MRP 2016 Day 22 Nyah to Tooleybuc Nov 6
Nyah to Tooleybuc
Just downstream of Nyah. The camping area is mostly hidden behind the town levees, however these campers are enjoying the proximity of the waterfront with the raised river. |
Sunlight through the river redgums in the morning light. |
Old river red gum with branches trailing in the water. They provide both shade and nutrients for life along the river. |
Old and new, showing the increase in scale and investment that has happened all along the Murray continuing to this day. |
Pump to vineyards and orchards at Koraleigh, just downstream of Wood Wood. |
Large pumps running to the vineyards of Piangil |
Elaborate fishing shack built in traditional style. |
River red gum branch trailing in water showing buds shortly before flowering. |
Sheep resting beneath an old gum. |
Reed bed inundated on meander point. |
Timber offcuts, left behind by sleeper cutters. |
This coppiced tree looked a bit like a hand reaching up from below the ground. |
Lush vegetation on the meander around Murphy's island, which is gradually being abandoned by the Murray. |
I love it when swallows fly around my boat, but they are so fast its hard to capture them on film. To get this shot I used a still from a video. |
With names like ‘Gallows Bend’ and ‘Devils Elbow” and annotations like ‘wreck of the Allewein’ and ‘Pevensy burnt here’ I was expecting some pretty hairy currents, but for the most part the river moved at a steady 4 to 5km/hr - a good speed when you are travelling downstream. Perhaps the most surprising thing was being able to look over the banks. It was like paddling down the narrows. Being at eye level with the cows, sheep and kangaroos, and being able to look into the towns, not just hear them was a real change. I saw why people were so often on the banks in these areas, they lived just beyond them. In Tooleybuc I was able to run the boat up onto the bank in the park across the road from the caravan park and carry my gear without any issues into the grounds, where, able to begin my evening post early, I am about to have a refreshing shower and head into town for a counter meal at the pub (thanks Mike Bremers :).
Tooleybuc Bridge |
The pub closes early and “there are no meals on a Sunday”… I second the words from the last loyal customer out the door “our hearts are broken”… however he pointed me to the Sporting club where I had a tasty roast of the day. Not quite the same though. Overland Corner can’t come soon enough… but perhaps, if I try very hard, I might find another good counter meal before that…
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