It was indeed a smaller than usual travelling Uringa group
that headed north for State League Events 1 & 2.
The drive to Armidale is well best described as long but for
our car the two hours it took on Friday night to get from home to the freeway
was mindlessly frustrating. (We need a tunnel under Sydney running North South)
Anyway Day 1
was held at Banalasta –
'Banalasta'
("land of the healthy waterholes"), located on the outskirts of the
historic township of Bendemeer, between Tamworth and Armidale is on the New
England Tablelands of NSW.
The
Banalasta property expanded in a myriad of rural pursuits, one of which was the
planting of the world's largest certified organic eucalyptus radiata (Narrow
Peppermint-leaf Gum) plantation and a lavender farm.
The eucalyptus oil returns commercially viable medicinal properties and brings
the production of eucalyptus oil back into the Australian oil market (a lull
since the 1950s). While the lavender (intermedia grosso) shrubs have also been included
as another diversified oil yield for the health and skin products Banalasta
produces.
We have run her a few times
in recent years and one look at the map and yes you are right rock, rock rock,
a few tracks and an open runnable forest. Unfortunately it was warm ( well hot)
and the times were long. The course setter had shortened the courses from
lengths that had been used previously but the combination of detailed terrain
and hot weather blew out times.
Dave, Dick and Maureen found the day to their
liking taking out the top place in their classes. Finn and Alice chimed in with
2nd placing and Lisa and Gayle scored 3rd placing.
Must mention father and son combination of
Finn and Jim Mackay were experiencing granite terrain for perhaps the 1st
time and they both did rather well.
Placings:
Alice Westwood
|
W21A
|
2nd
|
Gayle Shepherd
|
W45AS
|
3rd
|
Lisa Lampe
|
W50A
|
3rd
|
Maureen Ogilvie
|
W80A
|
1st
|
Finn Mackay
|
M12A
|
2nd
|
Matt Westwood
|
M21A
|
6th
|
Jim Mackay
|
M45AS
|
4th
|
Dave Lotty
|
M55AS
|
1st
|
Dick Ogilvie
|
M70A
|
1st
|
For most it was off to the Armidale Bowling Club for dinner
and the Annual General Meeting of ONSW.
Sunday dawned a little cooler with a strong breeze keeping
the temperatures down. Mt Brown is one hill of granite about 35km west of
Armidale. Again the map looks like a fly trod in ink and walked all over the
paper. Conditions were more conducive to running however the
complexity of the terrain certainly slowed things down.
Lisa, Gayle Dick and Maureen claimed the major prizes making
a neat double header for Dick and Maureen Finn was again in 2nd
place not a bad effort at all. Also in 2nd was Dave. Interesting
comment from Dave- ‘Saturday I fell over my controls, today I fiddled on them all”
Alice Westwood
|
W21A
|
4th
|
Gayle Shepherd
|
W45AS
|
1st
|
Lisa Lampe
|
W50A
|
1st
|
Maureen Ogilvie
|
W80A
|
1st
|
Finn Mackay
|
M12A
|
2nd
|
Matt Westwood
|
M21A
|
8th
|
Jim Mackay
|
M45AS
|
5th
|
Dave Lotty
|
M55AS
|
2nd
|
Dick Ogilvie
|
M70A
|
1st
|
It is always a
hugely beautiful drive from Armidale back to Sydney via Uralla, Walcha,
Gloucester and Raymond Terrace affectionately known as Thunderbolts Way. For those
who took this route it was quite an adventure. From our point of view the sky
darkened not long after we had left Walcha and as the sky changed from a
blackish to greenish colour we knew it was going to become unpleasant.
The wind arrived first and with it assorted flotsam and
jetsam from the road side. Rain quickly followed but it did not last long. I
guess we were lucky that we had left the event later than most and stopped in a
great Uralla Café for lunch- great food, great service and great staff.
It was the wind that really did the damge and for the next
70 kms branches on the road were the norm. A few we rather large but gaps had
been created by earlier motorists.
|
Even the cows were looking for cover |
Descending one hill and travelling parallel to the river one
finds a beautiful stand of Chinese Elm trees. Right out of place they are but it
is a place of great tranquillity. The trees are very mature with trunks that you could probably just cuddle.
Well that grove “ain’t” no more. The trees had branches and trunks snapped like
matchstick with barely one of the 200 or so trees remaining unscathed. It was sad to
see this but you just have to marvel at the forces that nature can turn on.
|
The queue |
After passing through Gloucester things were much quieter
and the road clearish. However the traffic came to a sudden halt as about a
kilometre down the road a rather large eucalypt had fallen and blocked the
road. It was big. Fortunately, near the head of the queue was Newcastle
Orienteer, Shane Trotter. Shane makes his living in and out of trees and he
just happen to have the odd chainsaw or two in the back of his ute. He was in
to it in a big way. The reinforcements arrived with a couple of front end
loaders which were needed to move the trunk and branches off the road.
For those in the
queue it was an opportunity to
have a chat with fellow travellers whilst the sound of chainsaws brought
confidence that we would get home tonight. As we drove off there was Shane
brushing off the sawdust, packing up the gear. Thanks Mate!
Home a little later than usual but satisfied- a great
weekend. Metro this weekend