It is not possible to visit Innamincka without coming across the story of Burke and Wills, and their ill-fated expedition from Melbourne to the Gulf. Innamincka is the name of the town that is closest to where King, the only surviving member of the four-man team that made the Gulf, was discovered. Without him, the entire story may never have been known.
The question of the title is borrowed from an article on the walls of an outback exhibition at the dig tree. In it, the author offers about six circumstances, of which any one being different would have saved the party.
Some of these could have been made different by the expeditioners, and some were out of their control. Their choice of horses over camels, doing the journey in summer, departing from Melbourne instead of a railhead and sacking your 2IC partway through may be considered folly. Missing the relief party by a day on the first meeting, then again two weeks later could have been bad luck.
The fact is that Burke was ill-equipped to head an elaborate expedition, both in experience, manner and ability. Dazzled by the promise of fame and the 2000 pound prize on offer, his grand scheme captured the minds of a Melbourne public, riding the crest of the gold-rush wave and brimming with confidence. The Australian outback though thinks little of such bravado. It is a mark of the nature of the Australian character that we remember him as an explorer dying in the attempt in dramatic, but ultimately pitiful circumstances, rather than for the pain and suffering he inflicted on those surrounding him. It is also a fact that with much less fanfare and not so long afterward, many parties made similar journeys to settle, stock with cattle and sheep, explore, and lay telegraph lines.
The outline of the story is that Burke set out from Melbourne with a large team of horses, camels and men with two tonnes of supplies – enough for two years. Frustrated by slow progress he left supplies and men at various camps along the way in an attempt to be faster and leaner.
The most famous of these was camp 65 on Cooper’s Creek, from which Burke, Wills, Gray and King left to make a dash for the Gulf, instructing those left behind to wait for at least two months, but as long as possible. That was in December 1960. The four made it to the Gulf, and Gray, died on the return journey from starvation after Wills had beat him for taking extra rations. They spent a day digging a grave for him and resting from the exertion. The legend goes that the relief party left in the morning,and the expeditioners returned at 7:30 that same night, finding a blaze on the tree instructing them to dig for supplies. There is some doubt about that because the dates in the explorers journal may contain some dating errors, perhaps due to fatigue. In any event, it was close.
The supplies sustained the three, but assuming no help would return, they left a note in the remaining supplies, reburied them, and made for Mt Hopeless, some 260km away to the south. A relief party returned to the area some two weeks later, but finding no evidence of the returned travellers, they again went away. Meanwhile, finding the desert to the south dry and impenetrable, they again turned North back to the Cooper, where Burke and Wills died a day or so apart some five weeks later. King, having better relations with the local aborigines, survived to be rescued a month or so later when a search party was sent out. He was found just south of the current Innamincka township, some 60km from Camp 65 and its famous “Dig Tree”.
Our exploration of the area was somewhat cut short by many roads being closed due to the recent flooding. The site of King’s rescue was originally marked by a blaze on a tree. The blaze has been returned to the site, even though the original tree died and was cut down. A memorial to Burke’s grave is about 6km East of the town, his remains having been restored to Melbourne for reburial. Wills original gravesite some 20km south of the town was inaccessible.
Innamincka is in SA, but the Dig Tree is in Queensland, on Nappa Merrie station, now part of the empire of the Stanbroke Pastoral Company. The site has been preserved as a joint venture by the company and Australian Geographic. The ranger on duty was an old drover who worked for 40 years in the area. He just wanted to chat and would no doubt have shown us many more photos, if only we’d had the time. The blaze on the tree is now all but grown over, the tree being still healthy 150 years later. An adjacent tree was carved with likenesses of the two men in the 1890s by a local, the one of Burke is still visible.
Leaving the last planned stop of our journey behind, we made our way through the channel country still looking lush and green following the flooding and into the oil and gas country. Tonight finds us in a roadside rest area (complete with picnic table and toilet – what luxury!) at the junction of the road east with the turnoff to Eromanga. It is on this road we will travel tomorrow. The swarms of mozzies which took over at dusk from the swarms of flies though have chased us to an early bed.