We left Police Paddock about 10am after an eventful night. Eventful because we had a tiny little bat inside the motorhome. We are baffled as to how it got in but got in it did. I woke in the middle of the night to a scratching noise just above my head and it seemed to be coming from behind the curtain. When I pulled the curtain away from the window a little bat flew out and then flew madly around the motorhome. It was obviously trying to find a way out of this strange place!
We opened the door and tried shooing it out the door to no avail and then it went into hiding somewhere. We searched high and low for it but had no luck finding the tiny thing. We returned to bed however I couldn’t go back to sleep. I lay on my back with eyes wide open and about half an hour later I saw it land on the air conditioner. We got back up and this time we were successful in shooing it out the door. The poor little bat must have been very frightened. Hope it survived its ordeal.

Our route took us via Corowa and then through Urana. It’s a very good road from Corowa on the Murray River through to Urana and then on to Morundah where Federation Way meets the Newell Highway. We only saw one lone emu this time. Last time we went that way we saw large mobs of emus with chicks. We wondered where they all went.
It was lunch time by the time we arrived in the tiny village of Morundah and found a big shady tree near the silos to stop for a lunch break.
We chose to take the road less traveled from Morundah and go via the Yamma Road that would take us across the Coleambally Main Canal.
Coleambally Irrigation Area is Australia’s fourth largest irrigation area supplying irrigation and drainage to nearly 500 farms via a world class gravity-fed channel system. The area covers over 400,000 hectares. Interestingly they use an online system called Total Channel Control (TCC) which is solar powered and fully automated. Farmers can order water and have the order filled within 2 hours.
The water for the system comes from the Murrumbidgee River and delivers between 200,000 and 300,000 megalitres a year to farms that produce a huge variety of crops.
Once across the Main Canal we took the Morundah Road which follows alongside the Yamma Channel. The road is a nice wide bitumen road. We saw a few farmers harvesting rice.




The township of Coleambally with its unique wine glass shaped water tower was built to house the offices of the Coleambally Irrigation Co-Operative Ltd (CICL) and is the youngest town in NSW only opening in 1968. There is a huge Bucyrus machine near the entrance to the town. These big machines were used to dig the canals and channels of the system and it stands proudly on display.
Just north of the town are the huge rice sheds where the rice grain is delivered to after harvest.
We passed huge fields of almost ripe cotton with the low bushes covered in white fluffy balls. Large walnut plantations can also be found there.




A short stop in Darlington Point to use their Dump Point and empty our rubbish and then before we knew it we were home. What a lovely few days we’d had. Just what the doctor ordered!

































