The Calm During the Storm

As the rest of the world well knows by now, a surprising amount of Australia was under water last week.  It’s been called a 1 in 100 year flood, and will change the course of social, economic, political and natural history in the country for many years to come.  I’ve often found myself adjacent to historic events of disastrous proportions.  Throughout my childhood I saw all four seasons in California: fires, floods, earthquakes and riots.  I watched the faces of great cities change as houses slid into the ocean, highways collapsed on themselves and two of the worlds tallest buildings crumbled to the ground.

Though I’m not one to glue myself to the news, I’ve watched enough coverage of the floods now to see a few differences between the Aussie and American responses to disaster.   For one thing, the Australians are just as bad at producing maps of disaster areas as they are at making weather maps.  To say Queensland is large is a bit of an understatement.  In my many attempts to find a map of the affected area I simply came up with map after map of the entire state, blocked out in one solid color, with a few useless dots here and there.  Had a flood of these epic proportions happened in California, news stations would have probably presented viewers with a constantly updating map, covered in an animated blue slime that crept along engulfing towns in real time.

The newscasters themselves also presented a decidedly calm face to the events they were reporting.  They were appropriately urgent with the warnings, appropriately somber with the statistics, but overall they were always quite calm.  On most news stations in the States, I believe we would have been presented with a much more manic reporting style, supported by a constant ticker of updates, shouted phone-ins from reporters on the verge of being swept away, and then lively debates about the flood’s impact on our economics.  And it wasn’t just the news reporters but also the flooded out residents who were restrained in their response.  There were tears and frustrations, mourning and fear, but all surrounded with an air of “It’s nature.  We can’t do anything about it.”  Relief centers were generally so well prepared that the beds were all made before anyone arrived, volunteer numbers were well suited to those of the displaced, and entertainers came to sing to the children.

The floods were also another chance for Aussies to show the world their strong spirit of resilience, wrapped in wet blankets of humility.  Queensland premier Anna Bligh was right when she said Australians (not just Queenslanders) are the people they “breed tough.”  They are also the people that take things in stride, and won’t accept too much praise for their strengths.  All last week, people helped each other build sandbag barriers into the night, rescued animals by boat and did it all without extra flair for the news cameras.  Some quick thinking tugboat drivers even saved major infrastructure from damage, by guiding an estate sized piece of rubble away from a bridge.  But to the tugboat driver it was just his job and “couldn’t have been done any better.”  I wonder if good ol’ “Sully” Sullenberger said the same thing when he safely landed his plane in the Hudson river.

That’s Australians for you, calm, collected, accepting and understated, even when underwater.  Perhaps part of the attitude came from the fact that this disaster occurred in a warm country at the beginning of summer.  With the calming effect of the season in full swing, everyone might have been thinking, “I may up to me waist in water, but no worries, I had thongs and swimmers on anyway.”  Here’s hoping they can maintain that attitude during the lengthy rebuilding process.  In the meantime, keep your fingers crossed for blue skies and sunshine in Queensland.  And don’t forget to make your donations to the relief fund.    Much appreciated, Mate!

Australia on my Subconscious

I, like a lot of people, tend to see repeated imagery in my dreams.  What little mothering instincts I have, manifest themselves in my dreams as me having to rescue small helpless animals from perilous situations.  The obsessively organized part of my brain forces me to dream about packing items for a trip, while having difficulties finding the right bag for as many items as I need.  And don’t even get my started on the types of dreams I have when I need to pee.  Luckily, I’ve never found a public restrooms quite that bad in real life.

Most often, I dream about having to get somewhere while facing certain architectural obstacles on my journey.  They usually are, pools of water that have to be swum through or skirted around, tiny doors that I have to squeeze through, and endless staircases that I have to climb up and down, often taking me to the wrong floor which forces me to have to turn around and start all over again.  Living in Australia has officially added another obstacle to my subconscious, slumbering journeys; giant spider webs.

Now, stretching across the staircases and hovering in the center of those tiny doors are elaborate tangles of spider web.  Just like in real life, my fear is not of a deadly spider, since I know even the bulbous ones in my dream are harmless, but of getting sticky threads of web, several times the strength of it’s equivalent thickness of steel, splayed across my face.  As if climbing up and down often uneven staircases wasn’t exhausting enough, I now have to limbo under those barely visible walls at ever other turn.  Thank you Australia, that’s just what I needed.

The Red Center

Streaky Sky

As you fly from Oz’s tropical coast to its aptly named red center, you watch the landscape below slowly change from rolling hills covered in copious greenery, to long stretches of neatly divided farmland, and eventually to smooth, rust colored sand as far as you can see.  But the martian landscape at the red center was nowhere near as empty as I had expected it to be.  Thanks to a long rainy season this year, it was covered with scrubby bushes, sprinkled with desert oaks, the occasional gumtree (eucalyptus in the desert!) and even broken up by the a few lonely pools of water.  But it’s still empty enough that when Uluru (formerly Ayers Rock) sneaks up on you, you can’t help but think it was dropped there by aliens.  And contrary to popular belief it does not stand alone.

Yulara

Resort Lawn and Sign

From the plane you can also see the neighboring peaks of Kata Tjuta (formerly The Olgas) and a tiny sparkly dot in between, the resort town of Yulara.  As much as Upolu Cay was the coolest place I’ve ever been, Yulara resort was the weirdest place I’ve ever been.  This resort/town was built in the mid 80s specifically to service tourists to Uluru, a site which receives a steady flow of tourists year round.  Yet somehow this college campus-esque resort felt practically empty.  The only constant company you have during a walk around the resort is a multitude of beetles, stickbugs, crickets and a constant entourage of flies who seem more interested in the moisture in your eyes than in the resorts four pools, or the sprinklers that water its needless stretches of bright green lawn.  But empty or full, it’s the only place to stay within five hours of Uluru, and with it’s surcharge on all credit card purchases, additional charge for any bus transport to Uluru itself and rooms in need of renovation at over $400 a night, I think it must be the most brilliant tourists trap in the entire world.

Empty Walkway

Nonetheless, we took advantage of what it had to offer, starting with a self grill BBQ at the Outback Pioneer Hotel.  The menu offered such Aussie meats as croc and roo, but I opted for the emu sausages, which were quite delicious.  The Outback Pioneer also became my first introduction the Northern Territory’s tendency toward lack-luster service (although I won’t lump the tour bus drivers into the group) and one of its undeniably backward notions.  At the bar you could not order a drink without showing them your room key.  The lackadaisical bartender explained that the local aboriginal population was not allowed to drink, thus the policy.  I was shocked.  Never before have I truly understood what it must have been like to live in a pre-civil rights movement society.  It turned out she had dramatically oversimplified the law.  As I now understand it, the vast majority of the Northern Territory is dry with the exception of certain areas, chiefly resorts and hotels, that are allowed to sell alcohol, but none is to be sold or even consumed within a 2 kilometer radius of said areas.  The general belief is that this will discourage the aboriginal population from drinking, without having to enforce a blatantly racists law.  Of course, the Outback Pioneer’s policy (which doesn’t seem to be backed by any official law that I could find) would prevent anyone from the local population (mainly aboriginal) from having a drink.  Do feel free to bring this up with the management there, should you happen to be heading that direction.

Kata Tjuta

Bench in the Heat

The next day we decided to head out and see one of the sites that had actually brought us out in the first place.  Kata Tjuta is a striking series of rock formations in the same area as Uluru but decidedly overshadowed by its fame.  It’s a testament to how vast the center of Oz is, that you can see both Kata Tjuta and Uluru from the resort, but it still takes at least 45 minutes to get to one of them.  With the heat desert sun only increasing exponentially throughout the day, you have to get an early start.  We stopped along the way to check out a closer view of the range of helmet-like peaks.  Once out in the open desert, you immediately befriend the flies, so many that the constant buzz around your head is like a special sound effect from a horror movie, and the fight against the urge to whack at every tickle on your arms becomes a matter of mind over fly.  But even a short hike around Kata Tjuta isn’t spoiled by your buzzing chaperons.  Between the mounds of conglomerate rock that look like bright red concrete, sits a pleasant gorge full of little pockets of fresh green growth and trickles of water containing tadpoles, lots of them.  Imagine that, frogs in the desert!  Life will always find a way.

Tadpoles

Sounds of Silence

One of the better advertised and more deservedly praised events offered by one of the tourist companies at Yulara is the Sounds of Silence dinner.  This outdoor Aussie buffet starts with canapes and champagne at sunset overlooking Kata Tjuta (which the bus driver accurately observed looks like a sleeping Homer Simpson) followed by a dinner in the pleasant silence of the surrounding nothingness, and ending with a star talk during which you learn that it’s not at all easy to find south using the stars.  Through the telescopes they had set up nearby I saw Saturn, which looked just like a glow in the dark sticker, and the super bright moon which looks more like a slowly boiling potato soup than cheese to me.  I would have gladly stayed up to look at the stars until the moon dropped below the horizon, but we had to make a 5:15 am bus to Uluru the next day, so back to the 80′s era hotel we went.

Sunset and "Sleeping Homer"

Uluru, a.k.a. The Rock

The day started while it was basically still nighttime (4:30 am) and so dark that you couldn’t see a thing behind the headlights of the bus except the bright stars in the sky.  I didn’t realize until then that I had so well adjusted to the site of the southern cross that it looked rather odd upside down.  But I was very energized (which is hard to do on instant coffee) and ready for the world famous sunrise over Uluru.  We stationed ourselves on the sunrise platform . . . and so did everybody else.  As the light crept into the sky, tour bus after tour bus filled up the parking lot, and the entire sunrise viewing area slowly filled up with a colorful sea of T-shirts, hats and backpacks.  Cameras clicked and beeped all around us.  And the flies eventually figured out we were standing there, ready to be buzzed at.  Maybe I’ve seen one to many beautiful red mountains in my lifetime.  Maybe I’ve just seen too damn many postcards of Uluru since I moved here, but I simply didn’t get it.  The mountain didn’t look like it was on fire.  It didn’t seem to glow from within.  I wasn’t touched spiritually.  It was a beautiful sunrise in a beautiful place, and that’s all.

We started our base walk at the same point where the climbers were scrambling up the well worn path to the top.  Despite a few shallow patches, I can see why people tend to faint, vomit and otherwise experience general discomfort while trying to climb the rock.  It’s far from a gently sloping hill.  And even though a lot of people were starting the climb, it still seemed like less than half the people from the sunrise platform had come out for the up close and personal view, and less than half of them were doing the base walk.  So for the next few hours it was essentially us and the rock.

People on the Crest

Uluru is not just an amazing shape, but an amazing combination of shapes, positive, negative and everywhere in between.  There are niches and little shady gorges all around the edge, strange holes resembling alien and monster faces carved into its surface, and flat little pockets with surprisingly lush trees growing right out of them.  The skin of the rock itself is not completely smooth, as the postcards would have you believe, but scaly flakes in a multitude of browns and reds.  And the environment around the rock changes with every kilometer, ranging from flat sandy nothingness to waist high grasses and sparse forests of twisty trees.  I couldn’t take pictures of the all of the beautiful places at the rock, because much of it was sacred ground and there were signs requesting that no photographs be taken.  I was a little disappointed that honoring the aboriginal culture in this way, meant not honoring our cultural tradition of photographing beautiful places we want to share with others, but maybe if I hadn’t seen so many pictures of the Uluru sunrise before I had gotten there, it might have maintained a bit more of it’s spirituality. Nonetheless, the base walk proved to be an even better experience than I had imagined.

Parrallel Folds

Unfortunately, after you have spent 4 hours walking in the increasing heat of the day, the park around Uluru has one last hurdle to throw at you.  The bathrooms you’re so desperate to visit at that point (the only ones near the rock itself) are at least five minutes away from the road.  And the visitors center, which you need to get to in order to make the bus ride back, is another 2 kilometers away!  The parks planning people may have had to work around a lot of sacred ground when building the visitors facilities, but I still can’t forgive them for building the worst planned national park ever!  It’s no wonder the flies hitch a ride on all the tourists, they too are probably too tired to fly the distance they have to go for a simple bathroom break.

Fly Passengers

Don’t spend 4 days in Yulara

If you don’t have a car, or preferably a private jet, to get to any of the other destinations near Uluru (and by that I mean within a four hour drive) don’t spend more than two days in Yulara.  You can only go to the same resort restaurants, swim in the same pools with the other trapped tourists, and walk across the same nonsensical green lawns so many times before your life starts to feel like Groundhog Day.  But I was rather happy that I had stayed near Uluru much longer than the average tourist’s in and out in 20 hours visit.  The culture diversity that this one rock brings to the dead center of one of the more isolated countries in the world is astounding.  Even if most of them weren’t quite sure why they were there, they had been drawn there nonetheless.  We came from every corner of the globe.  We stood together and watched the sun rise and set over the blazing red desert.  We ate kangaroo just because we could.  We swatted at (and occasionally swallowed) the same flies.  And we all got stuck with the same surcharge on every credit card purchase.  And that, to me, was a spiritual experience.