Almanac Running: Coober Pedy, at Dawn

 

Headlights like beacons in the leaden wet.

 

The engine’s both idling and roaring in the passive/aggressive way I associate with a Greyhound bus. Closing in, and the sight of it is evocative.

 

For me an interstate bus often prompts cinematic images of youthful dreams but also broken hearts. Making my way into the Coober Pedy morning I wonder about the passengers and their reasons for travel.

 

Above the windshield the destination says Alice Springs.

 

Minutes earlier I clicked the door of my Mud Hut motel room, eased onto St Nicholas Street and then veered north. Hutchinson Street is the main thoroughfare. I’m keen to explore.

 

It’s raining, and the day is lightening quickly. I’m almost a thousand kilometres nearer to the equator so the sun dashes up and down the sky more urgently, and with less languid theatre. Long, slanting solar routines belong in the sentimental south.

 

A sign directs worshippers towards the Underground Catholic Church of St Peter and St Paul. Its subterranean neighbours are an opal buyer and a backpackers’ hostel. I guess religious visitors pray for glistening gems to come to them before diving into a musty bunk.

 

John’s Pizza Bar then appears under the showering sky. My daybreak run is also initial research for Wednesday evening’s dinner. The building’s a low, forgettable rectangle and scurrying past I decide to seek a more distinctive local experience.

 

Above the red and blue Ampol servo a nightclub called Red Sands occupies the second story. I suspect the swingin’ hotspot’s no more, but I’m happy to be astonished. Playing cricket at Wudinna a frequent joke while fielding was, ‘What time’s the Minnipa disco start?’ The reply: What time can you get there?

 

With water already pooling by the pavement The Desert Cave materializes in the west. Above ground, it’s self-pleased and swaggering. I speculate if tourists are seduced into submission by its machismo. But the optimistic architectural view is that it’s illustrative of continuing faith in the community, a symbol declaring this town will endure, and we challenge you to discover why.

 

Lurching along by the kangaroo orphanage, the rain beats a pulsing tattoo on the tin roofs. Puddles and mud now smear the good earth. The desert isn’t as thirsty as I would’ve thought and like a surly child the ground almost seems to refuse the water.

 

Suddenly, a drive-in theatre! The huge steely screen hangs over the lunar landscape. Initially noting the absence of the iconic speaker poles I remember that cars now tune their radio to a low-powered FM signal. Shutting for a decade from the mid-80s, funds were then raised to digitise. An utter triumph, it’s the state’s only surviving example, and runs every Saturday from 8.30 until summer pushes everyone and their nostalgia back underground. I’d love to see Jaws there.

 

Turning back up the main road I pass a garage with its iron doors flung up. A couple of cars have already nosed into their respective bays. I hear a radio. Overhead lights press out into the lifting murk. There’s a mound of discarded tyres, and gluggy smells of oil and diesel cling thick.

 

Trotting homeward, a ute slides by me, its window down. I catch a glimpse of a goatee and lime-green vest as a miner teases me, ‘If you’ve got that much energy, then come and dig a hole!’

 

*

 

The following morning near the Opal Inn Salon Bar the same ute slows and the same miner hollers, ‘If you grab a shovel you won’t have to bother running!’

 

I laugh and encourage him. ‘Check with me again tomorrow!’

 

 

 

More from Mickey Randall Here.

 

 

 

To return to the www.footyalmanac.com.au  home page click HERE

 

Our writers are independent contributors. The opinions expressed in their articles are their own. They are not the views, nor do they reflect the views, of Malarkey Publications.

 

Do you enjoy the Almanac concept?
And want to ensure it continues in its current form, and better? To help keep things ticking over please consider making your own contribution.

 

Become an Almanac (annual) member – CLICK HERE

 

 

 

 

About Mickey Randall

Now whip it into shape/ Shape it up, get straight/ Go forward, move ahead/ Try to detect it, it's not too late/ To whip it, whip it good

Comments

  1. Evocative Mickey!

  2. Thanks Dips. It’s a place I reckon everyone should visit at least once. The terrain, the township, the footy ground, the pyramidal mounds of excavated white dirt. Utterly compelling.

  3. Very nice, Mickey.
    Coober Pedy is on my bucket list.

  4. Thanks, Smokie.

    It probably says some damning things about me that until a fortnight ago I’d never been to Coober Pedy but had visited Paris three times. And I’m yet to get to Bendigo!

  5. Have to recommend John’s Pizza Bar from when we visited a couple of years ago. When we lived in Alice in the 1980s, we stopped overnight with friends here (school teacher). Pretty wild then, still fairly wild methinks. Blokes driving around in utes with signs on the tailgate “Explosives”.

  6. As part of Woodville Town Hall’s Seasonal Sessions I saw A Migrant’s Son there last night (Claire was the interpreter) which is partly set in Coober Pedy and tells in song and monologue, the story of her dad. He and his brother set up the supermarket as well as being miners. Worth seeing if you get the chance.

    I’m likely to be back in Coober Pedy early next year and will take your advice on pizza! Thanks Bucko.

  7. roger lowrey says

    Some marvellous evocative images here Mickey. “Youthful dreams and broken hearts” is a killer line. Well done.

    I suppose the first line started me thinking “on a dark desert highway…” before immediately subsequent references took me to Greyhound buses and “windshield wipers slappin’ time” with Bobby McGee.

    Great work mate.

    RDL

  8. “Kathy”, I said as we boarded a Greyhound in Pittsburgh
    “Michigan seems like a dream to me now”

    This might be my favourite S&G song and high on the list of tunes with Greyhound references. ‘Bobby McGee’ (do we prefer the Joplin version?) has one of the great first lines with the wonderfully alliterative

    Busted flat in Baton Rouge, waitin’ for a train.

    Doubtless, there’s a wealth of essays on the symbolism of the Greyhound bus and its role in the mythic landscape of America.

    Thanks, RDL.

Leave a Comment

*