Wednesday 30 November
Exmouth
I rode to Tantabiddi for a 0900 meet. I got into conversation with a middle aged Irish couple which we continued onboard, and afterwards. It was a good tour lasting over three hours. There were only 10 onboard, two couples, a family of five and me. We were able to see the reef activity through the glass panels and I was reminded of our trip to the Great Barrier Reef some years ago when colours appear very muted just a few feet below the surface as light is filtered by the sea water.
We stopped for two 40 minutes’ snorkelling sessions and I was able to see the amazing array of multicoloured and fascinating fish populating the reef. The Ningaloo reef is the world’s largest ‘fringing reef’, as opposed to barrier reef, and one of the longest near-shore reef systems in the world. Unlike the Great Barrier Reef it has not suffered bleaching because of the influence of cold waters coming from the south. The boat had a crew of two, Matt and Lucy. Lucy gave an informative commentary and chatting with Matt revealed an interesting career including 4 years as part of the crew of Roman Abramovich‘s yachts. Coincidentally the family, who were from Brisbane, ate in the same restaurant as me the night before and they remembered seeing me. And the husband complained of eating too much!
Thursday 1 December
Exmouth - Carnarvon
I left at 0820 at 32C. The paper map showed a sealed road all the way down the west side of the peninsula to join the main road to the south so I opted to take that route. I effectively retraced my steps of the previous two days stopping occasionally to admire the view and take photos.
My satnav showed that I should turn back but I thought it must have been transfixed on the original route and that its map database was out of date or that it would eventually recalculate. I reached Yardie Creek where the tarmac ended at a car park. I saw a sandy track which clearly was not a regular unsealed road. I looked at Google Maps on my phone which corresponded to the satnav. I turned back and stopped at the Cape Range National Park information centre. I discovered that beyond Yardie Creek there is a tidal creek to cross before 45 kilometres of badly corrugated sandy unsealed road which is not recommended to travel. I was glad I decided to turn around but it added 170 kilometres (3 hours after coffee etc) to my journey. Of course I travelled through the flat coastal plain again until about 80 kms from Carnarvon with the customary low brush and spinafex grass. The strong wind was coming from the south west and so was against me most of the way. The temperature slowly fell to 28℃ as I gained height. I dropped into Coral Bay discovering that it is a small coastal settlement consisting basically of a couple of eateries and two caravan parks. The one cafe/general store was closed but there was a nice small sheltered beach.
I refuelled at Minilya after rejoining the North West Coastal Highway and crossing the Tropic of Capricorn. I must have crossed it heading north some weeks before but I don't remember seeing any signs indicating so.
I reached the large Carnarvon Motel at 1745 and was allocated a very large family room. Sadly the shower head fell apart but I was able to get sufficient flow to wash. I did notice a marked absence of raptors on the day's ride, perhaps indicating less prey, e.g. small rodents, frogs, reptiles, in this type of terrain.
563 kms travelled.
Friday 2 December
Carnarvon - Denham
I left at 0900 @ 26℃. I meandered around town looking for fuel. It was still windy with a southwesterly, again not in my favour. The landscape for the first few hours was much as before, flat with low scrub. After a while I encountered some hills and at one point I rode up to a viewpoint which afforded a panoramic view of the surroundings.
I had planned to refuel at Wooramel Roadhouse but it was closed. Fortunately I wasn't desperate for fuel and was able to top up a little later at the Overlander Roadhouse before turning off the highway onto the Hamelin Denham Road and then the Shark Bay Road. Shark Bay is a World Heritage Area and the 120 kms long road afforded great views of the azure blue sea beyond the bush.
I had seen a number of feral goats before reaching the Overlander Roadhouse but none beyond. I discovered that a concerted effort is underway to rid the area of these animals because they cause great damage to local flora, grazing new shoots and stripping shrubs of greenery up to 2 metres high as they are able to reach so high by standing on their hind legs. I arrived in Denham and cruised the beach road looking for my accommodation which was a pleasant apartment across the road from the beach.
It was a little windy sitting on the verandah admiring the view but the wind gradually eased.
334 kms travelled.
Saturday 3 December
Denham
Rest day. My left Achilles tendon was very sore. The problem began after a long walk in Darwin and I thought it had settled down but it had flared up after a longish walk in Exmouth. I called into the local pharmacy and was recommended Voltaren, an anti-inflammatory. I walked a short distance for coffee and then spent two hours in the Shark Bay Information Centre and museum. I spent the rest of the day resting and typing my blog.
Sunday 4 December
Denham - Kalbarri
I left at 0900 @ 25℃. I rode the 23 kms to Monkey Mia. As I left Denham an emu was slowly crossing the road in front of me. I slowed down to walking pace to pass it and as I drew near it about turned and crossed rapidly close in front of me! I passed the pretty Little Lagoon
439 kms travelled.
Monday 5 December
Kalbarri
Well, I was frustrated again by Australia’s time zones. I awoke at 0600 to watch the match but discovered I had missed it. I had read the television transmission time without realising it was eastern time which is 3 hours ahead of Western Australia - I should have been up at 0300! I walked to the beach and then Fishermen’s Wharf in a strong wind. Again I spent some time typing the blog. I had a long chat with the bloke in the next room, Mike, who had worked in mining for 18 years and he told me some fascinating tales of the industry, particularly about the enormous scale of many of the operations. I had dinner in the Upstairs Restaurant and ate delicious snapper.
Tuesday 6 December
Kalbarri - Geraldton
Left at 0900 @ 26℃. After refuelling I visited the cliffs for the spectacular views looking out over the ocean. Needless to say, it was very windy.
I understand that the three months from December to February are exceptionally windy on the southern part of the west coast. Although uncomfortable at times it does reduce the temperature in the afternoons. As I crested a hill I saw an expanse of pink ahead, the Hutt Lagoon. In 2020 I had visited Esperence in the south of Western Australia to see the famous pink lake, but it wasn't. There organisms which had given it its pink colour had died and it was no longer pink. Here apparently it's the extremely high level of salinity that gives the lagoon its unusual hue.
200 kms travelled.
Wednesday 7 December
Geraldton - Cervantes
I left at 0930 @ 25℃. I rode around Geraldton before joining the Brand Highway heading south. I stopped at the Central Greenough Historic Settlement where there are a number of preserved buildings including a school, police station/gaol/courtroom/police accommodation, a couple of churches and church buildings and a convent amongst others. I have previously described roads and terrain as undulating. This photo illustrates what I mean.
230 kms travelled.
Thursday 8 December
Cervantes - Beechboro
I left at 0930 @ 25℃ for the 25 kms ride back to Jurien Bay. I met Ian Boyd who appeared from his garage on a small motorised box/trike (he has mobility problems following surgery on his feet).
It appears that ???? thousand years ago sea sand, which consists of crushed shells, mixed with land sand and the effect of water leaching through the mixture created limestone (this is my understanding). This in turn was eroded by wind and water to form these pinnacles, although scientists cannot agree on exactly why they have formed as they have. There was a 4.5 kms sandy track through the area which I nervously negotiated given my dislike of soft sand riding although I didn’t have any problems. I reached Beechboro to the north of Perth via the Whiteman State Park (the highway was closed and I just followed my nose as my satnav was confused). My digs were a b&b in a small bungalow at the end of a cul de sac in a residential area. Quite comfortable although the stud partition wall between me and the family was not well soundproofed.
283 kms travelled.
Friday 9 December
I stayed local to Beechboro. I walked to the local supermarket to buy provisions for supper and I had lunch in the Kabul Cafe, a real Afghan establishment together with a raised fully carpeted platform without furniture although I ate at a table. I had a typical meal remembered from my time in Afghanistan 46 years ago, kebab, rice, naan, yoghurt and salad. Just like the 70s. I ate supper in my digs and typed the blog before watching tv.
Saturday 10 December
Beechboro - Perth
I left at 0830 @ 22℃. I rode to Fremantle, a city not far south of Perth. I visited the street where my brother Michael lived 45 years earlier.

I stopped for coffee at a van on a green beside South Beach. The beach was interesting in that it was a designated ‘dog beach’ and it was great to see a large number of dogs socialising and frolicking in the sea.
78 kms travelled.
Sunday 11 December
I was up at 0230 to watch the England v France world cup football match. Disappointed with the result I went back to bed and had another couple of hours’ sleep. I caught the free bus into central Perth and walked around the CBD (central business district), i.e. city centre, including the Murray and Hay Street Malls (actually pedestrianised shopping streets),
Elizabeth Quay (with seasonal traditional fun fair)
Monday 12 December
Perth
I rode the bike to JCS Motorcycles for a service (its third annual service in three months) and a new front tyre. Sadly there were no Pirelli tyres of the required size in Western Australia so I opted for a Dunlop Trailmax. I returned by train to my accommodation where I accidentally uninstalled WhatsApp from my phone and spent 2 hours trying to recover previous chats. Eventually I managed to retrieve all apart from the previous two days. I collected the bike at 1600 and bought a new pair of gloves to replace my old Hein Gericke ones which had started to disintegrate where the leather had rotted in places where sweat is absorbed.
Tuesday 13 December
Perth
I woke up to rain! I haven’t seen any of the wet stuff for ages. The receptionist said it would soon stop - wrong. So I donned my waterproof jacket and headed for Oakford, a 35 kms ride south of Perth. It was 18℃, the lowest temperature experienced for over 2 months, and the waterproof top was a welcome addition to my warm weather mesh jacket. I also wore waterproof gloves so my new ones have yet to get an outing. I arrived at John Gliddon’s large property and parked alongside his two ST1300s in his very well kitted out garage. He had owned a motor wheels/tyres business in Perth, coincidentally only two doors down from where I am staying, before retiring. John drove me to the nearest railway station, Kwinana, and I returned to Perth where it was still raining. I had lunch and as it was still raining and I was feeling the chill I bought an inexpensive light showerproof jacket in Kmart. Popped into the Apple store to enquire about a MacBook Air. The Chromebook I bought for the trip is driving me crazy; it’s very slow and cumbersome to use and an absolute pain when it comes to organising my photos and videos. This blog takes an inordinate amount of time to post, for example. That will teach me to go cheap! I enquired at the railway station about left luggage as tomorrow I will be spending all day exploring Perth before my late night flight and I didn’t want to carry my heavyish bag. I caught the bus back to East Perth and as I approached the motel I realised I had left the key card in the pocket of my motorcycling jeans back in Oakford. $20 for a replacement: I explained that technically I hadn’t lost the card as I knew exactly where it was but I was charged nevertheless!
A day of museums and galleries tomorrow and the flight to Wagga Wagga via Sydney in the evening.