Just a little more info
Just after easter the parks department spent more time down there doing track repairs. They used 4 wheel drive tractors with front end loaders and back blades and off road 5 tonne trailers. Drained and filled in more of the worst water holes. Done a great job but when bringing their gear back out they removed one of the bridges over a creek. Normally there is a bit in the paper that the bridges is out and the track closed for x amount of time, not this time. The info went in the paper about 1 month later and only after some of the locals who needed access for commercial interest took it upon them selves to build a bypass. It was then noted in the paper that the bridge had been closed and an access bypass had been temparly put in place. Makes you wonder what they are smoking sometimes.
My father at 78 years old and is pretty green these days after seeing the desruction over his life time.
I was discussing the closing of tracks with him and told him tracks like the Balfour track was on the hit list and he was gobsmacked that they were trying to shut down our heritage. For those that have never been on the Balfour track it is mostly hard base with some soft plain country that never dries out. What happens on that track is where the bogs are the vehicles tend to go beside the track looking for areas that havnt been driven on and normally a group of vehicles can pass over before it boggs up, the down side to this is that a some place the tracks are visable for maybe a 100 meters onto the plain. The solution is easy, it would take about 50 load of rocks over the 20 km of track to fill in the bogs on the main original track to put a hard base in, you would still have all the water holes (and some are deep) but with a base in them there would be no need to go off the main track.
The aborignal middans they are trying to protect are many and they are in places they dont even know of , yes some of them have been driven over but there are sections they could lock up/ fence off that would have no affect on all stake holders.
About 15 years ago the aboriginals locked up MT Cameron and were given funding for 10 odd years to make it feasable like they proposed they could. The property is now covered in gousse and looks worse than I can ever remember in my 50 years
cheers
blaze



Reply With Quote

Bookmarks