Australia – Brisbane Bound

Moree to Goondiwindi – 82 miles

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In line with the crime concerns I reported earlier the security in Moree involved the motel locking a gate to stop any vehicle or person entering or leaving the property and its surroundings! I’m stood there at just before 6am waiting for the owner to unlock! I’d wanted to get off as early as possible. In the end he didn’t appear at 6am and five minutes after I’m calling him on his phone. Dishevelled and obviously just out of his bed he hurried toward the padlock on the gate to release me.

The sun beneath the horizon

The temperature was a sublime 18°C (65°F) first thing and after stopping to buy a sandwich I was straight onto the highway heading north. At 5am many cafes and kiosks open in all these towns. Your average tradesman disappearing up the road to start work wants a coffee, that is, there’s business to be done in the hospitality sector. Given the hour of day they start I’m always impressed that they’ll stand around for 10 minutes waiting for their beverage. Clearly proper coffee or no coffee is the call.

A sign of things to come

I was headed to Goondiwindi but just before that was my first and only stop, Boggabilla. That turned out to be a very long way away. In the meanwhile there was no shade and nowhere to lean my bike up if I stopped and sat down before that settlement. I say shade because by 9am the sun’s well and truly out and hitting mid 30s. Later the temperature crept into the 40s. I was carrying lots of water, I was covered by a big hat and other exposed flesh was underneath sunscreen. The only thing I couldn’t stop was the complete enervation of being out on the bike for seven hours straight.

Shadow play

The road stretched before me. This was a good shoulder but note how rough the surface looked. Recent work on the highway had all been to degrade the quality of the surfacing to this roughness. The distance from the road of the trees meant no shade. Were there optional routes? Well sort of. I could have got north by following the suggestion of Google or Garmin for bicycles on very minor road but they would have been less direct, still approximate to this route and no less exposed. I’d have just had less trucks and a longer ride. No point.

Chunky gravel in the road surface

Most trucks moved over onto the other carriageway as they passed at 60 or 70mph. I never knew exactly when the truck would actually get past me, Would it be a truck alone, a truck with one trailer (‘Long Vehicle’) or with two trailers (‘Road Train’). Professional drivers are good and aware of the impact of their vehicles. They will give you space if they can. On more narrow roads where the truck couldn’t move over the draft created by one going past you, six feet away, at 60mph could be sold as an exciting fairground experience!

Chrome delight

So some time later I got to cross into Queensland and into Goondwindi. The clocks went back an hour. I’ve little to tell you about my day. The concentration on keeping the bike going forward straight and not wandering into the carriageway whilst dealing with variable shoulder quality was itself tiring. However, I was never in danger and just kept pedalling. My legs or butt didn’t hurt and I was fine but getting more drained. The option to camp was disappearing. My early starts were essential but getting to a campsite early afternoon was hopeless. What would I do until about 8pm when the heat started to fall.

My last state
How far I’d come. Brisbane, I can see you!

3 thoughts on “Australia – Brisbane Bound

  1. Following closely, Tony. I hope you have some alternative routes in mind for getting home after you reach your goal. I always look back to the time when an old Australian told me that 8 of the 10 most dangerous creatures in the world reside in Queensland. Can’t remember them all, but don’t swim in the sea and avoid rock pools. Well done, btw, your ride is one hell of an achievement even for a youngster like you. Perhaps another lunch, when you return?

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    1. Peter, thank you for your time as always. I’m in Brisbane now but the blogs will follow until the bitter end! Still have had a few challenges off the bike. The Iran war has been a major disruption in terms of my carefully laid plans and pocket! I joined Moores as Barry Cody left. The thing we shared was Pat Dalton. Me for secretarial duties only! Sorry to learn of his passing, I hope there was a decent turnout. A lunch seems a great idea. I’ll get to it when I’m back and remotely back in the swing of things. Lastly, most wildlife has either been biting my ankles or prostrate on the hard shoulder after a losing altercation with speeding traffic. Spiders, snakes and crocodiles have been nowhere to be seen! Kind regards

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  2. My comments seem to disappear when I press send, so I doubt you are receiving them, but – well done, a great achievement. Hope you can get home despite Mr Trumps excursion (note: the word war is not used anymore, see Putin’s Special Military Excercise). Perhaps another old codger lunch is calling. Which reminds me that Barry Cody’s funeral took place a week last Monday.

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