Wednesday 17 October 2012

Unto The 'Reach

Longreach water tower.
Leaving Melbourne back in August was a huge step for me. In the space of six months I had built an entire life for myself with a great job, amazing friends and a suitably dysfunctional place to live. Like Manchester and Hanoi before it, Melbourne was one of those cities that had became a home outside of Ireland and so it was incredibly difficult to leave behind. But in addition to wanting to see more of Australia I felt like Melbourne had peaked for me and I did not want to risk tainting so many wonderful memories. However I had been saying such things for a few months so at some point people stopped taking me seriously and quietly assumed that I would find a way to live with them in Melbourne forever. Around the end of July I snapped and handed in my notice at work in an attempt to get my travelling arse in gear.

“So where's next?” “I've no idea.” “Um...is that a joke?” It was not. Quitting my job was a kick start that was failing to get me started. I did not have a plan but felt strangely calm – I had always managed to land on my feet in Australia even when I was on the verge of poverty with no job prospects, things had worked out so in some weird way I trusted the country to look after me. (It is possible that after a lifelong record of pessimism, some optimism is winning through). While I toyed with finding farm work to become eligible for a second year visa I ultimately decided to look for bar or hotel work in a small town somewhere to save up some money, try a different pace of life and see this 'bush' I had heard so much about. (Yes, you may snigger at that). So I hopped on Gumtree with the elaborate key word search of 'outback' and 'hospitality' to see what came up, figuring if I could not decide where to go I might as well let the universe do the job for me. Or in this case, the internet.

The Great Dividing Range
A number of jobs around the country came up and I applied for them all, only taking a quick glance on the map to see where they were. It was only when I started to hear back from people that I properly considered the towns they were trying to get me to come to. One location sounded great – it was only an hour's drive from the Fraser coast which conjured up fantasies of days off on the beach but upon further research I realised the town was home to about 400 people. I would never have coped. Then there were the places that seemed so incredibly isolated that were definitely beyond what I could deal with – roadhouses off by themselves in the depths of the Northern Territory, serving only long haul drivers with bad communication networks and the nearest town hundreds of kilometres away. They had all the makings of a warm weather version of The Shining, no thank you. Then came the call from Longreach, one of the bigger outback towns on the Queensland map boasting a couple of thousand residents – a Central West metropolis! The conversation was less of an interview and more of a summons: “We need someone and you sound good so come as soon as you can and bring your dancing shoes.” I was sold.

Tropic of Capricorn marker
Getting there was a lot of effort since Longreach is further inland than a small island girl like myself can fully comprehend. With flights from Melbourne nearing $800 one way, I flew to Brisbane where I boarded the Spirit of the Outback, a 24 hour train to Longreach. It was one of the best default decisions I have ever made in my life. I had paid for an economy sleeper cabin which was supposed to fit three people but thankfully I had it to myself – a glorified cupboard with triple bunk beds and a pull out basin, there was one power socket and nothing else other than a large window for my viewing pleasure. I boarded the train at night so it was not until the next morning when we were storming across the countryside that I really got to appreciate the scenery. As the train thundered through the Great Dividing Range I was treated to rolling hills covered by dense forest before emerging into an infinite flatness with only an odd hopping kangaroo or the occasional tree to break the constancy of the landscape. I had never before witnessed so much of the horizon where the pale cloudless sky skimmed along the scorched copper earth with almost no interruption. As we went further into the interior, the vegetation became sparser and what there was of it became paler, almost as if it had been bleached – this was the picture of the outback that had formed in my head; the 'vast nothingness' I had heard not nearly enough about.

One of the little 'towns' we zipped past.
For a while the train travelled alongside what appeared to be a dusty dirt track upon which I only spotted a handful of cars. This turned out to be the Capricorn Highway (it runs parallel with the Tropic of Capricorn along which my new home is situated), the main route from coastal town Rockhampton to Central West Queensland. With the train, the highway ran through towns so small we went past them in twenty seconds as they only seemed to consist of a single shop and a handful of houses. I worried what I was getting myself into, especially watching my phone signal come and go. As we neared Longreach the sun began to set and the landscape revealed the real advantage of being so bare; the one viewpoint allowed me to witness every stage of the sunset from looking ahead into the glowing orange sky, across into the violet blue and back into the darkness of fallen night – it was truly spectacular.

The sun starting to set.
Upon arriving in Longreach, my first thought was 'Is that a water tower?' It was and I immediately had a feel for a town so small and country that they had a water tower (which also happens to be its most famous landmark). Everything you need is located in what is audaciously called the town centre but is in reality half of a single street. Speaking of streets, every single one in Longreach is named after birds. How quaint can you get? For example, the pub-hotel I am working in (one of four in the entire town) takes up a block flanked by Eagle Street, Duck Street and Magpie Lane. There is also Pelican, Owl, Cockatoo, Kingfisher, Spoonbill, Stork, Cassowary, etc. The town map is a confused, misled ornithologist’s dream.

The people here are noticeably different to those elsewhere in Australia, managing to be even more easy going and laid back that their city and coastal counterparts. The people always have a smile to share and a story to tell and you get to know them quickly – after only a week here I could not go to the shops without getting at least three friendly hellos. At this point, those people who I do not know to speak to I at least recognise. News travels fast here – everyone knows everyone's business and are eager to spread it around. The men wear stetsons and the women wear plaid. These are people who can remember the first time they saw the sea although not all of them have. It is a small but bustling community with great warmth and spirit.


Longreach Train Station
The biggest shock about Longreach for me is that I love it. Do not panic - I am not sick nor have I been abducted by aliens and replaced with a drone; I am still and always will be a city slicker as I could not imagine settling down to live in a place so small. I get bored and restless although admittedly that can happen to me most places. There are days that the only thing that gets me through is planning my trip down the Queensland coast with an itinerary full of beaches, nightclubs and fellow backpackers and yes, I dream of getting food after 9.30pm and going on a pub crawl that lasts longer than three pubs but those things can wait for the experience I am having here. There have been a lot of drunken nights, silly laughter and lazy days which is largely what I like life to consist of. For me to be famously and vehemently anti-small town, my time here in Longreach (eight weeks so far) has been a lovely break from urban life and is letting me save enough money to fund the final Aussie hurrah before flying home from Sydney on December 13th.