It’s been an interesting last fortnight on the riding front, with two very different events. The Wagga “Gears and Beers” cyclosportif was dry, dusty, and coloured by a temperature palette to match - freezing at the start and warm at the end. And so dry, in fact, that the local chapter of the Fire Department parked engines on one dirt sector and provided an extremely local overhead rain event to add some sloppiness to the otherwise powdery rubbly mix.
In
some respects Wagga was the ride that broke the drought. After an extremely dry winter, it almost
hasn't stopped raining in Sydney since (accompanied by persistent wintery
temperatures) with the inland also getting a good drink.
Fast
forward two weeks and Anita and I got up at 5 am on a Friday morning, dashing
to the airport for a weekend of adventure and heat, flying up to Cairns to meet
Greg and family, who’d driven up from Townsville (four hours further south). Apart from being a good chance to catch up
with all things ‘Panky’, it was also the opportunity to partake in a much
smaller charity ride. Whilst the Wagga
event attracted 2500 riders, soaked up by the town of 65000, the Jungle Ride
was a much smaller affair - 250 riders departing out of Port Douglas (an hour
north of Cairns), population 3500.
The
Port Douglas area has also been in drought - having had barely any rain for the
previous 6 months, despite being smack on the coast. Hence the conspicuous “Level 2 Water
Restrictions” advertised. Naturally,
that all changed the evening of our arrival in Cairns. Once the heavens open up, up there, they
don't muck around. It wasn’t super warm (30 C), but the humidity made movement
heavy and claustrophobic as I assembled our bikes on the deck of our Balinese style
tree-house.
The
route itself was largely an out and back affair, heading north through cane
fields on mostly small rural roads, before reaching the Daintree River at
approx. 60 km, necessitating a ferry crossing to the northern bank, where a
heavily chip-sealed road (one of the roughest I’ve ever ridden) weaves its way
through tunnels of green, over a pass then northwards to Cape Tribulation,
where the sealed road ends. Named by
Captain Cook back in 1770, this marks a reef-pocked area where the wheels
started to fall off the Endeavour, so to speak.
The return trip covers ~180 km.
The
ride kicked off early the next morning.
We up’d at 3 am, bundled riders and bikes into the car, and were on the
road just after 4 am for the rainy drive from Cairns up the coastal road in the
dark, arriving in Port Douglas just in time to disembark bikes, take in the
rider briefing, then roll out, just as the heavens opened again. Talk about muggy. The rain rendered the opening handful of
round-a-bouts quite greasy, bring down a few riders in our bunch - Anita
included - fortunately at low speed and resulting in only bruises - but not the
way she wanted to kick off a long day in the saddle.
The
ride was quite controlled as far as the Daintree River - split into escorted
groups of about 30 riders. As pointed
out by one of the locals, the inhabitants up this way are either greenies or libertarian
conspiracy theorists, some of the latter taking a dim view to having their
freedoms impinged upon by bloody bicycles.
Must say i didn’t see any agro on the day, and rather enjoyed the narrow
farm roads, lined with cane fields of various heights, whilst impressive dense
hillsides loomed with their top segments obscured by mist. It might just be romantic reckonings, but the
olfactory overtones of molasses and rotting fruit and vegetation awakened some
sort of nostalgia for my childhood - having spent my first 6 years amongst cane
fields near Cairns. Aside from
intermittent showers, the only other obstacles to be wary of were a dozen or so
narrow-gauge rail lines for the cane baskets, which frequently crisscrossed the
roads, some at extremely oblique angles.
With
the Daintree river attained, it was more laissez faire. Post ferry crossing the chip-seal ploughed
straight into the jungle, up over a steep climb of a few Km - steep enough to
have to remain seated on the greasy surface - to a lookout affording views of
the mouth of the Daintree to the east, before plunging back into the jungle, a
few times emerging to kiss the coast, with glimpses of ocean just outside the
trees. Spectacular stuff, albeit along a
damp surface one certainly didn’t want to come off on. Road signs warning of kangaroos were swapped
with those warning of large flightless birds with helmets. I was surprised how undeveloped the area
remained - true also of the Cape Tribulation itself - just a few very low key
resorts and B&Bs nestled in the jungle, next to a beguiling ocean loaded
with stingers, crocs, and other things with teeth.
Refreshed
and lunched we about-faced, making a B-line back to the Ferry and an escort
back through the cane fields for the last 60 km, but not before watching a croc
lazily drift across the ferry path 50 m out.
Various estimates of size were proffered, with most agreeing that one
should round up in such situations- so definitely 4 to 5 m! The ride finished
where it started, at the local football ground, with typical sports club fare of
sandwiches, hot chips, cold drinks, speeches and banter. Chloe even got the chance for a chat and pic
with one S. O’Grady - despite being a little on the young side to appreciate
his feats.
The
day wasn’t quite done yet. After soaking
up the afternoon atmosphere we bundled back into cars, taking in the
spectacular coastline heading south back to Cairns, whence I stripped the bikes
back into their cases for the journey home.
The rain hammered the roof all night.
Before our afternoon flight the following day we joined Greg, Sue, Chloe
and Sam for a boat trip out to Fitzroy Island for a bit of sightseeing and
snorkeling before returning for the afternoon flight, losing the hour gained to
the clocks, and finally getting home (track-work and all) after midnight. Needless to say we’ll sleep solidly for a few
nights yet. Thanks for a terrific time
guys! Bird of the trip - a cassowary would have been nice - but in
this case, the night-time wailing of Bush-stone Curlews, and the Torresian
Imperial Pigeons were a highlight!
Nice write up Langles, as always. You've certainly gone from bloody freezing to bloody hot in a short time from Wagga to Cairns.
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