Saturday, 26 October 2019

Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park

26 October 2019 marks the 34th anniversary of the 1985 ‘handback’ of Uluru to its traditional owners. It is also the date of closure of climbing the rock. To celebrate this long overdue occasion, I am posting some photos of the many natural features– reasons to visit and experience this remarkable place, one of the great geographical wonders of the world. Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park is a living cultural and natural landscape that belongs to the Anangu of the Western Desert region of Australia. The park is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is sacred country, the ancestral heartland of the Aboriginal inhabitants who have lived here for tens of thousands of years. At the center of this national park in the desert plains is the towering physical and cultural heart of Australia, a red sandstone monolith called Uluru.
Uluru from across the native spinifex and the twigs of a hardy desert oak.

A cave formation on Uluru at the Mala Walk.

Along the Lungkata walk where one can learn about the joint management of the park by the Anangu and National Parks, interweaving two legal systems (western and traditional).

Uluru at sunset
There is a colour unique to the red centre - a hue of purple-pink that paints the landscape for a few minutes during sunset.
But this is visible only on the peripheral vision.
There, do you see it?

Uluru sunrise

Kata Tjuta. Valley of the winds.

Going to Walpa Gorge

Walpa Gorge

One time at sunset I was lost in a trance staring across the sand dunes.  I was attempting to extend the periphery of my vision, stretching my neck this way and that, to capture the special unique pinkish purple colour, when instead the periphery of my hard hearing was shattered by my phone ringing.
Caller: “Where are you calling from?
Visitor to Uluru: “A rock in the red centre. I am calling like the echo of an eagle hawk that cries/ one more time before it glides behind the big rock where she flies.”

Sunrise from Talinguru Nyakunytjaku. This reminds of another place - Talinguroy lookout in Wangal, Benguet - where one can witness the sunset paint the skies bright orange.

The colours of Uluru are ever-changing. From one location or one moment to the next, the rock changes hue from rust to red and all shades in between. Then depending on the season or weather, it can go from purple into grey across the spectrum.
Under the endless canopy of the blue sky, the sparse vegetation and stunted trees, the desert oaks and mulga, the tjinpi (spinifex) - these plants add a vibrancy to red sand-dunes, ridges and rocks and dry creek beds.

And I must be sunburnt, but it's iron oxide that gives the soil of the arid outback its distinctive red colour. Crimson flames at noon and violets at dawn, they also go from orange to purple at sunrise and sunset.
Kuniya Walk


Rock art at the Kulpi Nyiinkaku (teaching cave) where generations of grandfathers painted pictures, and taught young boys how to hunt.

A sacred site Mutitjulu.

Many spots around Uluru are sensitive sites. 
Be mindful of their significance, accord respect and acknowledge tradition and culture. 
A very dry Kantju Gorge in the drought.
Numerous waterfalls would be flowing down the rock face during rains. 

One can learn and discover a deeper understanding of these sacred places by going on the perimeter trail (Base Walk) around Uluru.


Looking across the flat arid landscape towards kata Tjuta.
It was late September and the piriya (warm wind) from the north and west had arrived.

From the adjacent sunset viewing area.
Kata Tjuta is comprised of 36 conglomerate sedimentary rocks
From the dune viewing area.

The dawn of a new day for Uluru.
1983 was the dawn of a new age for Uluru. After a long stalemate, PM Bob Hawke handed back Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park to the Anangu people.
Hawke: “This is an historic decision and is a measure of the willingness of the government, on behalf of the Australian people, to recognise the just and legitimate claims of a people who have been dispossessed of their land but who have never lost their spiritual attachment to that land.”

Uluru is arkose sandstone made of sedimentary rock




In Uluru you won’t run out of things to do. There are tours on various transport modes, and they encompass astronomy, arts and crafts, ecology and garden walks. 








Sunset at Kata Tjuta.
Palya.
n.b. please notify the blogger if there are any 'not-permitted' photos posted here inadvertently.

Saturday, 12 October 2019

Kris Kristofferson in Concert in Brisbane

In 2005, Kristofferson toured solo in Australia. I missed his tours with The Highwaymen, so I made sure to catch him that year. I saw him at The Sleeman Centre in Brisbane with James Blundell opening.

Kris Kristofferson & The Strangers. Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre 5 October 2019

This time around Kristofferson toured with The Strangers,
formerly Merle Haggard's backing band.
 

The 83 year-young Kristofferson and band played 29 songs in around 2 hours and 15 minutes. 


Over the years decades, Kristofferson has always been self-deprecating about his voice, describing his singing as croaking like a frog, but his fans aren’t there for the voice, we there for the songs.

He sang his hits and other favorites, and played and sang along with The Strangers for a couple of their songs and a couple by Haggard.

The final song Kris played was ‘Please don’t tell me how the Story Ends.’ The song sounded like a last goodbye to his Australian fans, but who knows how the story ends?