After three nights at Longreach it was time to move on. We packed up after filling our water tanks and using the dump point on the way out. As we drove into Ilfracombe we saw the Machinery Mile. This is a collection of machinery along the side of the road and I’m sure my dad would have wanted to stop and check out each one. We just drove by.









On arrival in Barcaldine we parked up so we could visit the Tree of Knowledge. The Tree of Knowledge is a Ghost Gum that grew outside the Railway Station in Barcaldine. The tree has played an important role in the community over time as a meeting and gathering place. In the early years the tree was known as ‘The Hallelujah Tree’ because the Salvation Army held their services and band recitals under it. It kept this name into the 1940’s.
1891 was a tumultuous time in in Australia’s history as the Shearer’s Strike began. Shearers at the time had to sign a contract to be employed by the pastoralists and as there was an over supply of workers some managers and pastoralists took advantage of that and decided to reduce the price of shearing a sheep.
Shearer’s began to go on strike and soon that escalated across the region. Strike camps began to form across the west. The tree became a meeting place for the disgruntled shearers.
In 1892 various unions met under the tree and endorsed TJ Ryan as the first Labor candidate for the Queensland parliament. The Labor Party was born.
The strike became violent at times and some shearing sheds were burnt to the ground. The Militia was brought in to quell the unrest. The 13 leaders of the strike were arrested and sentenced to 3 years hard labor at St Helena Prison Island. The strike was slowly abandoned.
The Tree had become a symbol of the struggle, striving for a ‘fair go’ and the right for a fair days pay for a fair days work.
The tree survived many threats over the years including termites, fungal disease and even bee hives. Tree Surgeons tried multiple times to save the tree and fortunately a small number of trees were grafted from the original, one of which was planted at the Australian Workers Heritage Centre in Barcaldine and is called ‘The Young Un’.
The tree finally died in 2006 and has been preserved and placed back in its original spot. The memorial that surrounds it now was designed as a place of reflection and a memorial to those who fought for better working conditions.
The memorial contains 3449 hanging timbers that give the illusion of a tree canopy and they were made from recycled telephone poles. You can still see the root ball of the original tree through the glass panels on the floor. It is lit up at night. I like the way the hanging timbers clink together when the wind blows through. It’s sort of like rustling leaves.



After filling up with fuel in Barcaldine we headed southwards for 28km. We arrived at the turnoff to Lara Wetlands and just as we started down the red dirt road we came across a tractor pulling huge tyres behind. This is how Lara grade their road. We checked with the driver what the road condition was like and he said we’d have no problem getting through. There were quite a few spots where water was still across the road but we just went slowly through. The road underneath was firm. At times the road was quite corrugated but we just had to slow down.
We had to laugh at Katie getting red dirt up the sides of the van and car. Her car is usually spotless!

We checked in at reception, paid our $35 camping fee and drove around the wetlands until we found our friends, Catie & Robert, Andy & Jenny, Brian & Helen and Carol & David (who we’d called in to see in Dalby way back at the beginning of our trip)
We had a great position on the waters edge not far from the thermal pool and near an amenities building. It has toilets and showers with water heated by a donkey.
Soaking in the thermal pool was a must do for the day and we all enjoyed a therapeutic soak in the hot artesian water. The water comes up out of the ground at the Homestead at 68°, is fed into a huge dam with a heat exchanger in the bottom and then fed into a bore drain to the thermal pool. By the time it comes out at the pool it is 41°. The further you move away from the water entry the cooler the pool. It really is relaxing.
Lara also has kayaks and push bikes available and Ben and Maddie went for a kayak around the wetlands with Aunty Catie. There’s lots of bird life in the wetlands.



It was Katie’s turn to cook and she did potato in foil in the fire pit and cooked meatballs and sausages in Robert’s little cooker and served it with coleslaw. We sat around the fire and ate on our laps.
It was nice to be back at Lara Wetlands.
Lara Wetlands is one of our favourite campsites and I was glad to hear that Katie and the kids loved it too.


























































































































































































