilling rig that sits prominently in the centre of the bay.   We do a little shopping, visit the second-hand book shop which, rather enterprisingly, doubles up as an internet café, so that as I spend half-an-hour or so browsing the shelves, Andy can occupy himself researching accommodation in Bali.  After selecting three books and exchanging three, we visit the post office to get prices for sending some of our stuff back to the UK.  We are determined to seriously reduce the weight of our backpacks so that we don’t spend the next three months struggling under the strain of ridiculously heavy luggage on the next leg of our trip. 

We leave Geralton behind and arrive in the small seaside town of Dongara further down the coast by mid afternoon.  Dongara’s outstanding feature is the majestic avenue of fig trees that line Moreton Terrace in the centre of town.   A visit to the visitors centre which is housed in the Old Post Office is rewarded with a list of things to do in Dongara which runs to an implausible three pages of typed  A4.  This is followed by another session on the internet.   We have been trying for what seems like weeks to find an internet café that has Skype and stays open beyond 4.30 pm so that we can make some calls to the UK.  Firstly to chase up on the status of our insurance claim for the expenses we incurred at the Hanoi French Hospital and secondly to change the tariff on my mobile phone which has come of contract  and, for a phone not getting much use, is costing far too much at 35 pounds a month.   In Dongara of all the unlikely places there is a electronics shop that has broadband access and stays open normal working hours. 

The Amex claim has been dogged by problems;  the delay caused by the Hanoi French Hospitals administrative failure to take the payment from our account meant that the claim couldn’t be submitted until February;  the discovery that the claims email address quoted in the policy handbook delayed the claim by a further month;  and since we sent the claim to the correct address in early March we have heard nothing.   All call to the London claims office reveals that due to an administrative error in their automated system the claim has not been allocated to a claims officer.   I’m assured somewhat apologetically that the claim will be prioritized today and someone will be able to speak to me about it if I ring back tomorrow – no-one in the claims team is available to speak to me at the moment as they are all in a meeting!

The call to Orange is more successful but only marginally less frustrating;  Orange have a complex, multi-level IVR system, the sort that involves choosing  from several options only to present several more and several more after that, by which time you’ve lost the will to live and are selecting any option a random just to get through to someone who will talk to you.  On the first attempt I speak to the retentions team who provide me with another number to call, which turns out to be discontinued.  The second attempt gets me through the phone upgrade team who transfer me to an Indian call centre and a person I can’t really understand but it seems that I can’t have the tariff I want because I wasn’t on the right contract.  So I ask to close my account and, yes, I’m once again talking to the retention team!  At this point I’m offered a sim-only contract with double the minutes of the tariff I had asked for from the Indian lady for 15 pounds a month.   A result, but surely it shouldn’t be such hard work.

We camp just off the Brand Highway at the Midland Road Rest Area.  It’s a pleasant shady site, if slightly noisy;  there seems to be an electricity generating plant somewhere close by but out of sight. There are three other groups of people here including an Australia with a Japanese wife who we never see.  He on the other hand is very chatty and brings over a beer for Andy as he sets about lighting the camp fire – not one for me of course –  this is strictly a boys’ tete-a-tete. 

Which brings me on to the absence of a well-developed sense of political correctness in this country, which in some ways is refreshing and in others quite shocking.  For example, a whole variety of gollies are sold without anyone seemingly batting an eye, Wicked have a slogan on one of their vans that contains the word ‘poofter’ which would probably cause uproar in the UK and terms like ‘coon’ are used by some people without a second thought.   Our self-styled pc police would have a field day here, I’m sure. 

Continue reading

Posted in Australia, Western Australia | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment