First stop Yalgoo, Home of the Emu Festival. Yalgoo was almost the centre of the universe a few days before we arrived - on the day of the Northampton Airing of the Quilts Festival - when they hosted the Emu Festival. One to remember for next time. It’s only a very small town these days; in its gold rush heyday several thousand people lived in the area. There’s plenty to see and we were kept busy visiting the sights of the area.
The Yalgoo Museum is housed in the old Courthouse , Police Station and Lockup. Well worth a visit to see some of the local judicial history.
The Convent Chapel of St Hyacinth was built by Dominican Sisters in 1919. It’s another of the many masterpieces of Monseignor John Hawes. The convent buildings are long gone, and the chapel was renovated a few years ago.
After leaving the lookout we passed by the Mother and Child Grave. Their identities are unknown and it is believed that they died in tin the typhoid epidemic of 1908. In many cases like these people were buried where they died.
The Ampitheatre is one of several rock formations with the rocky breakaways surrounded by saltbush and mulga plants. We are seeing plenty of seed heads of everlastings. Most are white but sometimes we come across pink ones.
As we came closer to Mount Magnet on our round trip, we detoured to The Granites. The escarpment is about 15m high and formed by the erosion of soft white granite from beneath a hard red iron capping. There are many caves in the area.
We continued on to Walgun Rock, also known as Walgahna. Rock art here has been dated as up to 9,000 years old. There are many different styles and layers of paintings. One of the most interesting is of a fully rigged sailing ship, complete with portholes. This is intriguing because we are about 300km from the coast.
We ate our lunch here before proceeding on to the historic town of Cue.
There are many interesting buildings including the old jail built from stone and the Masonic Lodge built from corrugated iron.
Back to Mount Magnet with its interesting buildings including an open air cinema.
Further east, our next stop is Sandstone. No school, no police station, a pub with a general store, information centre and museum (open April-October), shire office, golf course and a caravan park. The Bush Nurse comes every 2 weeks and the Flying Doctor has a monthly clinic. Another tiny town with plenty to do for a few days.
The Heritage Trail incorporates both town based and out of town attractions. The Contradiction Well was the town’s first water supply. The well was 100m deep and was operated by a hand windlass and bucket. It was mainly used for watering horses and livestock.
The Old State Battery was shifted to its current site out of Sandstone in 1925. It was original sited at Paynes Find, about 100km south, from 1908. In it’s productive life 135,809 tons of ore were treated by the battery, producing 115,787 ounces of bullion before its closure in 1982.
London Bridge is a natural bridge formed of weathered basalt. It is estimated to be about 350 million years old. It has been a popular picnic spot for over 100 years, just a pinprick in the geological history of the formation.
Our final stop on the trail was the Brewery. All that’s left now is the stone cellar which has been cut into the rock, still lovely and cool in the 35+C heat.
Back in town, we stopped at the Gold and Wool Interpretive Park with it’s lovely gardens and interesting information panels. Lovely gardens are a feature of this town in the desert. Even in the harsh climate of the area there’s greenery and flowers.
There are quite a few people camped here - no phone, TV or WiFi. It’s rocky country with clear blue skies and mulga bush vegetation.
The dam has plenty of yabbies - a few less since we’ve been here. This huge ant mound, over 1metre in diameter, is testament to a very old established ant colony undisturbed by echidnas and humans.
After a day of R&R we’ve decided to do a drive along one of the Leonora Loop roads through deserted mining towns like Niagara and Kookynie and past the Malcolm Dam with its waterbirds, to Leonora.
The Gwalia Museum was a real surprise packet. It had been recommended to us and we’re please we spent the time visiting it. The mine dates back to the 1890s when it was a pit mine. The Sons of Gwalia Reef was discovered in 1896. The mine manager was a new graduate from the United States, Herbert Hoover, who went on to become the 31st US President. He designed and built the angled head frame in 1899.
The steam driven winder was the largest in the world when it was installed here in 1913. The pit mine closed in the 1920s and new technology resulted in the open cut mine we see today.
A lot of the original buildings are still in evidence and house museum exhibits. Many items were salvaged after the mine closed in 1963 and the miners and their families left to work in other mines. The population went from about 1,500 to about 100 in a matter of days as people left with only what they could carry with them on the train, leaving their homes and mementos behind them.
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