Days 44-46
Another
Saturday, another parkrun along a foreshore with a jetty. Always pretty, always
welcoming. Port Lincoln parkrun will be my last for a while, as we’re
now heading up the west coast of the Eyre Peninsula and across the Nullarbor.
The next town with a parkrun won’t be until Western Australia.
We still had
a few errands to knock over in Port Lincoln - Bunnings, BCF, Woolworths and
laundry (the washing does not stop just because you’re on a gap year) - so we
stayed an extra night. With it being the Easter long weekend, it made sense to
get things sorted while we could. Not that it mattered too much anyway, if
we’re sticking to Guideline #1: We are not in a hurry.
We did some
sightseeing around town — the Makybe Diva and Tuna Poler statues,
giant fishing boats at the port - then retreated to the campground for a lunch of fresh prawns, some
reading and chilling before heading out to Jump Ship Brewing for the
evening. Stephen tried the Great Southern Draught and declared it one of the
best beers he’s ever had, which is saying something.
The Easter
Bunny found us on Sunday morning, so after hot cross buns and a chocolate
bunny, we made our way to Coffin Bay - a place I’ve been looking forward
to visiting for a long time. Renowned for its oysters, and with me being a huge
oyster fan, expectations were high.
We had a
table booked at Oyster HQ, and despite the drizzle and overcast skies,
the views across the bay and oyster leases were beautiful. I was not
disappointed: a dozen natural oysters with a native dressing of finger lime and
lemon myrtle, paired with a Bloody Mary - divine. Stephen opted for fresh
whiting tacos, which were also excellent. On the way out we discovered an oyster
vending machine (as you do), so naturally we bought another dozen for the
road.
The weather
wasn’t ideal for sightseeing, but we headed into Coffin Bay National Park
anyway, visiting Almonta Beach and Templetonia Lookouts - steep
cliffs and fierce ocean energy - before moving into the more sheltered Yangie
Bay. In better weather we would have loved to camp in some of the remote
4WD only areas of this park, but it would have been miserable, so we continued
north instead.
By late afternoon the rain eased slightly, and we decided to try our luck at a free camp we’d heard about - Horrocks Lookout. After about 8km of dirt road off the highway (corrugated and rocky in places), we popped out onto the coast to find dramatic cliffs and wide-open spaces nestled among the dunes for kilometres in either direction. There was not another soul around and as this is very much our camping raison d’être, we set up with plans to stay until the end of the Easter weekend. The sunset was fabulous and put an interesting glow on everything.
The next morning, the sun finally made an appearance. We scrambled and slid our way down the cliff face (not as bad as it sounds) for a swim in our own private bay. Getting back up was significantly harder, but we managed - and it made us deeply grateful that we’re doing this trip now, while we’re still capable of tackling things like this.
Always love a lay day (Guideline #2). Watches off, an afternoon walk, endless admiration for South Australia’s coastline (criminally underrated in my opinion) and another fab sunset. A special spot.
As far as Easter weekends go, this one was a very good one indeed.


































Wow looking amazing. - especially those oysters 😀 - what a fantastic time you’re having. Kim
ReplyDeleteThe oysters were awesome and I've had more since!!
DeleteEnjoy the Nullarbor. Got a golf club to play any of the holes?
ReplyDeleteFreedom at The Caiguna Blowhole was a great spot. Interesting. (Google it)
Thanks for the tip re the blowhole - will look into it. We hired clubs from Ceduna today John as we forgot to bring one with us (there was a lot going on before we left). Stephen did the first two holes (it wasn't pretty) and I was caddy!!
DeleteOyster vending machine, classic!
ReplyDeleteIndeed!!! Who am I talking to - you are coming up as anonymous.
Delete