The morning after seeing The Dish, we headed northward toward more adventure. This is the main highway through the region. Yes, it is a two-lane barely improved road.
The Dish
The Parkes Observatory seems oddly at peace with the surrounding pastoral farmland. We arrived shortly after the visitor centre had closed but still with enough light for some great photographs. I still need to see the movie The Dish…
The Road to Parkes
Having successfully crossed the Blue Mountains in our Suzuki Vitara (a modern-day version of the camel trains of old), the expedition marched onward toward Parkes. Expedition co-leader, Lord Admiral Bailey salutes oncoming traffic from the right-hand drive car. Writing this nearly three months after my first taste of driving on the left side of the road, I can say that I still haven’t quite adapted back to driving on the right.
Yes, the cars are on the wrong side of the road.
The expedition’s progress was impeded by a coal train in the middle of a rain storm. Note the El Camino-esque car in front of us. This was one of our early Bogan vehicle sightings.
As the sun sank low into the west, the expedition sped onward toward The Dish just outside of Parkes.
The expedition halts to make scientific recordings of the surrounding countryside.
Lord Admiral Bailey documenting the indigenous Bogan agriculture.
Squall lines swept through the countryside around Parkes, bathing the land in cool rain and greenery.
The expedition continued toward The Dish.