Tag Archives: bungle bungles

Bungle Bungle Walks – Part 2

Our second walk that day was at Echidna Chasm, in the north end of Purnululu National Park. From the car park, the vegetation was all gum trees and scrub. The domes here were less pronounced, however they were taller.

Echidna Chasm walk

As soon as I hit the trail, I noticed that the gum trees disappeared, replaced by a grove of palms.

Echidna Chasm walk

The trail led into Echidna Chasm, and pretty soon its walls were towering over me. The temperature also seemed to drop by 10C.

Echidna Chasm walk

Echidna Chasm walk

Echidna Chasm walk

The path got narrower and narrower. Occasionally we got a glimpse of sky.

Echidna Chasm walk

Echidna Chasm walk

Pretty soon we were in murky darkness, clambering over boulders.

Echidna Chasm walk

At the end, the chasm narrowed into a one metre wide space, and it was so dark that I wasn’t able to get a clear shot. I imagine that in the wet season the entire chasm would be under water. This isn’t a walk for the claustrophobic or with mobility problems! I was pleased to walk back to the entrance and catch a glimpse of sky.

Echidna Chasm walk

Bungle Bungle Walks – Part 1

The following day we drove the 53km into Purnululu National Park to see the Bungle Bungles up close. We did two walks that day – the first was to an area called Cathedral Gorge.

The walk started with a grand vista of the domes among the usual savannah landscape of low scrub and termite mounds.

Cathedral Gorge walk

Cathedral Gorge walk

The domes towered above us the further we walked into the gorge.

Cathedral Gorge walk

Cathedral Gorge walk

There were lots of interesting details to see: a close-up of the stripes, and the amazing places that termites are able to build their mounds.

Cathedral Gorge walk

Holes in the ground grinded down by rocks being caught in a whirlpool.

Cathedral Gorge walk

Giant slabs of sandstone that have fallen away due to the intense weathering in the Wet.

Cathedral Gorge walk

And at the end was Cathedral Gorge – a pool dwarfed by sheer sandstone cliffs and overhangs. The acoustics were magnificent, as the boys found out when they sang a tune.

Cathedral Gorge walk

The scenery on the walk was so inspiring that it became my picture of the day.

Cathedral Gorge walk

Bungle Bungles from the air – Part 3

We flew south over the hills, and the further south we went, the smaller and more pronounced the do mes became. These are where the ‘money shots’ of the Bungle Bungles are taken.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

And there are more domes to be seen up toward the horizon. The Bungle Bungles are more extensive than the iconic rocks of Central Australia, and so much more rewarding to see from the air.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

The sun soon dipped, and all too quickly we were back to where we started.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

But that’s not the end of the Bungle Bungles – we will soon see it on foot.

Bungle Bungles from the air – Part 2

After around ten minutes, the striped hills of the Bungle Bungles appeared. The domes and stripes are all due to the movement of water through the sandstone, eroding it into domes, and leaching some layers of sediment more than others.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

We had a great view of the domes, and peered down into deep canyons to see palms and water holes.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

The pilot even showed us recent signs of lightning strikes – the build-up and wet seasons are particularly violent in the Kimberley.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

Bungle Bungles from the air – Part 1

The Bungle Bungles is in Purnululu National Park, on the eastern side of the Kimberley, and the most striking tourist attraction in the region. These orange and black striped domes, like its Central Australian counterparts, are also sedimentary; and at 350 million years old, also ancient. But unlike Uluru and Kata-Tjuta, it’s less visited as it’s a bit more remote. In fact, it was only discovered in the mid-1980’s by a mining exploration team. These days, access is either by 60km of pretty bumpy unsealed road or by air.

One of the early highlights of our fortnight in the Kimberley was a sunset helicopter ride from our campsite at Mabel Downs to the Bungle Bungles.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

It was an at times hair-raising ride in an open cockpit. The helicopter reached speeds of 180km/h, hence it got pretty breezy up there.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

But the views were rewarding.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

We first flew over the hills, plains and dry river beds of the Ord River. The late afternoon light made the entire landscape glow. You can see from above why the artwork of the local clans are in dots and lines.

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

Bungle Bungles Helicopter Ride

This river winds its way north all the way to Wyndham, some 400km away. We’ll see the river mouth later on, but first, the Bungle Bungles themselves.