Edith Falls, July 22, 2013

Leliyn (otherwise known as Edith Falls) is actually part of Nitmiluk (Katherine Gorge NP) even though it is some 40km to the north. We headed in there (20km east of the highway) towards the end of the day. There is a waterfall and pool that is safe to swim.
I promise this will be the last “falls and swim” photo (at least for a while) but it was a cool place to be at the end of a hot day. The pool was enormous – must have been the size of a footy field. The boys swam to the falls and jumped off the rocks more times than I remember.

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The camping area was full as a fat lady’s sock, so we headed out for a bush camp. It was stupendous! There was a breeze, which means one beautiful thing to me: NO MOSQUITOES. My itching limbs are starting to give my fingernails a rest.
The moonrise was worth the photo – a whopping big full moon.
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Beat the Crowds, July 22, 2013

We arrived at Wangi Falls by about 9.30am. These falls are Litchfield’s most popular attraction, so it was good to beat the crowds. The falls run all year round, and the pool is huge!
Wangi Falls Litchfield NP
You can see the boys swimming just below the falls in the photo above. And of course they had the obligatory shower:
Wangi Falls Litchfield NP
And here’s one for mum – a photo with me in it!!
Wangi Falls Litchfield NP
There’s a flash café serving coffee that’s not flash (4/10 again) and overpriced food. So we moved on.
We wanted to take a 4WD road (Reynolds Road) that heads south and exits Litchfield NP taking you down on the Daly River Road to save us backtracking to the Stuart Highway, but the road was closed, so backtrack it was.
John (famed for finding a short cut, albeit one that takes longer) did take us on an alternate route from the lovely town of Batchelor (formerly part of the Jungle Rum Uranium mining lease) to the town of Adelaide River.
Here, we visited the Adelaide River War Cemetery, the largest was cemetery in Australia. It has the graves of over 400 people who lost their lives during the bombing of the early 40s.
Adelaide River War Cemetery

Plunge Pools are Popular, July 21, 2013

Litchfield has some beautiful waterfalls and swimming spots – all very (read way too) popular. We stopped at Florence Falls where cars had filled up all the parking spots for trailers, so we took the bus parking spot. This was not a good sign for a quite dip in the pools. Because then the bus arrived!
Florence Falls Litchfeld NP
It’s only a short walk down to the pool in the pic above, and we swam over and got pummelled under the falls. There’s also a crazy guy in the photo jumping off the top of the falls.
Below is a not so crazy Harry (umm….) where we went swimming.
Florence Falls Litchfeld NP
We moved on to Buley Rockhole just a few kilometres away, where the car park was also full. Another Bad Sign. It’s a series of cascading waterfalls connected to Florence Falls by a walking track through a monsoon forest.
Unfortunately it was super packed here:
Buley Rockhole, Litchfield NP
Litchfield NP is only 90 minutes’ drive from Darwin, so it gets a lot of local day trippers. Add to that that is was a Sunday, and no school the next day, and you know you won’t be having a wilderness experience here.
The camping sites were all full, so we camped just outside the National Park. Unfortunately the mosquitos followed me there, and have made another well planned assault on me.

Back to The Bush, July 21, 2013

It doesn’t quite feel right camping in a city, so it was nice to hit the road and head to Litchfield National Park.
There are many bush fires around this time of year across the Top End, right through to the Kimberley. It’s a natural phenomenon, and regenerates the bush. You can often see the smoke in the distance, and it contributes to some beautiful sunsets. Today we saw a fire right next to us on the road entering Litchfield NP. But we also saw the Whistling Kites gathered en masse ready to feast on the wildlife scurrying out of the fire’s path. It was lunch time for them! Quite a spectacle.


We stopped to see the unique “magnetic” termite mounds that are only found here in the Northern Territory.
These termites, although blind, build their mounds aligned north-south, so that they always have one side in the shade. These are only found here, across these black soil plains. It’s a big contrast to the other mounds we have been seeing since somewhere near Tennant Creek that are built by Cathedral Termites.

They have just got bigger and bigger since then!
Litchfield NP

Even More to do in Darwin, July 19, 2013

Some 50 years ago, a man who lived right on the harbour at Doctor’s Gully began to feed the fish at high tide. Over time, more and more fish came for the treat, including many that would never be so close to shore. This private residence now makes a tidy earner from allowing the public to feed the thousands of fish that swim in at high tide each day. It’s quite a Darwin institution. The boys loved it. There were Green Milkfish, Catfish, Black Mullet, Toad fish (fat ones) and a big Potato Cod.


Can’t do a townie session and not get some historical education, so off we went to the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory. They had an excellent display about Cyclone Tracy.
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