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Tue
6 Nov
2001
We stay a couple of days but my mum doesn't
like the thought of us living "on the
side of the road". I try to convince
her that we were not exactly sleeping in a
cardboard box under a bridge, but eventually
we move into one of the local caravan parks.
Wed
7 Nov
The Bagara caravan park is situated at the
very northern end of town and is a great place
to stay. We park in the no-power section,
a beautiful grassy area with massive fig trees
for shade.

The no-power area, we parked in
the sun but there's great shade
if you want it.

Palm trees on the beach, just
across the road from the caravan
park.
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Fri
11 Nov
Today we had two Lorikeets (very brightly
coloured parrots) land on the railing. I throw
a piece of bread onto the deck and they pounce
on it. One is obviously dominant and takes
the lion's share, so I throw another piece
to the other.
This
goes on for some time. One piece falls short
and lands in the lounge room. In their strange
hopping gait, the bolder of the two comes
in for it and the other follows. They fly
back to the railing, where one of them leaves
us a little message before flying off.
As
I write this one of them returns, this time
he flies straight into the lounge room and
perches on the settee, we are both sitting
in the recliners with the foot rests up, and
he was only inches from our feet. For a while
I think he is going to jump right onto my
big toe.
These
two birds become regular visitors, flying
directly into the motorhome and sometimes
landing on my shoulder or arm.
We're
finding that the local bird life seems to
enjoy our deck. We've had everything from
Kookaburras using it as a lookout, to parrots
using it as a dining table, I just hope no
eagles get the idea.
Tue
22 Nov
We go over to my parent's place this evening.
Chris on the pushbike and me on the motorbike,
for a short while I ride next to her. There
is a strong head wind and she is not going
very fast when we pass a young fellow out
for a walk. We must have looked like we were
training for a triathlon or something as he
decides to join in.
Sprinting
to catch up he then settles into a pace that
matches ours. He's wearing white shorts and
shirt and reminded me of the guys in 'Chariots
of Fire' running on the beach. I am getting
tired of going so slow so I accelerate and
leave them to it, with the sound of the movie's
theme tune ringing in my ears.
Sat
24 Nov
I ride home tonight in the pouring rain. One
thing about Queensland is that it's seldom
cold, even when it's raining, so that isn't
a problem, but dodging the cane toads is.
I must look like I'm drunk as I weave in and
out the froggy 'speed bumps'.
Sun
9 Dec
I've spent the last week or so recording about
30 of my old vinyl albums onto CDs, a simple
but time-consuming process.
Tomorrow
we must leave and head back to Elimbah (just
north of Caboolture) to do some work on the
truck.
Tue
11 Dec
We arrive at Peter & Marie's place in
Elimbah and settle into our 'usual' spot under
the pine trees.

Parked under the pine trees.

The view from our lounge room.
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Thu
13 Dec
The truck moves into the shed and I remove
its rear wheels. Dave and his offsiders cut
the axles off, measure things up, then weld
them back on. Hopefully this will correct
our crabbing problem.

The axles are cut off with an Air
Arc Gouger. |
We
also have had severe tyre wear on the back
axle and general consensus is that a set of
shock absorbers would fix this (the 6x6 ACCOs
don't have shockies on the rear axles).
Mon
17 Dec
I've decided to add shockies to the truck's
two rear axles while it's up on stands with
the wheels off.
I've
purchased four Monroe-wylie shockies from
a local second-hand dealer, off a Unimog he
thought but they are exactly the same as those
on Peter's truck and the front of mine. So
they're really off an ACCO.
To
verify this I ring Monroe and quote their
part number from the box, they've never heard
of it!
Over
the next day or so I'll make the appropriate
brackets, the bottom ones get welded to the
axles and the top ones bolted to the chassis
(you don't weld to a chassis), this means
drilling 12 holes in the truck's double chassis
rails which is bloody hard work.
Wed
19 Dec
I've had a fairly hard day (by my standards
that is) working on the truck and it's after
dark when I stop. Peter comes over from the
house with a couple of beers, and we stand
under the mercury vapour lights shooting the
breeze.
The
place was swarming with bugs, big bugs.
A massive moth lands on Peter's belt, looking
rather like a bizarre buckle. A Rhino beetle
lands on my foot and latches onto a sandal
strap.
After
a few minutes I notice and comment that we
were standing having a beer wearing a four-inch
moth and two-inch beetle. Peter just said
"Yep, we're in Queensland". I have
visions of some weird planet where the denizens
use live animals as clasps for their clothing.
Speaking
of Rhino beetles we've been woken up recently
by a banging on the roof that sounds as if
someone's up there bashing with a mallet.
Dave
had told me of this, but it still took a while
for me to realize what was happening. Kookaburras
like to eat Rhino beetles but don't like the
heads (if you saw the horn that gives the
beetle its name you'd realize why) so they
fly the unfortunate insect to the roof and
bash the b'jeebers out of it until the head
comes off. Charming.
While
on the subject of wildlife, Mark has found
a Blue Tongue lizard in the house. He catches
it and releases it in the bush, after a photo
op of course.

Mark (the "Snake Man") shows
off the Blue Tongue lizard before
releasing it. |
Thu
20 Dec
Peter needs a photo of Slineaway on a dirt
road with the Glasshouse mountains in the
background. We can't find a spot with all
the mountains so settled for Mt Tibrogargan.

Slineaway hits the dirt near the Glasshouse
Mountains. |
Fri
21 Dec
We finally get tyres. I found three at a local
second-hand dealer and another three from
a steel fabricator who uses them on the land
planes he builds.
I
have also purchased the appropriate equipment
for changing tyres, so we have become even
more independent.
Peter,
Mark and I change one of the tyres, and by
the end we're all a bit knackered. We inflate
it only to find bulges appearing on the side
walls, the tyre is no good.
I
can't wait to do this by myself in the heat
and dust of the outback.

The truck parked in Dave's workshop,
a newly changed wheel/tyre on the
ground. |
I've
completed the changing of the tyres. It's
hard work, each wheel/tyre combination being
four feet in diameter and weighing about 150
kilos.
The
six running wheels were bad enough but at
least they were galvanised rims (no rust).
The spare however was not galvanised, and
the rim has rusted under the rust band.
My
sliding bead breaker is no match for the rusted
on tyre, so I have to resort to breaking the
bead with a high lift jack.

Using a high lift jack under the bull
bar to break the bead on a recalcitrant
tyre. |
I
then pour lubricant into the bead and wait
a few hours. Eventually I persuade the tyre
to leave the rim. Before replacing it with
a radial, I paint the rim with cold gal and
smear rubber grease on it. The new tyre literally
falls onto the rim.

We thought we'd start a Tyres-R-Us
franchise. |
Wed
26 Dec
39 degrees three days in a row. Two days ago
it was too hot to work, yesterday was Christmas
day, but today I built the lower brackets
for the new stabilisers I'm adding to the
truck.
39
degrees and I'm flame cutting and welding
steel, oh well it' got to be done sometime.
Sun
30 Dec
What a storm. At about 5:30PM the sky fell
on the Sunshine Coast. Chris battened down
the truck while I run to the workshop to find
overflowing gutters and horizontal rain drenching
tools.
I
move things to safety, struggle with the large
sliding doors in the gale and flickering lights
caused by a faltering power supply, then return
to the truck to wait the storm out.
Shortly
after that the power fails entirely, no problem
for us as the inverter just takes over without
missing a beat.
After
an hour or so the power is still off so we
decide to do something about the fridge and
freezer in Peter and Marie's house (they are
away for the weekend).
I
remove our generator from its possie in the
truck and install it in the garage. After
a brief period during which I struggle with
a moral dilemma, whether to use the generator
for the beer fridge or the food fridge, I
decide to save the food.
Our
small generator won't run both the fridge
and the freezer (they're both very large)
so we elect to save the freezer's contents.
Later
we swap the generator to the fridge, fill
the tank with petrol and go to bed. Sometime
during the night it ran out of fuel.
Mon
31 Dec
Rising at 5:30AM we find the power still off
and decide to have a cuppa then restart the
generator.
While
watching the NSW Bushfire News on TV and drinking
our first heart starter Chris notices that
the batteries had risen to 26.7 volts. That
means that they are in a state of float charge
and, at this time of day, can only mean that
the power has returned.
We
return to the house to plug in the fridge
and freezer. Chris goes to open the front
door and recoils, there's a frog perched on
the doorknob.
Yep,
we're in Queensland as Peter would say.
On
ACCOs the winch cable runs down the side of
the chassis, and the addition of shock absorbers
and stabilizers means that it has to be re-routed
to clear them.
This
means that I have to construct two rollers
to force the cable out around the shockies
and another to bring it back into line with
the chassis.

The new shockies and winch cable
rollers.

A closer view.
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All
this, plus adding upper mounts for the shockies,
means that I've drilled 25 holes (plus another
25 pilot holes) in the chassis over the past
few days.
Drilling
holes in a double chassis rail is not fun.
With a high-torque low-speed drill you use
all your body weight to force the bit through
the steel for the majority of the hole, but
as you near the end you have to back off and
chew slowly at the material or the bit can
break through too soon and jam. Even if you
do slow down the bit often bites the steel
anyway.
Now
usually during the course of hole drilling
in chassis you have two stationary objects
(the truck and the drill) connected by a spinning
object (the drill bit).
But
when the bit stops something else has to spin,
and you can bet it won't be the truck.
What
with pressing the drill to my chest with all
my weight and being bashed around by a spinning
hand tool I've been a little bruised lately.
Thu
3 Jan
It's been quite hot recently and we've been
using the pool a bit. One person however who
will not use the pool is it's owner, Peter.
Apparently
the only time he's been in it was some time
ago and that was an accident. It seems that,
while skylarking, Peter wound up in the pool
fully clothed. Remarkably he saved his beer
by holding it high, like a heroic Aussie version
of the Statue of Liberty.
One
can only wonder how long he would have stayed
immersed before deciding that air was more
important than beer :-)
Sat
13 Jan
Peter needs a hand collecting pipes on Stradbroke
Island today so at 4AM I'm in the passenger
seat of his Scania.
As
we cruise down the highway the merest sliver
of a new moon rises over the mangroves. A
great photo op but we have a barge to catch.

The Stradbroke barge, the ramp approach
angle doesn't look much but apparently
busses regularly get stuck. |
We're
booked to return on the 1:30 barge and have
plenty of time so Peter organizes for us to
board the mine's giant processing plant.
This
plant weighs about 4000 tonnes. It floats
with its dredge on a lake that moves around
the island as sand is dredged from one end,
stripped of Rutile and other minerals, and
deposited on the other end.

On the processing plant, control
room windows on the right.

The processing plant is connected
to the shore with giant umbilicals.
Here we see one of them, you get
onto the plant by walking along
the pontoons.

These devices separate the minerals
from the sand. Their technical
name is "spirally things".
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The
land then has to be reconstructed as close
as possible to the the original, including
rebuilding the hills, valleys, drainage etc.
Of course they can't put fully grown trees
back but I saw areas that were mined ten years
ago and they did look natural.
As
we leave the plant we passed a valve on a
12" pipe, you could hear the water rushing
through the valve and the power is incredible.
If one of those pipes blows anywhere near
you it will definitely ruin your day.
With
the sightseeing done we get to work loading
the pipes we'd come over to collect.
Most
were cut into six metre lengths the other
day so we just have to load them. Peter operates
the digger as a crane and I do the dogging.

Peter picks up a pipe with the digger. |
Fri
25 Jan
We borrow a car and drive back up to Bagara
for a few days to visit my parents. These
days I either ride a motorcycle or drive the
truck so doing 300-odd ks in a normal car
was a little strange.
We
book into a nice motel right on the beach,
$80 a night, ouch. It really hurts to pay
for accommodation when we're used to bringing
it with us. Likewise for food, $15 for lunch
in a service station whereas we would usually
park someplace nice and have a feed for almost
nothing.
Sun
27 Jan
We return to Elimbah. It's nice to be back
"home" but I'm getting itchy feet,
there's still work to do on the truck but
I'm starting to think that some of it can
wait. The road is calling.
Wed
6 Feb
We went to see Lord of the Rings the other
day, I just loved it but then I've been a
"Ringy" for years. I first read
LotR and The Hobbit in the early 70s and have
read them several times since, including a
couple of weeks ago to refresh my memory before
seeing the film.
I've
always been interested in doing some film
making so I thought I'd have a crack at my
own version, let's start with the title and
some of the main players. (If you aren't familiar
with the characters in LotR then you should
probably skip this).
"Bored
with the Rings"
starring
Gonedeaf - the somewhat
hard-of-hearing wizard
Fraudo - he's not what
he seems
Grimly - the dour Dwarf
Elround - the tall and
lean leader of Rivendull
Legless - he's an Elf,
but not as nimble as most
Bauron - the evil but really
uninteresting bad guy
Arrogant(Prider) - direct
decendant of the Gondor kings,
and does he know it
Dorcs - not real bright,
they work for the bad guys and
are really ugly
Blobbits - a friendly if
somewhat portly race
set
in
Rivendull
- The home of Elround, not much
happens here
The Shire - home of the
Blobbits
Mordorcs - The ring must
be destroyed in a volcano in Mordorcs,
trouble is there is more Dorcs
here that anywhere else
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There
that's the hard part done, now if I could
just afford a video camera...
Sat
9 Feb
I got to thinking about getting gas bottles
refilled and the difficulty of transporting
them even a couple of hundred yards if we
can't get the truck near enough. Also there's
all sorts of occasions where we might want
to carry stuff for longish distances, shopping
for example.
So,
I've decided to build a trolley. At first
I though a simple hand barrow would do but
as the idea grew I decided to make a trailer
for the pushbikes.
Pushbike
trailers cost about $250 and they don't fold
down for storage so, as usual, I got to and
made my own.
Thu
14 Feb
Because our truck is old it has a MPH speedo
which I find a pain, not so much for the speedo
but for the trip meter facility. Naturally
all signs are in kilometres these days and
I get sick of converting.
So
I've installed a bicycle computer as a speedo.
If it works out I'll write a tech talk article
about how to do it (there are some traps).
Thu
7 Mar
Work work work, for three months I've been
working on the motor home but that's it, I've
declared it officially finished. We've packed
up and had planned to leave tomorrow but there's
a party on Saturday so maybe we'll hang around
for that and head off on Sunday.
Sat
9 Mar
I had a number two today, no not that, a haircut.
I finally got sick of having bad-hair days
so a couple of weeks ago we bought one of
those haircutting kits, but its taken me this
long to get the guts to use it.
I
started with a number five comb on the shears
but that hardly had any affect so I bit the
bullet and pulled out the number two.
The
hair was flying thick and fast for a while
but when the dust settled there was a new,
even more feral-looking, man sitting on the
stool.
So
now I'm in "low maintenance" mode.
With a full beard and a crew cut, grooming
is a simple and infrequent affair that I can
do myself.
Sun
10 Mar
We finally leave Elimbah and head down the
road, all the way to Caboolture (10k). After
stopping briefly in a spot we thought would
be a good camp we change our minds and drive
to Deception Bay.
It's
nearly dark as we pull into a nice spot right
on the Pumicestone Passage. Some passing walkers
point to a sign lying face down in the sand.
"It's a No Camping sign" they say,
"the ranger moved someone on last night".
We
thank them for the warning but stay put. No
ranger turns up, at least not until after
4AM when we leave and rejoin the Bruce Highway,
southbound for Brisbane.
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