




So two months after arriving in Australia I have a proper day off. Slightly belatedly I thought I should update the blog on my current adventures. We live at a sheep station 120km outside broken hill (one of the remotest cities in the world according the tourist information office) along a partially tarmaced track. It is owned by the University of New South Wales and run as a sheep farm and research station. There are a five cottages, a computer room, air conditioning and a pool – so its pretty well equipped. About 20 research staff are there at this time of year and about 6 permanent members of staff. Our nearest pub is 80km along a dirt track in a different time zone (half an hour ahead) and is a lone building in the middle of the desert. It is surprisingly busy – I have yet to establish exactly where all the customers emerge from!
The local scenery is beautiful in its vastness. As far as the eye can see it is desert with few trees and virtually no hills. The red sand makes the landscape dramatic in the sun, and the lack of clouds means that sunsets lead to a glow across the landscape, something you’d never see back home. Locally Broken Hill has one of the largest mines in Australian, specialising in Silver, Lead and Iron. Near by White Cliffs is one of the largest Opal fields in Australia and the heat has led the town to be built into the hillsides. I haven’t been yet but the houses (called dugouts) are all underground, like on St Kilda.
View from almost anywhere..
Except the lake which looks like this..
The birds we work on are chestnut crowned babblers and breed in nests about 6m up in trees. They protect their young by building their nests from thorns so our daily job is to climb up a ladder into tall trees and put our hands into thorns. I wasn’t fully informed of this in my job description, but have become almost monkey like at climbing trees which will no doubt enhance my cv.



The climate is strange. The temperature builds from about 11 degrees C to about 35 (will go up to 45 by December) and then crashes after a few days of heat, and so the cycle continues. This photo is from outside my window during a dust storm where we had winds up to 80 mph and made onto Australia national news!
Random facts about Australia and other things:
The strong winds have now broken the internet so the wildlife photos must wait for another day x