4 x 4 Australia

Footloose RON MOON

GLORIOUS DIRT ROADS ARE VANISHING UNDER TAR.

- RON MOON

RIGHT across Australia the increased pace of developmen­t is seeing bitumen and tar spreading further onto roads that not so long ago were off-road tracks.

While I understand the rationale behind it, and the joy locals have when their main access road is upgraded to bitumen, for many four-wheel drivers it seems to be another nail in the coffin of the activity we enjoy.

Bitumen brings more tourists, which is a great thing for local shops and caravan parks, but it means many four-wheelers who don’t like mixing with the tourist masses have to go even further afield.

It is incredible the difference bitumen makes. The last time we cruised up the WA coast every camp within cooee of the bitumen – good, bad or indifferen­t – was crowded with vans, motorhomes, camper trailers and tents. To get away you’d just have to head down a dirt road for 20-50km and you would lose 90 per cent of them.

The same happens on Cape York. Go to Karumba where the bitumen stops on the western side of Cape York anytime between May and late September and the local caravan parks are overflowin­g. To get away from the mass of humanity all you have to do is head up the dirt.

So what’s happening to bring on this latest lot of despair regarding ongoing developmen­t? Here’s just a snapshot of three iconic routes that have long been favoured by dirt-road travellers.

The Outback Way, Australia’s muchtouted ‘longest shortcut’, which links Cairns and Townsville on Far North Queensland’s coast to Perth in WA, has just received funding for another section of the route to be bituminise­d. Only 1600km of the route remains unsealed, and the Laverton Shire in WA is pushing ahead with sealing another 50km or so this year.

Tourism isn’t the only driver of this increased pace of developmen­t. In this particular WA case, the Gruyere Gold Project east of Laverton is the largest gold discovery in recent times and the largest untapped gold resource currently in Australia. With a road being built to the site and accommodat­ion units being set in place, Gruyere is set to become a major mine within the next couple of years.

A little further north the Gibb River Road is continuall­y being upgraded, with more short sections of the route going under tar. Still, with the amount of rain they have had up there this Wet season, the dirt sections of the Gibb (which is by far the majority) will be pretty knocked around and will take a bit of fixing. Expect the route, especially the route north to Kalumburu and the Mitchell Plateau, to be chopped up for some time into the Dry season – they may even be closed for longer than normal, so it’ll pay to check.

Cape York in North Queensland will see the greatest change for outback tourers on the east coast. The plan there is for the main road from Mareeba and Lakeland to be bitumen all the way to Weipa by 2019. The road is already blacktop all the way to Laura and beyond, with more than 120km of bitumen being added in the last few years. In 2017, Cape York travellers can expect to see a lot of road work going on along the Peninsula Developmen­tal Road between Laura and the Bypass Road Junction north of the Archer River, with much more of it going under tar before year’s end. To give you an idea, check out the map we have included below.

It seems four-wheel drivers will need to look further afield for adventures, and luckily we still have plenty of choices in this great country of ours. You will just have to go a little more out of your way to find them.

 ?? IMAGES COURTESY OF STATE OF QUEENSLAND, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT AND MAIN ROADS ??
IMAGES COURTESY OF STATE OF QUEENSLAND, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT AND MAIN ROADS
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia