Travelling Worm

A bookworm's travelogue

Category: Northern Territory

  • Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 25-year-old bookmark and can proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC) .

    Today’s travel notes

    Me and the TC are usually pretty easy to please, but we were just a wee bit disappointed with our recent day-trip to Litchfield National Park. The park is in Australia’s Northern Territory, about 100 km from Darwin. It was 16th May, about 3 weeks ago, and we were in Darwin to attend a conference. We took a coach trip to Litchfield, because the TC was nervous about driving around the bush on her own.

    “Bah humbug,” she was thereafter heard to exclaim. “Litchfield is a walk in the park.”

    My impressions? Tame, but with some pretty colours. The termites and waterfalls are good.

    Travel tip

    If you’re looking for a full-on nature experience, don’t take a coach tour to Litchfield.

    The book I’m in

    Gone Tomorrow, by Lee Child. This worm is quite taken by Jack Reacher, the hero of this book. He’s a modern-day swashbuckling pirate, in a ruthlessly homeless kind of way. I wouldn’t like to bump up against him on a dark night. Unless he’s on my side, of course.

    The photos

    Me knocking on the door of a cathedral termite mound:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    The termite mounds in the Northern Territory are fascinating, even awe-inspiring. The TC rabbits on about them looming up from the bushes and standing silently in amongst the trees. We saw a number of different types. The cathedral termite mounds are huge and shapely:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    The magnetic termite mounds are eery and otherworldly. They’re thin and wide, and all built in parallel lines. Wherever you find them, they’re lined up to the the Earth’s north-south axis. I wrote a bit about the magnetic mounds we found near Humpty Doo, just outside Darwin. Here’s one, with a cathedral mound behind it, in the Litchfield National Park:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    Termite mounds are extremely hard. Our coach driver told us that people used to crush termite mounds and mix the resulting grounds with water, then spread it to make airstrips in World War 2 and later tennis courts.

    Another fascinating fact from our coach driver: 80% of the trees in that area of the Northern Territory are hollow. Their trunks have been eaten out by termites. The termites and the trees survive quite happily this way, with the termites providing nutrients to the tree and the soil. This is a picture of a palm tree with a termites’ nest inside:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    Litchfield has a number of pretty rock pools where you can go swimming. You do need to make sure you’re well into the dry season and all the salties (salt-water crocodiles) have retreated towards the sea. The TC went swimming in the pool under the Florence Falls:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    A number of large black fish shared the experience. One of them made so bold as to give her a painful nip in the thigh. I’m glad I wasn’t in the water with these fellows:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    There’s a pretty walk around the Florence Falls. It’s a bit spoilt by the helpful signs explaining how you can make your garden look like this too. Nevertheless, we managed to look past the signs and enjoy the bush and the lovely colours enhanced by a recent burn:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    More colours:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    A bit of pink:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    Some yellow:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    This dude is very interesting. I’m not sure exactly what it is. It’s a creature inside a coat of sticks. All you can see of the creature is the bit that attaches it to the stick.  Is it a fellow worm? An insect perhaps? Let me know if you know what it is:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    These are the Wangi falls:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    The wetlands around the Wangi falls were more like the swamps we were expecting to see in the Northern Territory:

    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory
    Litchfield National Park in the Northern Territory

    Summing it up, this worm thinks that if you only have a day to spend then the Spectacular Jumping Crocodile Cruise is more interesting. On that tour, you see the wetlands around Humpty Doo as well as the Adelaide River with the salties, and a bit of the bush around Darwin too. I wrote a blog post about it. If you have more time, then probably Kakadu is the thing. We didn’t have time for that this trip.

    If you’ve seen a lot more of Litchfield than we did and you found it awe-inspiring, let me know.

    That’s all for today dudes.


  • In and around Darwin

    This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 25-year-old bookmark and can proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC) .

    Today’s travel notes

    Darwin is an interesting place to be. I suspect it’s a city of many faces, depending on when you’re there and who you’re travelling with. One thing is guaranteed: the heat. At 12 degrees south, it’s decidedly tropical. Darwin is in the Northern Territory, at Australia’s Top End. The TC and I were there in May, soon after the start of the dry season. If that’s dry, this worm would prefer not to be there in the wet.

    My impressions? It’s a bit warm in Darwin.

    Travel tip

    If you plan to walk down Stokes Hill Wharf, take your time. It’s a long wharf and, in case I haven’t mentioned it, Darwin is a bit warm.

    Another tip for free: Go looking for the crocs. I wrote about them last week.

    New word of the day

    “Calenture” – a tropical fever suffered by sailors, who think the sea is a green field and want to jump into it.

    The book I’m in

    DON’T TELL MUM i WORK ON THE RIGS she thinks I’m a piano player in a whorehouse, by Paul Carter. This book is full-on, extreme energy. Paul Carter tells tall tales of his many years spent working on oil rigs in and around Australia. Adventure and danger, funny and nasty, they all rub up against each other in this book. Highly recommended.

    The photos

    Me hanging out on a Darwin city street:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    I promised a devoted follower that my next post would tell a tale of peril. Here it is. The TC wanted to show the enormous size of the ivy leaves in Darwin. Note her lamentable lack of regard for my safety. Now you see me, now you…

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    … don’t!

    Truth be told, Darwin city centre is not much to write home about. This picture is taken from the corner of Mitchell and Knuckey streets, looking up Knuckey. It’s all happening, folks:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Here’s The Mall on Smith street:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Darwin is “one of Australia’s most modern capital cities”. That sounds pretty impressive, and even more so when you learn why it’s true. The city has had to be rebuilt twice in recent history: once after the Japanese bombed it in World War 2, and then again after Cyclone Tracy hit in 1974. Tracy just about flattened the town hall (originally the Palmerstone Town Hall). The Darwinites have preserved the ruins, to remind people of that blustery Christmas Eve in 1974:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Tracy was quite a ruthless gal. She holds the record for being the most compact tropical cyclone ever to hit Australia. Indeed, she was the most compact world-wide until Marco in 2008.

    Not far away from the town hall ruins, this old man banyan tree stands in Darwin’s Civic Square:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Banyan trees are fairly ruthless in their own right. The banyan starts life as a seed, eaten by a bird and then deposited on another tree’s branch as part of a bird dropping. The banyan starts growing and sends down roots to the ground. The host tree becomes cocooned in banyan roots and branches. Eventually the host dies and the banyan lives on. With good reason, banyans are also called “strangler figs”.

    Cyclones and stranglers aside, it’s peaceful around the great banyan now, with birds tweeting and lizards scurrying:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    This debonair traveller took a close look at the strangler’s roots:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Later we moseyed down Stokes Hill Wharf. The TC confessed her disappointment at not finding the wharf littered with plaques and other memorabilia related to Baz Luhrmann’s film “Australia”. Between you and me, I will point out that she would have been the first to complain if we’d found hundreds of tourist traps. The wharf is also the place where many Japanese bombs fell during the WW2 attack on Darwin. Wikipedia says that more bombs were dropped on Darwin than on Pearl Harbor. Here’s a view of the wharf today, just before the TC and I started our long walk:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Some of the locals are a trifle scathing of the new suburbs springing up around Darwin. People say the new houses are built without regard for “natural air conditioning”. Evidently the earlier houses were better built to take advantage of breezes. Take it from this worm, there’s precious little breeze to take advantage of. What air there is, is moist and warm. It licks your face like a bulldog’s tongue.

    The TC professed admiration for many of the new buildings. The new suburb we saw had direct boating access to the harbour and the Timor sea. Here’s another interesting tidbit, courtesy of this worm: the tidal variation is 6 to 8 metres. That means that the water level drops by 8 metres when the tide goes out. So there’s a system of locks to keep the boats afloat.

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Outside Darwin there’s a tiny place with the picturesque name of Humpty Doo. (Yes, really.) Close by we spotted these eery constructions:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    They’re about the same height as the TC, about 4 feet across, sharp on top and only as wide as the TC’s hand. They all face in exactly the same direction. Seeing them, you feel restful and tranquil because they’re just there and they’re so neat. And yet, underlying the tranquillity is an unease. They’re weird, because they’re so neat.

    They are magnetic termite mounds. The termites build them all facing in the same direction, more or less exactly on the Earth’s north-south axis. Boffins say that the termites do this to keep warm, by catching the sun’s rays. This worm finds it hard to believe anyone would need to catch more warmth in Darwin. Here’s a closer look at one of the mounds:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    While we were at an Aboriginal art centre just outside Darwin, the TC was given a baby wallaby to hold. Sally is her name. A car hit Sally’s mother while Sally was in her mother’s pouch. Sally survived and is now thriving on bottled milk and tender loving care of one of the staff members at the art centre. Here’s the obligatory cute snap:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    One of  Darwin’s “must do” activities is a trip to the Mindil Beach Market. It happens every Thursday and Sunday evening during the dry season:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    You can buy all sorts of things there, including dinner. The TC found the food “ordinary”, but she has expressed some enthusiasm for the smoothies. Best of all, though, is to be there when the sun goes down.

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    Drift down to the beach, just the other side of the stalls, and watch the sunset.

    Me doing just that:

    In and around Darwin
    In and around Darwin

    That’s all for today dudes.


  • Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 25-year-old bookmark and can proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC) .

    Today’s travel notes

    Peg, the TC and I have all been in Darwin, in Australia’s “Top End”, for the past week. The TC, bless her cotton socks, booked herself on a Spectacular Jumping Crocodile Cruise. As is her wont, she took me along. I consented to pose in front of the bus for the obligatory snapshot, then retreated to the safety of my book nestled deep in the TC’s bag. Peg was nowhere to be seen. She’s a very together type of gal and knows when to keep herself out of harm’s way.

    My impressions? The Northern Territory’s salties are horrifyingly beautiful.

    Travel tip

    Believe it when they tell you not to put your arm out over the side of the boat.

    The book I’m in

    Past Caring, by Robert Goddard. Definitely a “the thot plickens” type of book. This worm recommends it whole-heartedly.

    The photos

    Me and the only type of jumping croc that I allow anywhere near me:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    We were lucky enough to have the one and only Rod as our bus driver and guide. He knows a great deal about the bush, the swamps and the history of Darwin. I was sorry when the tour ended, because he’d only been able to relate a fraction of the stories he knows of Darwin and surrounds. The photo below shows us driving over the dyke at Fogg Dam. Rod told us all about the doomed Humpty Doo rice project, of which Fogg Dam is part. People built the dyke to control the water in the Adelaide River wetlands, so that they could grow rice. Alas, after the first big wet season most of the rice ended up in the Timor Sea. Did you notice the crocodile toys on the dashboard? We were very soon to see the real thing!

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    A pretty little Jacana bird wanders through an idyll soon to be shattered:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    A late-blooming Lotus lily lures and lulls the unwary:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    But wait. Take a closer look at those low-lying dark humps at the middle right:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    Oh yes, the TC has spotted her first crocodile.

    Next stop, the reception room for the Spectacular Jumping Crocodiles Cruise:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    Then out onto a reassuringly solid-looking boat:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    Gotcha! We walked straight on through that boat and onto the much more intimate craft that would ferry us around the croc-infested banks of the Adelaide River:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    The TC, of course, was delighted. So much more real. So much more opportunity to get close to the crocs. Better photographs. Yada yada yada.

    Sure enough, we were but a couple of metres off the mooring point when this charmer hove into view:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    That was when yours truly, the Travelling Worm, huddled deeper into my book and did my utmost not to attract the TC’s attention. It’s at times like this that she’s apt to whip me out and parade me in front of whatever’s going on, to snap that killer photograph. (Aah, bad choice of words on two counts, worm!)

    From this point on it’s all go:

    For the faint of heart, here’s a still of the same crocodile:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    For the tender of heart, here are some baby crocodiles. They’re hatchlings, about 6 inches long:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    Aah, so cute! Beware, mum is not far away:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    Isn’t she gorgeous? Here’s the video:

    So, if you ever see a footprint like this:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    Then look out for a poser like this:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    Now I’m back home in the arms of my loved ones. Drool has had his nose put out of joint by my tale of creatures more prehistoric even than he. Peg is, as so often, my anchor:

    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin
    Jumping crocodiles near Darwin

    That’s all for today dudes.


  • The red centre

    This is the blog of a 25-year-old bookmark, Hallmark serial number 95 HBM 80-1. And this is my very first blog post. Hallo world. I spend most of my time inside a book (well, duh) while my Travelling Companion sees the world. Read all about me and follow my blog posts to share my experiences as bookmark and travelling worm. I promise to get quite philosophical at times, but not unnecessarily so.

    Today’s travel notes

    I’ve just spent three days in the Red Centre of Australia: Alice Springs, Uluru (Ayers Rock), and Kata Tjuta (the Olgas). I’m tempted to say “awesome”, but that’s an overloaded word. This is a bit sad, actually — my first blog post ever, and I pick a location that leaves me speechless. As you get to know me better, you’ll realise that I’m usually quite garrulous. This time, confronted with Australia’s Red Centre, I’ll just titillate your interest with this one word:

    Omphalos

    The book I’m in

    Eye of the Needle, by Ken Follett.

    The photos

    Me and Kata Tjuta (the Olgas):

    Me and the Olgas

    Me and Uluru (Ayers Rock):

    Me and Uluru

    Me on Uluru:

    Me on Uluru

    Kata Tjuta (one of the Olgas):

    Kata Tjuta (the Olgas)

    Uluru (Ayers Rock):

    It really is just one single huge lump of rock. Quite different to the Olgas, which tend to come apart at the seams when you get up close and personal. Here are some aspects of the rock — all photos taken within the space of two hours:

    Uluru 1

    Uluru 2

    Uluru 3

    Uluru 4

    Uluru 5

    Uluru 6