We passed bush, trees, fields, cows and llamas. Everything looked the same to me. No buildings but the odd shed. I couldn't fathom how K had managed to live in such remoteness. Every 30 minutes or so, we might pass another vehicle. People were such a rare species there, they never passed up the chance to say hi/ wave at each other. I checked the cellphone coverage (the representative claimed that 3 had "96% coverage").
No network access.
She turned into a couple more non-descriptive lanes before stopping the car by the roadside. I clambered out reluctantly, certain I would be attacked by the Giant Stealth Mosquitos that had plagued me through Christmas at Bannockburn. (Aussie bugs are venomously potent. Or maybe I simply didn't have that protective layer of ang moh fuzz that keeps most people here bite-free). "Are we lost?"
Note the swelling on my left leg. It itched, it swelled, it oozed pus. "Will you still love me if I have JE?!" I wailed to X. He wisely nodded.
K simply pointed to the sign.
"BIG TREE"
Trust Australians to comb through acres and acres of untamed forestation, find a tall piece of vegetation hundreds of miles far away from civilization, put up a sign and expect it to become an attraction . Then again passing through all this nothingness (though admittedly the greenery is very soothing to the eye), it was probably the most exciting thing to happen in a while.
We walked down a clearing and found this.
A big tree. To its credit, a really big one.
2 comments:
It'll be excellent. I can teach Hayden the difference between small and big. Small tree (tiny, little Lego tree) and BIG TREE (huge tree in Australian wilderness). Hopefully he won't think I mean, fake (plastic) tree and real tree.
bad monkey, no banana!
i'm sorry. i'm feeling silly today and require some release. interview tomorrow!
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