February 19th (night) – 22nd
For those of you that know about it: I just pressed play to “Avoiding Catatonic Surrender” on my iTunes; the good late night JMU favourite. Actually that’s not all true… I just pressed reply because it just finished. I really haven’t been listening to too much Tim Barry / any other acoustic music that reminds me of being in
That’s beyond the point… From the looks of where my pasty white thighs meet my waist it appears that I am constantly wearing a red t-shirt, but I assure you that it is only severe sunburn.
Thursday I had packed and hopped in the driver’s seat by default only to find out that I would be soon driving through near torrential downpours for the next 2hours with what had to be considered the bottom 1st percentile. The only things that I could actually make out were the tail lights from the car in front of me, and it was not even dark yet. The sheer power of the rain had shattered my vision. I continued north for another 3 hours or so pulling up to my destination at about 10 something. My crew and I all checked into our respective rooms, cheers-ed, chugged our beers, and went to the bar to meet the other 50 yahoos that had come on the trip with us this weekend. The bar closed at 12 and we had to be on a bus by 6 hence no one started luring too hard.
I awoke… confused and tired. Friday I was up from 5 am til 1230 am running off morning coffee and evening energy drinks. I was beat. We got on the bus and headed to the 4WD place to pick up our weekend whips, but first we had to watch a couple “educational” boring ass videos.
Woolworths was our first stop. The 8 of us settled for hotdogs, bread, peanut butter, ham, processed cheese, and steaks (which we would later not eat). Next, and more importantly it was now 9 and the bottle shop next door was ready for our business. Our car was stacked: 2 boxes of wine, 5 30 cases of 1.4 beers, and a bottle of Tequila. We had more alcohol per person than a small country and we were ready to get to the ferry and get camping.
The ferry ride was a quick 40 minutes or so followed by a 20 minute drive through the jungle before we could open it up on the beach driving wherever we chose.
We drove North up to Indian Heads for the afternoon to do some picture taking, handstand competing, fish catching, and standard textbook procedure goofing off. As the sun started for slide down the other side of the sky we decided that we should set up shop with plenty of daylight out.
Our camp site was perfect: 5 minutes walk from the bathroom and the barby. While some rinsed off, others cracked cold beers and started cooking. The steaks that we did not believe were so cheap were so cheap because they were similar to lamb fat and bone. I opted for the hotdog. More beers and worthwhile conversations were followed by shots of tequila and a midnight star gazing session on the beach.
The following morning I was the first up. It was about 630am and I was still lagging behind on sleep from the previous couple of days, so I set the coffee before I could even process whether I had to pee or not. I did, but it could wait.
I started making eggs, but to no avail on the barby that we cooked the hotdogs on the night before. It was not working and raw egg not only tends to bring quite a few flies around, but it also can go bad in a matter of minutes, probably even seconds. I ran back to the Land Cruiser and climbed on the roof to get the gas stove that I should have used in the first place.
Instant success and more instant coffee were in the near future. While I cooked, Rory took out the trash; the others backed up all the bags and deconstructed tents. The eggs were all cooked up and there was one plate for Rory.
“Here,” I approached
“Oh, wow, thanks,” said Rory prior to immediately stuffing his face. “Wow, yeah what’s in here?”
“Eggs,” I replied, “cooked eggs, fried eggs, not so fried eggs, burn eggs, and more than likely some remnants of the previous night’s meal.”
He chuckled and we finished backing before being threatened by someone from the Russian area. Apparently some midnight beach goers had left some bottled casualties at the beach that needed disposing of and of course it was the loud, stupid, American’s that DON’T even own bottled beer.
We were underway, cruising south down the white sand beaches of Fraser Island UNTIL: the (at the time) worst thing happened: a bad gear switch on the manual left us feeling an uncomfortable click every 5 seconds. Shit. The whip was drivable, but not in the least bit safe. We pulled over and flagged down the quickest driver. They were older, Australian, and more than happy to help. My friend who was driving got in the backseat of their car and headed back North to the camp ground.
We didn’t let this hinder our fun in the least bit. We continued the morning with impressive handstands, yahoo games, and I had no better time to learn a new language: semaphore. It is the language used on
The driver returned and a mechanic was on the way. After some extensive under the hood and body checking we were told to drive south until we reached the camp ground, where we would setup and then take the cruiser to the ferry to get a replacement. It wasn’t long before the mechanic that was following us flagged us over and told us that it was too bad and that we would have to be towed. We pulled over and unloaded everything from our vehicle. A tow truck arrived and took the driver along with his girlfriend back to the ferry where they would be met with a new car. The mechanic said that they would return around 530pm. It was currently about 11 and we were told to not drive past 3 due to the higher tides and the dropping sun.
After some sammys and a general direction from the mechanic, we walked south to
More handstands, semaphore talk, threatening dingos around our food, more beers, joined the most extensive game of “Would You Rather…” that I have played made for a great afternoon. As the sun fell we made up “what ifs” for our situation. We also made a cumulative decision that a shot of tequila was necessary with the arrival of our other comrades.
The flies had now basically covered every square inch of our things and the thought of packing everything back up into a new cruiser was taking on a paranoiac feel. We were rewarded for our patience on the beach with an 11 seater as opposed to the 8 that we had previously. After a near death experience with the flies while packing our car, we were on the road, or sand. It was dark and the tide was high, but we charged. Everyone besides the driver was cracking beers only to drink out of fear of running head on into rocks or flipping our way through a major washout. We lived though. We had approximately reached the intended camp site when we decided that this was our spot. We unpacked again. While a few of us started dinner the others setup tents. Setting up tents in the pitch black after an afternoon of drinking is tough stuff, but we managed.
Dinner was a fine meal of chilli dogs on white bread and beers for drink. It topped the lamb that we suffered through the former night for sure. Some flashlights were passing by and after a drunken holler we realised that it was the rest of the group. They invited us down to their camp. After a few shots of tequila and we grabbed some roadies, we headed down the beach, star gazing the entire way. I was mad that my camera could not capture the galaxy that I was witnessing above. Then I thought to myself that just because you can not record the remarkable view above in pictures, some things you just have to harness in your mind and keep them for yourself. I had taken an entire album worth.
We met up with the other group explaining to them our situation of changing cars. There had been rumours that we were switching from 7th gear to 1st going 170km/hr. We laughed on the inside and let the naïve believe what they wanted. We had intentions of waking up at 445am and checking out
The lake was truly amazing: some of the clearest blue water that I had ever seen lightly slapping against some snow white sand. We were short on time however, so after a 45 minute dip, we were headed to
We snagged Scarlet, ate Subway, I grabbed an energy drink, and hit the road for the 4 hour return to school. The ride back was much nicer. Although there was a little rain, driving home after a great weekend trip left me feeling relaxed and much less anxious than the drive to the destination.

