Camping on the beach in my converted Toyota Landcruiser, I
was up at 3 AM to hopefully find that the emergency services crews had cleared
the three separate flooded sections of the highway. To my excitement, I breezed
through with no issues; however, one of the crews told me that the highway was
still flooded several hundred kilometers up, and that I may want to try an
inland route if I had any hope of making Brisbane. However, they said it with a
chuckle, making me think my chances were slim at best. Stopping off at another
Information outlet, I picked up a local map and planed my route. From Kyogle I
would make my way north to the Lindesay Mountain pass in hopes that it was high
enough ground to stay uncovered on my way to Beaudesert. However, as I left the
town, the rain was falling harder than I’ve ever seen rain fall and more of the
landscape was under water than not.
It didn’t take long to find a familiar sight; traffic signes,
caution signs and a roadway that sank into the murky depths of the flooded low
lands. However, this time there were no Emergency Services Crew standing guard,
and measuring the roadside indicators, I knew that this body of water was only
about a foot deep, even if it was travelling across the road with some
velocity. With the speed of the water, I nosed in much more cautiously this
time, not worried about depth, but of the possibility that the road surface was
washed away underneath. After a good 15-minutes and several hundred meters of
water crossed, I was on the far shore and shooting north once again.
With the rain pouring down, the Lindesay road began to jerk
and kick its way through the thick undergrowth. Long open bends quickly turned
to sharp narrow bursts that wound up into the mountains, the forest spilling
out over the road with the weight of the water pouring down. However, that
cruel bitch, Mother Nature, wasn’t done with me yet. About 20-kilometres up the
road, a large pile of red mud had obscured the roadway in front of me. This
time, 4-Low was locked in and the increased ride height saw me not only safely
over the 100-meters of dirt in front of me, but another nasty washout shortly
down the road.
As I began to descend down the East side, the rain began to
become more and more violent, and having been through this situation for the
last few days, I knew that I was now in a race with the water to get down to
the lowest point. Before I knew it, the tropical rain forest was being replaced
with open meadows as the road continued to wind just a viciously down through
the undulating and hilly topography, however, still lined with several layers
of trees to keep the corners blind. What wasn’t blind anymore were the rather
serious drop-offs that now lined the left side of the road. With no barriers to
save me if I locked up a wheel, my slow speeds in the 4x4 allowed me to momentarily
look away from the road, and straight down a 200-metre drop. All of a sudden,
this road, race with Mother Nature and situation just got a lot more serious.
Finally I broke out of the trees and into the meadows,
although I was still racing the water down the mountain. Great rivers of water
were now flowing across the roadway and undermining the side edges. I soon came
to a bridge signed “Tamrookum Creek bridge #7.” Having crossed over several
bridges before, I was hoping that these numbers would be going up, however I
was not very surprised to find “Tamrookum Creek bridge #6” only a short
distance down the road. The race was on for “Tamrookum Creek bridge #1” as that
will likely be the lowest in the rapidly flattening out terrain, and the most
likely to be covered by flood waters. The suspense built as my fears were
coming true, each bridge was getting a little lower to the ground, the water
getting a little higher as the countdown continued.
Finally I rounded a sharp corner, spraying water to both
sides of the road, to find that “Tamrookum Creek bridge #1” was still over the
water, at least just as I rocketed over top, crossing the finishing line. I had
felt like I had just won a long distance marathon with mother nature, and I
really couldn’t ask for a better battle ground for the fight to take place.
Despite not having a machine that would give me the greatest driving pleasure
on such a road, I never would have found it if it wasn’t for the fording and
off-road abilities of my Britz 4WD camper. Thank goodness I did have it, as
this was one of the most epic roads I’ve driven yet.
The pressure was off, and I could now meander my way to
Brisbane, only a short, and finally dry, 150-kilometres. I arrived at my
destination, the home of Marks nephew… kinda… inlaw, who has graciously put up
the team. Both Mark and mechanic Craig, my fellow ground crew member are
waiting, and they even have the vehicle that we will be traveling in around
Australia, a beat up old Nissan Patrol. After three days on the road, I finally
get a well-earned shower, and can finally relax as we wait for Glen, the fourth
team member who wasn’t so lucky getting through the washed out mess I had just
endured.
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