Early the next morning, far, far too early we dragged ourselves from our respective tents, doused ourselves in refreshing cold showers and prepared to face the day. I'm surprised the day didn't flee at the sight of us. I dragged on a yellow t-shirt I had bought at Perth airport at the insistence of my travelling companion who was afraid my all black wardrobe would attract flies. Of flies there were few but she emerged from her tent rubbing steroid cream on yet more mosquito bites.
The Bungle Bungles are an area of uplift looming over the plains around. Gorges trace through the hills providing a rough and beautiful landscape perfect for walking through if walking through gorges in 30+ degrees heat is your idea of a good time. Strangely it is mine. Then there are the rocks. This is the Bungle Bungles' drawcard. The exposed stone is striped orange and black like oversized humbugs or bees with a glandular problem. The orange is iron, the black is a type of bacteria that obviously has an artistic bent.
We set off for a walk in Cathedral Gorge. The intention was to get this walk done before the heat of the day really starting impacting us but it turned out that the heat of the day had got up early to welcome us. Despite the rapidly climbing temperature we ploughed on. Various Bungles rose up around us as we weaved our way through a beautiful landscape marred only by a vast profusion of cane toad corpses. The sight would have pleased me if I had believed a serious dent was being made in their numbers. Sadly this is not the case.
Despite these reminders of mortality we headed into the gorge until we came to an area with a small pool which historically was used as a birthing area by indigenous women. The entire of Cathedral Gorge was used as a shelter that women and children could hide in if danger threatened. After the birthing area we carried on deeper into the gorge until we came to a larger, beautiful pool. I don't know if the local indigenous people used this area for anything in particular but with stunning views, fresh water and only one way in or out they would have been mad not to.
Once scenery had been appropriately gawped at we retraced our steps back almost but not quite to our starting point and headed out on the more difficult track. Again dipping into our trip notes my companion and I were expecting a brutal death march, stairs were threatened in a manner which led me to believe there would be a ladder bolted to the cliff that we would have to ascend under the grim oversight of our hard driving taskmasters. We trotted up the stairs assuming the worst was to come. It wasn't, I am ashamed to say that my companion and I engaged in a little mockery of the difficulty level as we went along. The fact that we still had breathe enough to be smartarses indicates the level of difficulty actually undergone. My companion is, as noted, a pilates instructor with enough energy to power a city. I on the other hand am a shambling wreck whose lifestyle is basically a low level exercise in self harm. Despite this I was able to keep up with her even as the sun rolled up its sleeves and really got down to business.
Piccanninny Lookout whose name survives I suspect because no one knows what "piccanninny" means anymore provided us with spectacular views over parts of the Bungle Bungles and also provided a helpful fence to stop us pitching face forward into those parts. We photographed, my companion posed and yet more photographs were taken. Then, because the lookout had neither a bathroom or a Pizza Hut we returned to the carpark where we had left our noble steed. It was still early in the morning and despite the sweat lathering our bodies we were nowhere near finished for the day. Our truck bounced and jolted across the track heading for the aerodrome.
Yes, you heard me. To be fair an aerodrome is simply a flat patch of land where aircraft are allowed to land. And land they do. Somewhat more financially stable tourists fly in to the Bungle Bungles rather than subject themselves to the road. This is where they land. A small passenger aircraft lurked in the shadows as if to add verisimilitude to this fact. We weren't interested in leaving but also here were a trio of helicopters that did sightseeing flights over the Bungle Bungles and every single member of the tour had booked an opportunity to look at the sights without having to go to the effort of walking through them.
The helicopter flight was amazing, the Bungle Bungles spread out before us and the view from above was incredible. The flight lasted half an hour during which time the pilates instructor, who had hijacked my phone, took about a hundred photos. I settled for staring out of the side of the helicopter in astonishment. I would happily have stayed up there forever except; bathrooms and Pizza Hut. We landed in time for lunch which wasn't pizza but was welcome all the same.
In the afternoon there was another walk. No "cool of the morning" rubbish this time. It was peak sunstroke time but we were assured that the bulk of the walk was in the shade. It certainly was, Echidna Chasm was a narrow crack in a Bungle that stretched out before us. Shadows and darkness beckoned and I stepped forward eagerly and almost sprained my ankle. The ground was loose rock and pebble and rather difficult to walk on. Yet walk on it we did as towering rock walls closed around us as the chasm got narrower the further we went into it. Sadly we couldn't get all the way through. Parts of Echidna Chasm had fallen onto lower parts of Echidna Chasm effectively blocking the path. One of our guides claimed to have seen a snake but nothing came of that. I suspect it was scared off by the sound of over a dozen people crunching over a loose rocky path while squealing excitedly at the towering rock walls all around (ok, it may have just been me doing that last bit).
That night our guides cooked us roast lamb over the fire and a tawny owl turned up and posed for photographs. I crawled into bed with my cup not just running over but floating away on the stream.