Guilderton |
It was 11⁰C when Devil (F650GS) and Dwarf (R1200GS) pulled out of our driveway on one of the last days of winter, on a four day getaway to ride Western Australia’s Wildflower Country. When you leave home at 7:30am on a weekday, the 90 kilometres of clogged freeway, through the city, is not an inviting proposition. We chose the scenic route, through Fremantle and along the coast road to Mullaloo. This alternative was busy too, and it was with some relief that we turned onto Burns Beach Road and escaped the roundabouts and coffee drinking pedestrians.
By 10:30am
we were in Guilderton, at the mouth of the Moore River, digesting the empty car
park and the $2 per hour parking fee. We chose the free space on the hill
overlooking the Indian Ocean.
Lake Indoon |
We were soon riding the Indian Ocean Drive again, cruising past the coastal townships in the cool, calm morning and admiring the shifting sands and the magnificent Indian Ocean along the way. We shared the highway with migrating bees, heading southwards. I bunkered down behind my wind shield but I couldn't avoid them all and by the time we arrived at Green Head I could hardly see through my visor.
We turned
right onto the Coolimba Eneabba Road and I made a mental note of The Beekeepers
Nature Reserve at the turnoff. The temperature rose quickly as we left the
coast. I was relieved to stop at Lake Indoon as I had been keeping an eye on an
insect that had found its way inside my helmet. In the early 1980's we had
participated in sailing regattas on Lake Indoon. Now, in the late winter of
2020, the lake is just a shadow of her former self, the water level very low
and health warnings and "no boating" signs everywhere.
Camping at Mingenew Springs |
Three
Springs was our fuel stop. Unmanned service stations are becoming more common
and it took half an hour, and a visit to the council office, to find a fuel pump
that was not out of order. Dwarf’s computer said 5km to empty.
By our riding
curfew time of 4pm our tent was up and we were enjoying a beer at the welcoming
Mingenew Spring Caravan
Park. We impressed some of the other travellers with our homemade burger followed
by chocolate cake and strawberries for dessert. We turned in for an early night,
happy after a good day on the road.
Mingenew Hill |
The
following morning we scampered up Mingenew Hill and then undid all the hard
work with a pie and a cake from the Mingenew Bakery. The bakery
makes seriously good tucker and both the pie and the apple turnover were right
up there with the best ever.
Coalseam Conservation Park |
Ready for
the run out to Coalseam
Conservation Park, Steve placed the site map neatly in the map reader of
his tank bag and then, in a senior moment, removed the tank bag, "for
comforts sake," just before heading out on the road. The wildflowers were
spectacular and at Miners Lookout we meandered through an enchanting meadow, with
flowers as far as the eye could see. There are many places to stop in this park
but by the end of the afternoon I found the locking and unlocking of the
jackets and helmets rather tedious. One traveller said "why do you bother
locking up?" I replied "we'd rather use our luck on rider safety than
protecting our belongings."
We dined at
the Commercial Hotel
on the second night, a pre dinner drink beside a roaring fire and then a good
measure of a well aged T Bone steak made for a very enjoyable evening.
Butterabby Graves |
On day
three we set off for a ride through wildflower country. We stopped at the
Butterabby Graves, where five aboriginal men were hanged long ago. Fortunately
we were left alone to lament what had taken place here at Butterabby; as we
were leaving two caravans and two cars arrived.
Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church |
In Mullewa
we wandered up to Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church. At one time her designer and
builder, John Hawes, described this church as "feeble" ~ in size,
maybe, but certainly not in grandeur. Only the pub served a sit down lunch on a
Saturday in Mullewa so we hit the Wildflower Way and made our own tea and
opened the "nut box" at the ruin of Tardum Hall. We were too late for
a cake from the Wildflower Bakery in Morawa so we happily rode on back to
Mingenew. The warm 29⁰C from a couple of days before had been replaced with a
cool 18⁰C, a reminder that it was still winter.
Tardum Hall |
It always feels good to be back on the open road and I was smiling all the while as we rode south from Mingenew along the Midlands Wildflower Route. We enjoyed the vintage cars in Carnamah and took some local advice and fuelled up in town instead of riding on to Coorow. The Drovers Inn welcomed us for lunch in Moora and then we rode on towards home. We enjoyed a quiet meander through the Chittering Valley before negotiating the Sunday city traffic. Suddenly we were home again and all we can think about is the next time we will ride the open road.
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