We visited the impeccably kept Adelaide River War Cemetery
which was created for the burial of servicemen and women who died in this part
of Australia. After the war the Army Graves Service moved graves from civil
cemeteries, isolated sites and temporary military cemeteries from all over the
top end to the AR War Cemetery. It is now maintained by the Commonwealth War
Graves Commission and is beautifully kept, with stunning gardens and large
flowering trees amongst the pedantically maintained graves. The gardeners were
actually sweeping head headstone and grave, and lovingly tending the gardens –
a real credit to them. It is obviously a place of well earned respect.
Apart from the military section, there is a special area
reserved for civilians that were killed during the bombing of Darwin on 19th
Feb 1942. A bomb directly hit the Post Office, instantly killing all the
employees (12 people), so there is a moving memorial to them.
We also visited the quaint old Railway Station which is
decked out as the Adelaide River Heritage Centre, which also had lots of great
old photos, and displays of various railway artefacts, and even the old radio
receivers and transmitters that my grandfather would have operated when he was
stationed here.
Next we stopped at the tiny town of Batchelor to buy a few
supplies, and then headed the 10km up the road to the Litchfield Tourist Park
on the edge of the National Park. We parked the van (fantastic shaded sites
here), hooked up power and water, and then headed off to see the various
waterfalls and rock formations which Litchfield is famous for.
First up we stopped to see the Magnetic Termite Mounds. In Australia
we have three types of termites and mounds – Magnetic (tall, wide and flat – 2
dimensional), Cathedral (tall, built like castles with many turrets) and Wood
(build their small bounds at the base of live trees and then proceed to eat out
the core of the tree). At this place we viewed both the magnetic and the cathedral
mounds – both of which were well over 8 foot tall. They are called Magnetic
Termite Mounds because they are always built facing north/south, to keep the
temperature cooler in the mounds by reducing the surface area exposed to the
hot sun.
Next up, Wangi Falls. This was a beautiful spot – 2 tall
waterfalls plunging into a very large, deep pool. They cascade impressively
over very red, and very silvery rocks into the clear pool below. We swam out to
the waterfall (quite a swim) and were amazed to find that we could climb up the
sheer vertical rockface a little way (up the waterfall) and we found another
very deep, warm rockpool in the waterfall! Talk about stunning. The kids used
the pool noodles we had brought with us, so they could rest on the big swim out
to the falls.
Much to Sam’s delight we also saw a large water monitor
cross the ground in front of us (about 1.5 metres long), and were glad it
wasn’t swimming towards us, as they look a little like a croc with their long tails.
There are only freshwater crocs around here, so it was safe to swim. They have
permanent traps in place to make sure no big salt water crocs get through to
these beautiful swimming holes.
Next it was off to the amazing Buley Rockholes. A series of
15 small, deep rockpools, , each with a small waterfall, cascading down into
the next rockpool, through the beautiful bush setting. We had a swim in our own
personal, deep rockpool, once again, perfect water temperature, before heading
down the road again to the next pretty spot. The amount of people here today
was amazing – during the middle of the day, there were hundreds of people
visiting all the waterfalls, and the carparks were all bursting. We later found
out that it is a NT public holiday today. (Cup Day).
Up next was the beautiful Florence Falls. A short walk up to
the lookout, then a long walk down into the gorge (176 very steep steps), to
the plunge pool at the base of the falls. It was an absolute idyllic swimming
spot – peaceful, surrounded by tropical vegetation, and crystal clear, deep
water at the base of a tall, thundering waterfall. The water temperature was
warm, and just superb – lots of large black fish swimming all around us, very
non-plussed. Not sure what they were, but they were huge, eating bread out of
peoples hands, big enough to eat. If you stood still long enough, they started
sucking on your legs, which freaked Sam & Lily out a bit! Sam and I walked
along the creek through the rainforest-like surrounds back to the carpark the
long way, while Lily and Dad traipsed back up the steep flight of stairs.
Then it was a short drive back to the caravan park, where we
indulged and ate at the outdoor attached bistro – nothing better than a barra
burger after all that swimming! (or as Sam says ‘getting revenge on the fish
that have freaked me out all day!’). A lovely day, one of our best – the NT is
simply awesome.
Helen and I loved this area. We did a day trip in a small 12 seat bus. From 7.00am to
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