GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #28 | Page 50

Starting from the Alice Springs end, our first day saw us complete the first 200kms of tarmac, pulling up stumps in a free camp and relaxing by a fire while we watched the vibrant sunset turn into an incredibly bright star show. We rose early, eager to tackle the rough stuff! Undertaking the necessary checks and readying items inside the van to endure some vibration and bounce from the corrugations, we made our way into the Yuendumu Aboriginal Community, throwing down $50 to top up 20L of fuel. As soon as our tyres met the unsealed road, we second-guessed our decision. I swear I could fit my size 8 shoe in-between those humps in the rougher sections, and there was no way we were getting our 3.5-tonne caravan to ‘glide’ over the top of that washboard! With Wayne tightly gripping the steering wheel as he did his best to swerve into the least impactful tracks along the deep corrugated track, I’d be lying if I said we weren’t all feeling highly strung and a little sick in the stomach. 50 \ After eight hours on those unsealed roads with multiple stops to check everything, do nervous wees and make another coffee, we’d only made it 160kms (averaging a mere 20km/h)! We felt more than a little defeated, and considered turning around. Sleeping on it, we decided to continue – we knew we’d regret it otherwise! We further adjusted our placement of items in both the 4WD and van, which helped ease some of the horrid rattling noises that made our stomachs drop, and deflated the tyres another 5psi. The conditions didn’t really change until we passed the turn off to Balgo, but we seemed to relax as our confidence grew. Passing multiple car wrecks, shredded and popped tyres, vehicle parts, a pop- top caravan roof, a burnt-out camper trailer, car batteries, and various other items along the track, it gave us a constant reality check. We realised that it didn’t matter how long it took us to do the track – just that we were doing it! The beauty of indefinite travels meant we weren’t