Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Townsville

Hi All,
In this post we are going to take a trip from Cloncurry to Townsville. Townsville is situated about 800km to the east of Cloncurry on the Queensland coast and is the closest major centre to Cloncurry.
Being on the coast it is a popular destination for Cloncurryites wanting a seaside fix, medical specialist or major shopping. We have been over there twice since being in the northwest and we thoroughly loved being there. So lets have a look at Townsville named after Captain Robert Towns and it's surrounds.
 
 
The first small town you come to on your journey east is Richmond. A beautiful little town that is famous for Dinosaurs.
Many fossils have been found in the area and some are on display in the museum on Kronosaurus Korner.
Nice park in town perfect for a cuppa and a bite to eat.
Grand old pub in town.
Hughenden is the next town along the Flinders Highway and has this unique piece of art in the main street.
Charters Towers is the next town on the Flinders Highway and was once a gold rush town. Its only about an hour and a half drive to Townsville from there. On the Townsville side of Charters Towers is this boat by the side of the highway. I just had to pull up and grab a photo.
Townsville was not blessed with great beaches like the Gold Coast so the  council got to building a custom esplanade complete with rock pool and sandy beaches called The Strand. This pic is of the Rock Pool.
 
The Strand is an awesome place to visit, there are numerous places to enjoy coffee, meals or just kick back and look the scenery. You can see Magnetic Island in the background.
Maggie Island.
 The Strand runs 2.2km along the foreshore right down to the Casino.
 Castle Hill.
 
The Water Park is popular place to cool off.
 Our camp at the Deeragun Big 4 Caravan Park. Second time we have stayed here, it's a little way out of town but is a very nice, comfortable and clean park.
Feeding Rainbow Lorikeets happens every afternoon at the park.
Nice tropical pool area.
We ventured up Castle Hill for a birds eye view of the city.
Looking out to Magnetic Island and over The Strand.
Sunset from Castle Hill.
City Lights.
We did a day trip to the Northern Beaches. Bushland Beach is the first beach out of town and is where we enjoyed a great meal at the Bushland Beach Tavern the night before. Next is Saunders Beach where this photo was taken.
Saunders Beach.
After Saunders Beach Is Toolakea Beach.
 Then you come across my favourite, Balgal Beach, what a gem.
There is a very small caravan park here if you wanted to stay for a while (and I couldn't see why not) and a great little store/restaurant where we had a fantastic feed of fresh fish and chips.
  A great little beachside park.
The little store.
The view from the dining area.
 Local resident, Red Tailed Black Cockatoo.
And his mate.

 
 
This is a fantastic part of the country and I hope to get back here again and have a better look around.
Catch ya next time.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Saturday, July 19, 2014

Mary Kathleen

Situated roughly halfway between Cloncurry and Mt Isa is the now abandoned Mary Kathleen uranium mine. Clem Walton and his prospecting partner Norm McConachy discovered the rich uranium deposit in 1954 and they named it Mary Kathleen after McConachy's late wife, then quickly sold the rights to it and in 1955 Rio Tinto Mining set up Mary Kathleen Uranium Ltd. The mining method used was open cut and at the time was the largest known deposit in Australia. The town was purpose built and owned by the mining company and was home to about 1000 residents by 1961. The town 6 km from the mine had a full range of facility's including a post office, cinema, school, banks, sports ovals, bowls club, hotel, town hall, general stores, fire and police stations. The nearby Corella River was dammed by the company and created Lake Corella and it supplied reticulated water for the mine and township as well as a place for recreational activities. By 1963 the contract for the supply of Uranium had been completed and the mine mothballed.  So lets have a look around at this once bustling town.
 

This was once a Lawn Bowls Club.
Town centre was mostly on the left.
These slabs belonged to the Post Office, Town Office and ANZ Bank.
These are the Town Hall, Hotel, Shops and Library.
 More General Stores.
 Guess you could call this the main drag.
 
 This was a water feature in the park centre of town.
This used to be the Cafeteria where the miners were fed.
The whole area is now part of a privately owned station but the owners let travellers stay overnight so they can have a look around, it is a very popular spot in the tourist season.
Plenty of Ghost Gums around the area.
 Oh look a roundabout!! The road to the mine is on the right of the roundabout, on the left was all housing right down the road. The Police Station had several lives, it was first at Oona near Kajabbi and then to Dobbyn and onto Mary Kathleen. It is still in one piece and resides at Mary Kathleen Park and Historical Village in Cloncurry.
 The gates to the township also reside at Mary Kathleen Park in Cloncurry. The mine site is behind me and we are looking down towards that roundabout.
 The sealed road to the mine is still in pretty good shape for it's age.
The mine is located in those hills, the Selwyn Ranges.
What is left of the processing plant.
One of the overburden heaps looking towards the ranges.
 
 
 
Mary Kathleen had another leash on life after more than a decade in mothballs when some new contracts were signed. Reopening in 1974 mining continued until the ore ran out in 1982.
 
In 1983 they held a big auction at Mary K and sold off the whole town. A lot of the houses ended up in Cloncurry and some in Mt Isa. The open cut here is now fenced off and makes it very difficult to see it now, they say the area is still radioactive. Well I hope you enjoyed looking around Mary K as much as I did. Catch ya Later.