Category Archives: Rivers

Snake in River

Evening walk with Katie, heading upriver: southwest wind, very small alto, maybe some cirrus. It’s been a mid-to-high-20-degree day. Two dolphins head upriver over the sandbar. There are terns and seagulls, and many flowering native grasses—mostly tall feather-grass. And it’s one of those days where it’s easy to see, in the middle of the river, a snaking line of intersecting surface layers, at the corner by the yacht club, on the incoming tide.

Joondalup to Jennalup

I walk downriver from Joondalup Point Walter towards Jennalup Blackwall Reach along the shoreline on a relatively low tide. Koorodoor the egret is there all white in the morning light, Pacific black ducks, koordjikit the black cormorant, kakak to small pied cormorant with a small fish—djilba bream?—in his mouth. Two osprey fly high above, while another perches on a riverside dead tree branch, which becomes eye-level when I take the path up; hIs feathers are all ruffled, and his eyeline stands out brown against the white of his head and chest. There is plant life in the area that burned a couple of years back, including many healthy-looking balga grasstrees. The wind is offshore for here, no clouds. So much limestone, and so much depth to the water below.

Ideas of Landscape

The landscape is an ‘organism’ with different ‘organs’ (somewhat like a healthy compost).

If a counterpicture is needed for extractive mining and agriculture, maybe we could be ‘putting something back in the ground’.

The human being is in the landscape in many ways, including a metabolic system underground, head above ground, and rhythmic system in the soil between.

There are rivers between WA and India severed by the splitting up of Gondwana. 

Some shorelines of Whadjuk Country on the Swan Coastal Plain: the Yilgarn Craton to the east (water from runoff), ocean to the west (water from sea), plus water underground. 

Of the City Sky

On the old traffic bridge stretching across the river from North Fremantle—where even now they build a new bridge next door—above a lightpost on the upriver side, just as the road starts to hang out over the water—in that upper world, looking down on it all, including the river, sits, as so often he does, dorn dorn the osprey. The next day I’m walking across the high trainline pedestrian bridge towards the ocean, and on the westernmost lightpost, high above coastal dunes and plants and road, sits a small raptor of some kind—I’m guessing a kestrel, the sun heading towards setting beyond. And on the way home, on a power line the other side of the highway, sits wardo wardong the grey butcherbird, all black and white and high, singing as if from the periphery of life.

Perth Water

I’ve been thinking about the water underneath this city, the water underneath our feet. It’s hard to see other than when it comes up in lakes and wetlands and rivers and sprinklered bores. But it is there, under the Swan Coastal Plain—Whadjuk Country. I think of Archimedes displacing water in his bath. I think of the brain displacing spinal fluid. Maybe this underground water is holding up a buoyant country, a buoyant city, as the water in the body holds up a buoyant brain.

River’s Mouth

We walk then paddle upriver from the mouth of the Wooditch Margaret River. The wind blows up from the ocean as the river winds and curves. On one side is steep sandy hills with dune grasses; on the other are paperbark wetter lands. We paddle as far as the next bend in the river, but don’t go ashore. The place is old, transformative, full.

Wetlands and Brains

There is a landscape of water under this landscape of land. Maybe one keeps the other buoyant. The brain weighs around 1.5 kg; this would be enough to crush the veins and arteries in the spine…if it weren’t for the fluid it floats in, keeping it buoyant. Do we think with that which weighs us down, or that which holds us up?

Soapbush

Isn’t it convenient that the soapbush grows, all thick and white-flowered, by the water’s edge?—be it at Noble Falls by Woorooloo Brook, the upper reaches of the Swan, or here on the Bilya Maadjit Murray River in Dwellingup (or elsewhere too, of course).

Flowers and Life

We paddle the Djarlgarra Canning wetlands and, amongst the other things of interest, I note the lack of wildflowers. Within the wetter areas there are sedges, rushes, paperbarks, other melaleucas, water, so much life. It takes stepping out onto the mown grass before we see little black-eyed Susan flowers, and other bits of colour. And I know in even drier areas there are many flowers opening to the sunlight now.

In the wetter places, growth and life prevail. In the drier places, light and colour and warmth. Here, now, this means plant and leaves and trees in one place; wildflowers in the other. Still, the more rain, the more wildflower plants in those drier places; and the more light and warmth in the wetland, the more chance of flowers.

Bells—Bells

Late Djeran, early Kambarang—a.k.a. sometime in spring—I head out with nephew to Bells Rapids where the river comes tumbling down through the hills and, later, onto the plain. We cross the bridge with the tumbling white-water below, all alone, and hike upriver along its banks on the north side in the post-winter green of grass and soapbush amongst the wattle, zamias, banksias, dead and living casuarinas, big tuarts ponderous and hanging over, invasive orange flowers, purple flowers too, and black-eyed Susans. It’s not as wet as last time I came, when waters flowed down from side valleys into the brown river. There are green parrots, wood ducks, black ducks, pied cormorants, white-faced herons, black cormorants, coots, grey teals, red-capped parrots, sacred kingfishers, galahs, kookaburras, corellas, crows, magpies and more. We walk the muddy bank between granites in the bright sun. And we walk all the way to Walyunga National Park, right to the point the river becomes the Gogulyar Avon. Here, at a particular spot, we take off our packs and inflate a couple of small rafts and paddle our way back down the river in stretches between fast-moving rapids and longer stretches of open water with flat paddling. We take our time. The wind pushes us along. We get out and scout our line through rapids at one spot, then do the same again, later, as we re-approach Bells, this time from the water. There is the bridge again, this time with many people on top of it. We pull over on the north side before the rapids, listening to the sound of it. We walk up onto the bridge and see if we can find a line through the rocks—left or right. We walk past the bridge downriver and try to decide the same. In the end we get back in the rafts and try to time it with less people watching, but we can’t avoid attracting a crowd looking down. We approach the rapid with a clear plan in mind, but the river and the boats themselves seem to have other ideas. I try for the left side, then the right, and then, in the end, we both get taken through the middle, straight over a submerged rock…but all is fine, and we ride the water on a little while, through some more rapids. And then, near the car, we pull the rafts out, having now approached this river from some other side.