Leaving the Adelaide Hills it wasn’t an over taxing drive
to reach Mount Gambier that night and there was time to pull over occasionally
at whatever took our fancy. The first place we pulled up was where the Murray River
empties into Lake Alexandrina at Wellington. Now the locals and the SA tourist
mob may disagree but I don’t believe that this is any well-known tourist spot;
what motivated me to check out this spot was the debate over the last few years
on the Murray Darling Basin Plan.
What did we see; the Murray was running high and from the wet years 2010 and 2011 Lake Alexandrina from a distance looked as if it was full. Where we crossed the river on the ferry the land was very low lying. As a farmer the salt lakes didn’t inspire me. There certainly far better land upstream in SA that was being irrigated. But this was only one spot on a very big lake system; I was only an interstater blowing by and no doubt influenced by state parochialism.
I gained a brief
SA perspective that afternoon when I stopped for a prearranged coffee with a
couple of online contacts in the seaside town of Robe. South Aussie’s feel that
they have improved their water effientcies dramatically over the last decade especially
upgrading infrastructure and they were not using a greater amount of water and
it was time for the States upstream to do likewise. BTW if you travelling the
Princess Highway on route to see the Great Ocean road make the detour to Robe
and even stay a while, we were very pleasantly surprised in our 1 hour
stopover.
The other
stop we made that day was a lookout on a mini peninsular with views of the Coorong.
The day we were there didn’t do any justice to what is by all accounts a very
special spot. If you need to be enlightened to what the collective conscientious
within the car of the best description to the smell; SA tourism would like you
not to ask.
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