Photographer Robert Lang and journalist Gretel Sneath both live in SA, some 1100km apart. Their paths would probably never have crossed if it wasn’t for OUTBACK.
Photos Robert Lang
The intrepid pair have been on a number of memorable assignments, and their latest journey to the Flinders Ranges saw them embark on an adventurous lap from Port Augusta to Hawker, Rawnsley Park Station, Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park, Blinman and Arkaroola, with a hike down Italowie Gorge in the Gammon Ranges, where RM Williams once camped and learned the craft of boot-making. There were some fascinating detours along the way, from the unmissable Mount Chambers (Wadna Yaldha) to Angorichina, Parachilna Gorge, the Prairie Hotel, and several days spent with the down-to-earth Nicholls family at Angepena Station.
The trek across mountain ranges, gorges and vast red plains produced hundreds of images highlighting real characters and the sheer scale of this ancient land.
From the air, the rim of the crater-like basin of Wilpena Pound resembles the scaly tail of a giant crocodile, its rocky ripples baked for centuries beneath wide, uninterrupted skies. On the ground, tiny fossilised marine creatures stranded by the tide 550 million years ago rest beneath rocky ledges. “We call it the timeless land,” says Adnyamathanha guide Sharpy Coulthard, an Arkaroola icon.
Deep inside the hand-dug tunnels of the Blinman Mine, memories of gritty Cornish miners linger like old ghosts, while the exhilarating view from Sillers Lookout – of seabeds squeezed and folded into mountains – puts life into glorious perspective.
Rawnsley Park Station owner, Julie Smith, sums it up well: “It makes you realise you’re only a small part of this big world … just one little bit.”
This story excerpt is from Issue #136
Outback Magazine: Apr/May 2021