Tag Archives: australia

Australia – Brisbane Bound

Singleton to Murrurundi – 72 miles

I’m usually asleep by 8pm and awake some time after 4am. As I’ve written earlier then with a head torch I start packing to go but as dawn doesn’t arrive until past 6.40am I have a lot of time to kill. I would seldom set off in the dark: drivers aren’t looking for cyclists even if I’m using lights.

First breakfast

The streets were alive with utes/pick up trucks. Mining is important to Singleton and there are 17 open cast mines in the area and the scale is enormous. No doubt Australia is keeping the lights on in Shanghai. At 7am the traffic is like rush hour and the number of people in hi-viz, usually clutching a coffee from a cafe, is enormous. For me on my bike I had to be careful as workers were focussing on getting to their sites. As always with my luck the day starts with a long hill climb and they’re steep enough for large American trucks with their trailers to have to crawl past me.

My friends

I read a fabulous book about the origins of Australia before I came out, I was interested in the European immigrant. It’s called ‘The Fatal Shore’ by Robert Hughes. A summary is:

The First Fleet of 11 ships, bringing 736 convicts left Portsmouth, England in May 1787 and 8 months later they dropped anchor in Botany Bay, that’s Sydney to you and me. Out of the passengers 48 had died on the voyage. Most were transported for theft and there were no, say, murderers or rapists. James Cook had landed in 1770 at this same spot. I avoid the word discovered as the were many indigenous natives already here. Over the next 200 years the aborigines would experience murder, theft and rape at the hands of the Europeans. Any British or Irish convicts escaping from the existing settlements might perish at the hands of the climate or aborigines. They were in a prison without bars and walls.

Eventually over the next 80 years a total of 165,000 convicts were transported. The origin of shipping convicts had started with America before Australia but after the British lost the American colony another location had to be found. Why transport convicts? Well, the British prisons were full and a place had to found for them. During the 80 years many other emigrants arrived from Britain and the convicts provided vital labour. Convicts usually had 7 or 14 year sentences and on the completion of their time had the rather tricky task of getting back to England. Obviously just about all stayed. If during your sentence you could get a ‘ticket of leave’ for good behaviour that allowed them many liberties such as marrying or working for themselves.

Eventually there was considerable agitation to end transportation in Britain and Australia. The British thought it cruel and had started to build prisons. The new Australian settlers in New South Wales and Queensland felt this history was a stain and wanted to move on. The number of free settlers massively outnumbered the convict numbers by then. Toward the end Tasmania and Norfolk Island became the repositories for repeat offending criminals. The regime was brutal and often inhumane. Tasmania was originally known as Van Diemen’s Land and changed its name latterly to remove the stain. The importation of convicts wasn’t originally rejected by many of the settlers who desperately needed labour as they farmed increasing large areas of the country.

A key reason for the demise of transportation was the fact that conditions in England compared unfavourably to the open spaces, warmth and opportunity in Australia that came the way of convicts and then there was the discovery of gold! Transportation could be viewed as free travel to the opportunity to make a fortune. And so it ended.

I couldn’t listen to live Premier League football live as it played out back in Blighty and so Tim and Anna kept me posted on WhatsApp but I kept looking at the BBC website. Since I’ve been away Leeds have played three games and picked up one point. My absence has sent the club into a tail spin.

BBC App

My first major town, Muswellbrook, came into view and a sausage egg muffin called me.

Note the rumble strip on the right of the hard shoulder. In fairness this is a wide hard shoulder with a good surface.

The USA and Australia like their rumble strips
Obviously coal has its opponents. Fossil fuels must eventually go but the pace it is being abandoned has a major implication on jobs and manufacturing. Singleton looked vibrant with many young people in work.
Aberdeen!
A town called Scone. Many horse studs in the area
Sad old carriages

I cycled through an enormous deluge of rain. I got drowned! Eventually I rolled into Murrurundi, a small town at the bottom of an enormous hill… I had to climb the next day. After getting wet through I thought I’d stay in a hotel. The one I found had no rooms and so I camped (!) at a nice little site. Despite the scenic setting there was a main road on one side with 24/7 trucks and a rail line on the other side that ran through the night moving coal. It was noisy. Fortunately I can sleep through most things.

Home for the night

I found some Vietnamese food at the Bowling Club. Delicious if not a little expensive! Before I dined I sat in the main bar writing up my blog. The service and smiles were delightful from all and I got asked questions. I seldom do. Gary, one of the gents having an early evening beer asked about my trip, its distance and my camping. He looked genuinely concerned and asked if I had enough money? Of course I’m fine but I was so touched by the question. It last happened in 2014 in the USA when a stranger, Ed, following my blogs, asked the same question. The lady behind the bar noted how touched I was and I said I’d find the club’s Facebook page and mention Gary.

Pork

Cycling Sydney to Canberra to Adelaide 2024

You Ain’t Going Nowhere, Sunshine…

I’ve always viewed my long cycle trips like a moon shot. On such a mission the excitement is all about being at the moon but much of the anxiety arises in the launch and re-entry. My trips have the same issues. I’m always worried about packing the box, remembering all the things I need to carry, box sturdiness, the weight and not least getting this large package to the aeroplane. When returning the challenge is finding a large cardboard box at the departure town to pack the bike in. On this latter challenge then imagine finding a bike shop with a surplus box and then carrying it 3 miles back to where you’re staying to pack it!

So I was never relaxed about the flight to Sydney. Something approaching relief would have happened when I pushed the box into my hotel room. With the alarm set for just before 4am I tiptoed out of the hotel room at Manchester Airport attempting not to wake my first wife. In the reception I was reunited with my bike box and loading my other bags on the trolley I wheeled the lot down to Check In at Terminal 2.

The bike has to be put on the trolley end ways up to push it through the narrow passageways that litter your route. I got to Check In at around 4.15am in line with instructions for a 7.45am flight (!) The process starts with using those awful electronic stations. They never seem to function properly and an assistant, usually hard pressed as a lot of passengers want his time, has to help due to some malfunction. I overcame the Check In hurdle and was directed to another person at a desk who requested my passport.

I handed it across and literally after opening it up he asked me to wait whilst he hot footed it to another colleague. I was urged to join them where this colleague said to me plainly without any empathy that the passport was damaged and I couldn’t fly.

Weeks of planning, lots of expenditure, accommodation booked, items bought, fitness  kept maintained in a rubbish winter now all discarded in a heartbeat. The passport was weary, true. It had been through the wash in Port Douglas, Queensland in April. However, I’d had no problem subsequently in Australia, New Zealand, France, Spain or the UK. Never even a comment made by an airline or border official.

In distress I said that it hadn’t been a problem elsewhere and so was passed to my third person. She advised that the airline could be fined for carrying me to Australia; as I’m talking the tickets were being ripped off my luggage. My interview was seemingly over as they moved onto other passengers.

Stunned!

Back in the hotel room my bride was rudely woken as I regaled her with this unbelievable situation. Following this I ran around that morning getting a passport application form from a Post Office, passport photos from a booth in Tesco and a counter signature from a friend across town and drove to Liverpool to get a passport on a guaranteed week’s delivery. I now await its delivery.

(Note, this new passport will have a new number. I will therefore have to re-apply for an updated Australian visa. Obviously this can’t be done until I get the new passport and see the number.)

Booking.com and Qatar Airways advise that I can reschedule this flight (and my return ones) for an amendment charge. I somehow don’t feel that lucky but we’ll find out.

So that photo of a smug Yorkshireman in a T shirt in front of the Opera House is on hold.

Following this debacle I did contact Simon Calder of the Daily Telegraph on ‘X’ about Qatar Airways. It seems they have a lot of ‘previous’ with this action. In fact amongst their victims is Matthew Parris who got evicted prior to a flight to an African destination.

Check the condition of your passport and don’t fly Qatar Airways.

Lastly thanks to all the sympathy I got from a load of folks on Facebook and Instagram with my video explaining my problems. Hopefully my next social media post will be happier.