Map
Towing Trailers
As our regular readers probably know, since having our
kids (Leah 5 yrs and Chardae 2yrs), we have continued to travel every year
camping out in swags and/or tents. We do not own or use a camper trailer,
although if you read our earlier Trip Journals from 1998 - 2000 you'll see that
BC (before kids) we did have a trailer. So we have had plenty of experience in
all sorts of terrains both with and without a trailer.
This trip saw us once again towing - however this time it
was a 4.8m motorboat, but it wasn't ours. The owners were our friends who were
towing their camper trailer in convoy with us from Perth. Our destination was a
2 day drive along bitumen highway from home to the Ningaloo coast, requiring
only an hour of dirt road and then a short 4WD sand section to a beach camp
where we had planned to spend almost 3 weeks aiming to indulge in rest, fishing
sports, water sports, very little driving but most of all some quality
family/friends time.
Powering the Camp
After all these years of travelling and camping there were
still many trip-specific packing alterations and purchases to make. Indeed the
very fact that this was not a 4WD trip was the cause of most of the
complications! Most importantly was the consideration of how to keep our fridges
cold for 3 weeks camped on the beach with temperatures in the high 20°s
C. Not being fond of the noise of generators, and already well provisioned with
12v lights and an inverter, we opted to purchase a foldable 100w solar panel
comprising of 2x50w panels and a regulator and our friends likewise bought a
portable solar panel ensuring that each of us could be power self-sufficient.
The Fridge and Icebox
Not content with just a 40L
fridge for each family, it was decided that a 62L icebox would be used
specifically for storing and cooling drinks. A week before trip departure, 4 x
2L milk containers were filled with briny water and frozen solid. These were
used as icebricks in the bottom of the icebox and filled with 2 cartons
pre-chilled beer and a few casks of wine. During the trip, the solar panels were
wired to our vehicles' main batteries and we were very impressed to find the
batteries fully charged at all times. In fact at no time over the 3 weeks beach
stay did the fridges or other accessories (invertor, coffee grinder, 12v fluro
worklights, mobile phone car kit, camera battery charger, laptop, etc) take a
load off the battery that the solar panel couldn't keep up with. So, towards the
end of the trip when we'd caught so much fish that we had to turn one of the
fridges up to freeze the excess fish fillets we also refroze the briny water
bottles and then transferred the icebricks back to the icebox. Our solar panel
setup cost around $1000 and although initially hesitant to spend such a large
amount for a once-off trip, we couldn't have enjoyed our trip without it and are
totally converted to using solar panels for future trips.
I had been fortunate enough
to acquire a TwoZone (sits ontop of an Engel fridge to increase storage
capacity) but was unable to take it on this trip due to packing constraints. I
had really wished to use it to test the various methods of fruit and vegetable
longevity. I normally put most of my fresh produce in the fridge inside
Tupperware®, although in temperate climates I also keep certain produce out of
the fridge. I take a lot of food on any trip and our family prefer gourmet meals
requiring a wide range of ingredients especially fresh produce. So, since the
decision to leave the TwoZone at home was made about 2 hours before we left, I
had to find an alternative place to pack the excess vegetables I had purchased -
each variety was wrapped in green long-life vegetable bags and packed into a 35L
esky. Fresh roma tomatoes, baby zuchinni, baby eggplant, Lebanese cucumbers,
corn cobs, carrots, avocadoes, whole rockmelon and whole watermelon.
Shading the Camp
The $89 purchase of a cloth
gazebo (pop-up type, no poles) from HomeArt solved this problem ideally, however
without the boat to store it in on the road trip to reach the camp, it would have been too bulky to pack in/on a
vehicle. I made a set of 4 sand draw-string bags and filled them with sand to
weigh down the 4 corners to avoid it blowing away and that turned out to be a
wise idea as we had almost a full week of near gale-force winds that stopped all
the boating and fishing but didn't tear down the gazebo! This formed our
communal area - mostly used for the kids to give them a protected place where
they could be during the heat of the day.

About Ningaloo
Just about every West
Australian has heard of Ningaloo, but surprisingly, its an oddity to most other
Australians. Located between Exmouth and Coral Bay about 1200km
north of Perth, Ningaloo is about 300 km long and is the largest
fringing coral reef in Australia. Camping is permitted in the
Cape Range National Park (see
Yardie Creek Run Trek Note) and Ningaloo Station
(new Trek Notes to come).
Ningaloo is the only large reef in the world found
so close to the mainland. It
follows 260 kilometres of coastline
and in total the marine park covers 4000 square
kilometres. In places, the reef's
lies as close as100 metres from the shore, whilst its
furthest point is only seven kilometres offshore. It
is an ideal place for fishing, diving, snorkelling, swimming and simply
relaxing on pristine white beaches in a region that enjoys
year-round summer conditions. It’s
also one of the few places in the world where you can swim with the world’s
biggest fish – the whale shark.
The Ningaloo area was declared a Marine Park in
1987 in an attempt to protect and to control public
access to this large living reef. Much debate and controversy
has continued with the Save Ningaloo Campaign fighting to seek a balance between
ecological values and human visitation; an extension to the Marine Park in 2004
seeing an increase in sanctuary "look but don't touch"
zones; a rejection of the proposal for a resort marina to be built at Mauds
Landing; and pastoralists in the area campaigning to keep their leases after the
2015 expiry date (covered by the
Four Corners Program on the ABC a few weeks ago).
Camping on Ningaloo Station
The Ningaloo Station is just one of the parcels of land
that is negotiating an exclusion to the 2015 end to their pastoral lease.
We stayed at South Lefroy Bay, just one of 5 approved
areas set aside for camping within the Ningaloo Station. We found it well
managed as well as exceptionally good camping for a low fee. The caretaker at
Ningaloo Homestead not only greets guests, collects camping fees, monitors
campsites, and encourages campers to minimise disruptive ecological activities,
he also monitors the radio for distress signals from boaters and campers and
performs all the usual duties of a pastoral station worker. A UHF repeater
enables the station to assist in the co-ordination of visitor health and safety
throughout the area. Although this was our first visit to South Lefroy Bay, most
of the other campers were repeat visitors, some told us they'd been coming each
year for 16 years! Like anywhere, visitor numbers swell in school holidays and
our trip commenced a week before the WA school holidays so although we almost
had the beach to ourselves when we arrived it was only a matter of days before
we were almost camped in by neighbours.
| The most important part of organising our trip to Ningaloo
Station was purchasing a Porta Pottie.
If visitors do not bring their own, they are
required to hire one from the Station. |
 |
Ningaloo Station are very conscious of their obligations
to provide a safe and enjoyable camping experience and hope that by setting a
few rules they will be able to demonstrate to the Government that they are
capable of managing a pastoral property that is both viable and ecologically
sustainable. Ningaloo Station is strongly opposed to losing their lease in 2015
(it would most likely be handed over to CALM for management) for they suspect
that camping will be either radically managed (as it is further north in Cape
Range National Park) or it will be closed indefinitely for "rehabilitation".

More to this story will be added next fortnight (see
eNewsletter#114).