Roadside killing, nearly.

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elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
4 Aug 2010 1:34am
It was almost a massacre. ..almost

A bloody by the roadside, bones in the dust, body’s murderously mangled type massacre.

Essentially the only thing that saved them was probably the distance that they had travelled. Two more metres would have done it. One more metre out, then the same extra distance back again and I reckon that would have been enough. They wouldn’t have made it.

We were in the outback of Western Australia about two thirds of the way to Adelaide from Perth. Stark dry featureless desert surrounded us on all sides. Small clumps of hardy vegetation the only relief.

The singular lack of trees explains the Latin name given to this part of the world.

Nullarbor. No trees.

It is not the sort of place you would like to be lost in and we unfortunately had lost someone. To be more specific we had lost two someone’s.

First a wife, and then with her an indomitable sister in law.

We had been travelling together up to now on our way to New South Wales, far away to the east. The wife and sister in law in the Mitsubishi and my companion and I in a Toyota camper van. Sometimes we tagged along behind them, but often we ranged ahead. Up to now we had always through communication and planning managed to meet up during the day. To eat together and to relate any experiences of the day.

Now for some reason the system had broken down and they were nowhere to be seen. Fatigue had overcome me at one stage. Being ahead of the others, I had decided to stop and rest in a sheltered spot off the road.

I figured firstly (erroneously as it turned out) that my fellow travellers on seeing me would stop. I assumed secondly that they then would announce their presence. Lastly, I thought we would all travel on together in companionable convoy to the next port of call.
Who knows what happened?

They didn't see me. Or they saw me and thought, oh well; he will catch up, who knows.

What I do know is that when I awoke from my snooze, I had no idea which way to go to find them. Had they broken down behind me, or forged ahead now well on their way to South Australia? Mobile phones were useless as there was no service that far out.

I looked at my friend sitting in the passengers’ seat.

Missy the eleven year old sleek, black, kelpie, looked back at me with a doleful look that said. “Come on let’s go.” “There are things to be seen, smells to be sniffed.”
I decided the best plan of action initially would be to continue to the next roadhouse. There we would find out if they were waiting for us. If not then we could quiz other road users whether they had seen a blue Mitsubishi broken down at the roadside.

So this is what we did.

It explains why we were still at the roadhouse when the massacre almost happened.
The Nullarbor roadhouse has improved considerably since the first time I visited it as a young man. The standard of cuisine had risen to the point where if someone was inclined they could actually purchase a salad. The usual roadside fare of pies, sausage rolls chips etc were still therein their deep fried glory but additions had been made. This didn't make our stay more pleasant however. Half an hour at a desert roadhouse is usually enough for most people to see and partake of most of the pleasures therein.
The puzzle was unfortunately still with us.

No one had reported a broken down car behind us. This would indicate the wife had probably travelled on. However no one at the station could categorically state she had passed through.

There was always the worry that some thing more nefarious had transpired and that the both of them were in a situation from which they would need deliverance. Deliverance being the key word! The flies and heat added to the general perception that we would both rather be somewhere else when something happened that added substantially to our discomfort.
Flip and Flop turned up.

Flip and Flop (my names for them) were a particularly nasty pair of predators. Small in stature but big in bluster, they were working a cruel trick. One they had obviously tried before, and seemingly perfected over time.
Missy left the car for a drink only to find herself set upon by these scurrilous scoundrels.

Flip was a yapping Chihuahua. Flop a nasty blend of Pomeranian and some other equally unpleasant breed. Possibly rat.
Their trick involved a full frontal attack by both aggressors with a pincer movement where by the victim was surrounded front and rear. Then while one provided a diversion with foul yapping at the forequarters the other would strike, biting at the victim’s heels. Poor Missy was quickly overcome and it was only when I interceded and expressed my displeasure (Get back to Pomerania you little bastard) did they smugly retreat to the safety of an owner (surely a loose term) that had obviously lost control.

Then a nice thing happened. A just thing. A levelling of sorts. Some would say Karma
As we retreated to the safety of our van Flip and Flop made the worst decision of their sordid careers. They spied another dog in the distance and made the split second resolution to complete the day’s fun with another victory. With this in mind they both hared off away from the station bent on mischief.
Nullarbor station is almost bereft of wildlife. The dry dusty environment accounts for this fact. Few animals choose willingly to live there. Apart from the ubiquitous flies that are too stupid to go elsewhere and the occasional eagle, snake or lizard not much else chooses Nullarbor station as its address. No one that is except for the dingoes. The target of Flip and Flops reckless headlong charge that day was a male, adult, Australian, Dingo.

Dingoes are Australia's answer to the American coyote. A relative to the Indian wolf it is a formidable and cunning wild dog. Dingoes have a history of attacking and killing big game including kangaroos, sheep and on occasion even people.
To Flip and Flops credit the audacity of their charge was initially enough to put doubt in the mind of the Dingo. He was undoubtedly taken aback. He may never have experienced anything remotely like this in all his years. It took him a moment to weigh up the odds but a moment was all he really needed.
I’m not sure at what stage, of the charge of the exceedingly light brigade it was that Flip and Flop realised their dilemma.

As I said before, two metres was about all there was in it. The distance they ran out equalled the distance they needed to cover to return. The time taken in which the dingo went from disturbed to (almost) diner and Flip and Fop from assailants to (almost) dinner was a split second.
Flip and Flop returned to their owner in a decidedly different fashion in which they left.

Pomeranian legs (I think), are about 3 centimetres longer than Chihuahua’s so Flop led the retreat. Close behind came Flip and behind them with a hot breath and hungry eyes came the Dingo with teeth literally snapping at their heels. Both leading dogs filled the air with a cacophony that (I guess) was the doggy equivalent of “Help!! Mummy Help!!”
The Dingo ran with silent intensity. There isn’t a great deal of food for dingoes in the desert. Apart from the occasional lizard or possibly a rabbit, scraps are probably the best they can do. Dingoes hang around road houses for the food. Here was what easily could be termed takeaway.
A metre from the cars and hunger was driven away by caution. The dingo curtailed the chase and retired again to the plain to await his next opportunity. Newly educated he would not be so slow to make a decision next time.
Flip and Flop while instinctively caterwauling had also had the presence of mind to weave strenuously on their way back home.

This alone had probably saved them. That and a few metres.
Missy and I laughed and laughed. Well I did anyway. I'm sure there was a sense of justice about the whole episode.
We finally caught up to the wife and sister the following day in South Australia.

It was almost worth losing a wife to see such a thing.
The humbling of tyrants.
Always worth watching.
Danger Mouse
Danger Mouse
WA
592 posts
WA, 592 posts
4 Aug 2010 1:16pm
Thanks, enjoyed reading that
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
4 Aug 2010 1:44pm
D_Meredith79 said...

Thanks, enjoyed reading that


Thanks for that. I actually just came back on line to apologise

I keep sitting down, having a few beers and then inspired I write a short story.

After a while I must think Hemingway and I are almost kin because I then post it to anyone I can think of including the long suffering readers of sea breeze

I promise to find a more appropriate forum, maybe one for aspiring writers?

Thanks again for your positive feedback and thanks to all the readers that didn't write in and call me a dickhead.

Jukebox
Jukebox
NSW
155 posts
NSW, 155 posts
4 Aug 2010 6:49pm
As a wordsmith you paint a clear landscape and a nice picture of events
keep it up
Cassa
Cassa
WA
1305 posts
WA, 1305 posts
4 Aug 2010 6:02pm
martman said...

As a wordsmith you paint a clear landscape and a nice picture of events
keep it up


My sentiments exactly
well done
NotWal
NotWal
QLD
7436 posts
QLD, 7436 posts
4 Aug 2010 9:19pm
Nice read Hemingway.

You really don't like small dogs do you.
echunda
echunda
VIC
765 posts
VIC, 765 posts
4 Aug 2010 10:30pm
Can you please return the 2 minutes you took from me?













































Nah.......stuff it, I'd just waste it picking my nose.

Next time please remember

Pics or it didn't happen.
cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
4 Aug 2010 10:55pm
Don't trust a Dingo!!

We had got the mustering done early that day and as usual all the dogs were chained back up to their stakes in front of their kennel huts in the shade of the big old fig tree at the back of the house yard.

They were far enough apart so they couldn't get into each other if there was any dog jealousy thing going on and it had been pretty big work day till one o'clock by the time we had penned the steers for tomorrows sale, so they all settled down for an afternoon snooze, or so I thought.

I'm sitting on the back step enjoying a big mug of strong black tea with a couple of sugars to be followed by some puffs of Dr. Pat from my favourite pipe, contemplating the day and surveying the house back yard.

The chooks are still on the loose in the yard and I notice one of them cautiously heading towards the still meaty bone in front of the Dingo's hut. The bone had some big fat maggots on it and the chook obviously saw an easy feed to be had.

The hen had just plucked it's third grub off the bone when, as a blur, the Dingo shoots straight for it and just short of snapping it's head in his jaws, reaches the end of the chain and does a dusty somersalt.

The chook beat a rapid retreat and I could barely contain my laughter. I thought I had got the wild out of this dog as I had trained him since the day I pulled him off his dead mother's tit. Might have got the wild out of him but certainly not the cunning.

So the yard settles down again, the Dingo recovers himself and lies down in front of his hut. Not for long. He then creeps out on his belly to the end of his chain, reaches out with his paw and just manages to get it onto the bone which he then drags into the reach of his chain and then he creeps back to his hut.

I couldn't deny him as he would maybe never trust me again and he knew I was watching, so the inevitable happened. The moral of course is "You can take the dog out of the wild but you will never take the wild out of the dog!!"

The previous is not an original story. I read it in the "Sporting Shooter's Journal" many years ago and have tried to recount it as best I could. Hope you enjoyed it.
cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
4 Aug 2010 11:02pm
echunda said...

Can you please return the 2 minutes you took from me?

Nah.......stuff it, I'd just waste it picking my nose.

Next time please remember

Pics or it didn't happen.


elbeau did not take 2 minutes from you. Maybe you should stick to picking your nose or bum and licking it.

Words are what turn on the video of the mind. People that do not read tend to die younger.
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
5 Aug 2010 3:40am
Thanks for all the positive feedback.

You're all invited to the BBQ when I sell the first million copies.

Thanks for the story. Cisco.
mineral1
mineral1
WA
4564 posts
WA, 4564 posts
5 Aug 2010 12:16pm
elbeau, thanks mate was a dull day til I read your post
You sure have a knack of putting it together wit precision and humour
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
5 Aug 2010 1:15pm
mineral1 said...

elbeau, thanks mate was a dull day til I read your post
You sure have a knack of putting it together wit precision and humour



Thank you Mineral1. You have made my day.
frant
frant
VIC
1230 posts
VIC, 1230 posts
5 Aug 2010 4:45pm
Nice read.
However, I take issue with your description of food on the Nullabor. I have driven some 3000km a few times in my life just to enjoy the delights of the fully fried breakfast fare of the Mundrabilla Roadhouse. My mouth waters at the thought of the fried eggs, fried bacon, fried sausages, fried tomatoes, fried potato patties, fried mushrooms, fried baked beans, fried bread and roadhouse coffee.
Your story could benefit if you could make the reader salivate at the roadhouse stop.
Otherwise most entertaining.
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
5 Aug 2010 3:10pm
frant said...

Nice read.
However, I take issue with your description of food on the Nullabor. I have driven some 3000km a few times in my life just to enjoy the delights of the fully fried breakfast fare of the Mundrabilla Roadhouse. My mouth waters at the thought of the fried eggs, fried bacon, fried sausages, fried tomatoes, fried potato patties, fried mushrooms, fried baked beans, fried bread and roadhouse coffee.
Your story could benefit if you could make the reader salivate at the roadhouse stop.
Otherwise most entertaining.


Lol. I believe they fry the coffee as well at some stage.
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
5 Aug 2010 3:23pm
echunda said...

Can you please return the 2 minutes you took from me?

Here's 2 minutes worth. Read slowly

Australia has more camels than any nation on earth. Here are some of them. The others are somewhere else.

South Australia at last.

Country living

The sister and the blue Mitsbishi

Missy relaxing at home at the end of the trip













































Nah.......stuff it, I'd just waste it picking my nose.

Next time please remember

Pics or it didn't happen.


landyacht
landyacht
WA
5921 posts
WA, 5921 posts
5 Aug 2010 8:39pm
last time we went through Nullabor, I glanced in the bain marie , and settled for paddle pops(unfried), as we were driving out my mobile , That i had managed to forget the existence of, started ringing. It was telstra wanting to tell me about some stupid foxtel promotion
you cannot get away
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
6 Aug 2010 2:27am
landyacht said...

last time we went through Nullabor, I glanced in the bain marie , and settled for paddle pops(unfried), as we were driving out my mobile , That i had managed to forget the existence of, started ringing. It was telstra wanting to tell me about some stupid foxtel promotion
you cannot get away


I'm sure there must be a way to deep fry paddle pops. It just hasn't been perfected yet.
cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
6 Aug 2010 10:49am
Ask a Chinaman. They deep fry ice cream.
evlPanda
evlPanda
NSW
9207 posts
NSW, 9207 posts
6 Aug 2010 12:16pm
... what happened to your wife and her sister? They were missing in the desert. Suddenly a dog fight became the focus. Did I miss something? Or am I not reading between the lines?


Bloody Afghani illegal immigrants. I don't see any papers.
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
6 Aug 2010 1:49pm
evlPanda said...

... what happened to your wife and her sister? They were missing in the desert. Suddenly a dog fight became the focus. Did I miss something? Or am I not reading between the lines?


Bloody Afghani illegal immigrants. I don't see any papers.


Dear Panda

They drove past while I was asleep then kept going.

They both (vaguely) claim not to have seen me.

I finally met up with them in Port Augusta.

Is there a message here? Is it me not reading between the lines?.... "Oh Darling".

The device I used was to allow the reader to imagine the worst, as in the possibility

(in their minds) of my wife and sister coming to some violent end in the desert. That

was then transposed to the reality of the dogfight and a feel good ending for all

concerned.

I thought it was an exciting and smart use of imagery, cleverly executed, clearly

leading the reader from a possibly sad and depressing outcome, to a sunny and

just result. I thought it showed intelligently that the injustices of the world will be

brought to book and that there is hope for the downtrodden and opressed.

Apparently not.
frant
frant
VIC
1230 posts
VIC, 1230 posts
6 Aug 2010 4:12pm
elbeau said...

evlPanda said...

... what happened to your wife and her sister? They were missing in the desert. Suddenly a dog fight became the focus. Did I miss something? Or am I not reading between the lines?


Bloody Afghani illegal immigrants. I don't see any papers.


Dear Panda

They drove past while I was asleep then kept going.

They both (vaguely) claim not to have seen me.

I finally met up with them in Port Augusta.

Is there a message here? Is it me not reading between the lines?.... "Oh Darling".

The device I used was to allow the reader to imagine the worst, as in the possibility

(in their minds) of my wife and sister coming to some violent end in the desert. That

was then transposed to the reality of the dogfight and a feel good ending for all

concerned.

I thought it was an exciting and smart use of imagery, cleverly executed, clearly

leading the reader from a possibly sad and depressing outcome, to a sunny and

just result. I thought it showed intelligently that the injustices of the world will be

brought to book and that there is hope for the downtrodden and opressed.


Apparently not.


Stick my neck out here and suggest that maybe hope for the downtrodden and oppressed could have been expressed had the dingo got the wife and sister in law.
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
6 Aug 2010 3:43pm
frant said...

elbeau said...

evlPanda said...

... what happened to your wife and her sister? They were missing in the desert. Suddenly a dog fight became the focus. Did I miss something? Or am I not reading between the lines?


Bloody Afghani illegal immigrants. I don't see any papers.


Dear Panda

They drove past while I was asleep then kept going.

They both (vaguely) claim not to have seen me.

I finally met up with them in Port Augusta.

Is there a message here? Is it me not reading between the lines?.... "Oh Darling".

The device I used was to allow the reader to imagine the worst, as in the possibility

(in their minds) of my wife and sister coming to some violent end in the desert. That

was then transposed to the reality of the dogfight and a feel good ending for all

concerned.

I thought it was an exciting and smart use of imagery, cleverly executed, clearly

leading the reader from a possibly sad and depressing outcome, to a sunny and

just result. I thought it showed intelligently that the injustices of the world will be

brought to book and that there is hope for the downtrodden and opressed.


Apparently not.


Stick my neck out here and suggest that maybe hope for the downtrodden and oppressed could have been expressed had the dingo got the wife and sister in law.


To be absolutely frank with you not dissimilar sentiments have sometimes percolated through the mind of my brother-in-laws, wife's sisters husband.
cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
7 Aug 2010 3:52am
Jeez elbeau, I thought it was a pretty nice little story as posted.

Now we have got a critique of the Nullabor Road House "Ultra Cholestoral Breakfast" and correct behaviour with one's sister in law.

I reckon just munch the lot and suffer the consequences.
elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
7 Aug 2010 1:59am
cisco said...

Jeez elbeau, I thought it was a pretty nice little story as posted.

Now we have got a critique of the Nullabor Road House "Ultra Cholestoral Breakfast" and correct behaviour with one's sister in law.

I reckon just munch the lot and suffer the consequences.


Sort of dessert in the desert then you could say.
frant
frant
VIC
1230 posts
VIC, 1230 posts
7 Aug 2010 12:56pm
elbeau said...

frant said...

elbeau said...

evlPanda said...

... what happened to your wife and her sister? They were missing in the desert. Suddenly a dog fight became the focus. Did I miss something? Or am I not reading between the lines?


Bloody Afghani illegal immigrants. I don't see any papers.


Dear Panda

They drove past while I was asleep then kept going.

They both (vaguely) claim not to have seen me.

I finally met up with them in Port Augusta.

Is there a message here? Is it me not reading between the lines?.... "Oh Darling".

The device I used was to allow the reader to imagine the worst, as in the possibility

(in their minds) of my wife and sister coming to some violent end in the desert. That

was then transposed to the reality of the dogfight and a feel good ending for all

concerned.

I thought it was an exciting and smart use of imagery, cleverly executed, clearly

leading the reader from a possibly sad and depressing outcome, to a sunny and

just result. I thought it showed intelligently that the injustices of the world will be

brought to book and that there is hope for the downtrodden and opressed.


Apparently not.


Stick my neck out here and suggest that maybe hope for the downtrodden and oppressed could have been expressed had the dingo got the wife and sister in law.


To be absolutely frank with you not dissimilar sentiments have sometimes percolated through the mind of my brother-in-laws, wife's sisters husband.

Just as well your story is not from the deep South of America then . Those sentiments in your wife's sisters husbands brother in laws mind could lead to deep frying of the whole fellow depending on his skin tones. Nice coffee analogy with the "percolation" of thoughts.
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