TRAVERSE Issue 08 - October 2018 | Page 73

Toyota Landcruiser had sudden- ly stopped while we were taking a roadside break. It had been a scene straight from the movie of the same name. Both of us stared at the ‘big red car’, not sure what to expect. Was Mick Taylor about to jump from it? “NO WAY!”, Oliver had yelled with excitement. “What are the chances?”. Laughter filled the hot, still air. Had we really expected a deranged axe-murderer to step from the car? Oliver was now following us down the Tanami Track, not really offering support but rather enjoying the expe- rience of being a motorcyclist, even if on four wheels and inside an air- conditioned vehicle. His reasoning, it was the best way to have an adven- ture; with others that were travelling differently and to be able to share a beer with them at the end of each day. For that I was thankful. Our day three camp was roughly the halfway point on the Tanami. An indescript clearing behind a stony outcrop of a hill. Around a small fire we enjoyed a beer and discussed the possibility of the track getting worse. The first day had been relatively easy, despite it being the most used end of the road as the few travellers who use this road ventured no fur- ther than the Wolfe Creek crater. We’d ridden to within spitting dis- tance of the crater but after stumbling across Oliver we’d decided to camp for the night. The ride into the crater national park the following day had TRAVERSE 73 been an ordeal. The track, one of the worst I’d ridden for a long time. Only 20 kilometres long but 20 kilometres that had taken over an hour to com- plete. The destination was worth the effort. All three of us sat in silence and stared into the almost perfect- ly round depression in the vast flat plane. Wolfe Creek crater is the sec- ond largest known crater of it’s type on Earth. It’s an impressive sight. The return ride to the main track was made a little easier by finding a makeshift route running alongside a fence. We continued south-east on the Tanami yet only managed around 150 kilometres before calling it a day. A large plume of smoke rose from the horizon and had been in our vi- sion for several hours. It was either