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Urbenville New south wales revisited

This is our second visit to Urbenville NSW. We are staying at the forestry rest area on the road to Woodenbong. It is our preferred campground. As it happens, it is the only one available because the showgrounds are still closed due to very wet conditions.

In 2024 we had the place to ourselves, the weather was fine and cool and the facilities were clean and well maintained

2025 was definitely different. The weather was wet as it had been every month since January. The grounds here are very wet and boggy in a few places.

Which is a shame the camp grounds are well set out and a postcard pretty. When we arrived there were no other campers so we had the pick of the sites, and as it got wetter the choices diminished quickly. We like this little village, but it has changed from our last visit. You get the feel of neglect. The facilities at the campground were not usable. They had not been cleaned in a long while. It was the same with the public toilets in town. We stayed a few days then moved on to Woodenbong, about 20k down the road to dry out.

Exploring Lismore’s Art and Recovery Post-Flood

Lismore! A beautiful slightly alternate town in the Northern rivers district of New South Wales, I! The residents are probably the most resilient in the country. Floods are the nemesis of this town. There have been many in the town’s history. At the time of this post being written, the town is being inundated again. The really sad thing is that they have not really recovered from the last two.

The original part of town is built on a flood plain. Later development has migrated to higher ground. Still, there are thousands of residents who have property in the old part of town. The Wilson river is the culprit at flood time. It flows into the Richmond. The river finishes at Ballina on the coast.

These rivers once carried the produce and timber from the farming areas around Lismore. In the early days, they were essential for transport. Now, the flooding river renders the lower part of the town almost useless for very long periods. Jacky and I lived in Alstonville about 30klm from Lismore, we shopped there and really enjoyed the quirky alternate vibe of the town, we last visited there in 2023 a year after the last flood again from a cyclone like the current one “Alfred” that drifted further south than normal, the photos that are in this post are from that time

After the flood in 2022, the NSW government decided to buy back houses and businesses that were regularly flooded. Nonetheless, at the time of writing, this has not been completed. This is the second flood since then, and there are still residents trying to get suitable housing replacement.

Lismore and the residents are a resilient lot. While we were there this time (2023), it was clear that the area was suffering. There was so much unemployment and many despondent homeless residents waiting for government decisions. The local council decided that the dingy graffitied areas of the town needed a lift. They employed local and international artists to transform the back alleys into an art gallery. Now, that area attracts many tourists to view the artwork.

We were to be in the Northern rivers again this week, but Cyclone Alfred has delayed our plans. I’m looking ahead to visiting Lismore again. We will visit the cafes, restaurants, and shops. Hopefully, not too much damage has been done this time. I am keen to see if the mess from 2022/23 has been cleaned up. The abandoned homes, schools, and businesses were a sad thing to witness. Yet, Lismore will recover. As travelers, we can do our little bit to put a few dollars back into this great community.

WE will be back here in a couple of week Lismore 2025 coming up. If you are a traveler and are near Lismore, give it a crack. You can find time to divert there. There is plenty to see, with some of the best markets in the country close by.

Cheers

Exploring 1770 Beach Campgrounds: A Traveler’s Tale

The towns of 1770 and Agnes Waters offer more than just a couple of novelty stores. There are surf shops, chemists, and two grocery stores. You can also find fishing and boating options. There is even a golf club that provides a good challenge. The weather really dictated our activities. We spent most of our time reading and relaxing. When the weather permitted, we walked the foreshore. On one of these short walks, I started out wandering through the little cafe at the park entrance. I found myself in a group of mangroves. It was interesting to view the surrounding sand flats through the windows created by the gaps in the mangroves. Well, I thought so. Trying to photograph those scenes was challenging. It was more difficult than I thought because the camera tends to flatten the perspective. Photographing did fill the day.

That was our 2025 1770/Agnes Waters visit. Would we go back to the same camp grounds? Maybe, but we did enjoy ourselves. The rain has apparently moved on, so we are heading to Alstonville to catch up with friends. We also plan to reconnect with one of our special places.

Wreck rock, high tides and plastic

Wreck rock 2025

Today we are sitting at Gympie waiting for cyclone Alfred to make up its mind about landfall and an apt time to publish this post as there will be plenty of debris created on our beaches.

Another visit to one of our favourite places Wreck rock, our fifth time here, in the very wonderful Endeavour national park Queensland, there are three camp areas here looking north towards Agnes waters is Flat rock and Middle rock and here we are at Wreck rock again. The weather has not been as kind this time as it has been just a bit of wind and some higher than usual tides, as usual the camp area is great very clean not so crowded only a couple of others and some day trippers, and the ever-present lace monitors.

We were here this time for a 8 days and I must say that the first time we were here I did not notice the problem that I am about to introduce you to but this is not a new thing here Im sure. IApart from the National parks the area is under the not so watchful eye of the Gladstone shire and maybe a bit of the Burnett region; The beaches and sand dunes on this stretch of coast are nursery for the green back and flat back turtles, so there are Turtle monitoring stations all along the beaches, and I have to say that this is the first time that we have been here and not had the volunteer’s camped here to monitor the nests.

This area is also the start of the real surfing beaches north of the New South Wales border in Queensland,  so as well as the National parks rangers and the Turtle monitoring people there are plenty of surfers from Agnes waters to Bundaberg as well as travellers using the beaches.

So by now you are wondering what is this bloke getting to, well i’ll be blunt

the beaches that I mentioned at the start are THE MOST POLLUTED BEACHES THAT I HAVE SEEN in our travels around our great country. Not only polluted , but mistreated by most who visit here, on this visit I met a man who not only loves the area he actively cleans it up, which is more than I can say for most of the others I have previously mentioned.

The pollution I am talking about is Plastic and plenty of it, every day there is a new batch deposited by the high tide to collect not just a handful but bags fill  , the photos are what we,  Jim and I collected in about six days and from only around 300 METERS of beach, 

I would like to apologise  on behalf of Jim and I for only getting to such a small area but I am a few days short of seventy seven and Jim looks likes he shades me by a few years and its been hot. But what about the regulars, well according to a ranger that Jim spoke to the “beach” is not National Parks responsibility, more on that a bit later, on to the turtle nest monitors, I may be tarring a few people with the same brush here but this is my experience, last trip 2022 after myself and a couple of young campers had collected a few bags of rubbish, that the “turtle nest monitors had been driving there buggies through “ for a few days we were trying to dig out this very large piece of rope that had some trawl net around it, obviously buried by the high tide, we had excavated a fairly large hole in the sand around it but it was to heavy for three of us to pull out, the nest watchers were coming back from their watching and we tried to get the first buggy to stop: No go, one of the young men helping all but threw himself in front of the next one and with a lot of complaining  I think the wine and bickies were out,  he let us tie it to the buggy and we got half a trawl net out of the hole, he left us to get it to a place where it would not get washed back and could be retrieved.

Jim told me a similar story of last year where he had put four bags of plastic rubbish next to the park track, he had asked the ranger if he could dispose of it, ( sorry no can’t do that) but the ranger asked the turtle people to help, and they did but Jim got a lecture from one of them saying that they should not have to do this.

To the users of the beach and ocean, some of this group has saddened me this week, first to travellers, I was walking down to start collecting from the high tide on the first day and passed a couple of young English tourists camping here, a brief chat and I told them what I was doing and the young lass said Oh good we have collected a lot of plastic bottles and rubbish and put it on the path for the ranger, bonus lovely people, but the locals, the surfers so disappointing, on the weekend a few of the Agnes Waters surfers were here to catch a wave, day one crap surf, so we were talking about the area and the lack of waves,  I told them about how much plastic we had picked up and that there was so much more,  very small bits floating in the tide line:  So I asked them both if they would help with the plastic collection as it was their beach, surfer 1 said yes we see lots of the small bits out in the water all the time  “its not good”, surfer 2 nods his head and says, you know there is a bit of a wave just near the rocks what do you think, and off they went to flounder around in a 2 foot chop.

Day two about half a dozen board riders ( not surfers) joined the other two, no takers on the clean up but their girlfriends who had a shade cover managed to bury their rubbish including two plastic bags in the sand below the high tide mark.

Jim and I will finish our stay here this afternoon by once again walking the tide line and picking up what we can, but this is not about people looking after the ocean and the beach, this stuff comes from the rivers and creeks around here and is deposited on this great beach,  that is about 50 kilometres long and no one appears to be  caring, not the council, not the National parks not the turtle people who cannot grasp the fact that when the turtles hatch they have to fight or eat their way past this crap, and the people who use the beach and Mother ocean for their pleasure don’t seem to care or give back

Its definitely not about people like Jim and I, It should be about you and others who don’t walk past a plastic bag or an old plastic oil bottle or drink bottle, or see a problem where plastic waste can be washed out to sea and end up on a deserted beach like this to break down in to the smallest pretty shiny colourful most harmful lure that the ocean can present to its occupants.

As Jim said to me this morning If you won’t participate, don’t talk about it, If you get to this bit and come to the conclusion that I’m just another nutter that overreacts to this type of issue, just delete the link and let me know that you have and you definitely won’t get another rant from me.

Enjoy life BK 

Exploring Kauri Creek Campground and Cooktown

The Endeavour river on a good day is spectacular, when Cook visited it would have been pristine with only the local Aboriginal community and the endeavour crew to appreciate the beauty of the river and surrounding rainforest; There is a thought invoking plaque in the town park near the river that tells of the struggle, and the eventual truce between Cook and the locals, it seems that the locals were a bit cranky with Cook for stealing some of their property. (old Australian aboriginal proverb, “if you want to use our wood to fix your ship don’t steal our stuff”) Anyway, back to the river, a walk along early in the morning or afternoon really shows of the colours of the river, the council has done a marvellous job of making sure that you can get the best of it, great walking/bike path take you to the best viewing places, plenty of signs and information of the area history

Innisfail Far north Queensland

Innisfail Far North Queensland, this quirky town is one of Australia’s best examples of multiple art deco architecture in Australia; rebuilt after a devastating cyclone in March 1918.
The photos here are a small selection of the houses and buildings built in the restoration of the town.

I have keep saying that I am going to do this every time we come to the area, so camera in hand late on a Sunday afternoon I set off in to Innisfail to try to capture the essence of this great far north Queensland town. Situated on the Johnstone river about 100K south of Cairns, Innisfail rests in lush Banana and sugarcane country, amazing tropical rain forests and close coral reefs and the quirky art deco architecture are some of the reasons we keep coming back.

Innisfail is not the coolest place in Queensland any night over 18deg at any time of the year is unusual, lots of rain and the occasional cyclone; In 2006 category 5 cyclone larry devastated Innisfail causing millions of dollars in damage and loss of business to town and farming communities for many kilometres from the centre


I had cause to travel through the area a week after the event and the town, rain forest and farming area were almost unrecognisable. But sometimes these events shape a community, the town has been rebuilt after Larry, but a previous cyclone that did more damage made Innisfail the quirky art deco museum it is today. A huge cyclone swept through Innisfail on 10 March 1918, causing immense damage and killing many people.Buildings destroyed included the Anglican Church and the Methodist Church. So many buildings were severely damaged, that many new buildings were erected after the cyclone using concrete rather than the more traditional timber with tin roof. As Art Deco architecture was popular at that time, many of the new buildings were built in the Art Deco style. As a result, Innisfail is now considered one of the best Australian towns for Art Deco and Streamline Moderne architecture.

The Johnstone river flows through the town, a large river with plenty of its own history, the town is only about three kilometres from the ocean with a good harbour and deep water you will usually see fishing boats from many different ports either at anchor or tied up at the fisherman’s wharf.

  • Fishing boats

Walking around the town on a Sunday evening, the lack of people, the light changing very quickly I think suited the building designs, I hope that I have done justice to this beautiful historical town.

Anzac day 2024

Coonabarabran area

Pilliga pottery art
Pilliga pottery art

Alstonville to Burren Junction