Time Enough

The big horizon-wide windows faced south towards the sea. On most days they were still, but on some days you could feel them buzz as the wind from the west pushed across their surface. I would stand there at the start of each day just looking, waiting for the kettle on the stove to boil, waiting for that first, all important, cup of tea. A kestrel would often perch on one of the bushes between me and the sea, waiting just like me, but waiting for something different. It was a perfect place to stand and day dream, to plan the day ahead, to think about the day before, to wonder if it would be possible to get close enough to the kestrel to photograph it. It was a place to stand and for a few minutes – I never really could tell how long – become lost in the distance and the surf. I would be called back to the morning by the growing silver whistle of the kettle, sounding old fashioned, urgent and warm. Reminding me that, for a short time anyway, we were not connected by wires or waves to the todays of other people, that all the noise and movement around me were nature’s or my family’s. We were not really cut off, but in the morning, trapped in the spell of distance, you could believe you were.

All holidays take on a rhythm of their own. The morning walk to collect the paper and have a coffee. The daily count of kangaroos around the house. The arrival of children, slightly chilled by the cool mountain air, in the early light of the morning. Some are variations on the normal home day, some are special to the holiday. Each adds a still, predictable, start to the day; a foundation on which to build.


At Tide Lines, on Kangaroo Island, the routine became watching, or at least looking for, dolphins whilst having breakfast. Armed with a small telescope and a large pot of tea I would search the surf from the south facing deck. Some days I needed a thin jacket, every day I needed to refill the tea pot. The deck and its weather greyed table were just the right height to look over and through the dunes and into the breaking of the waves. A small rocky headland pushed out from the shore and funnelled the water into a rip. Beach scraps collect in the rip. The scraps attracted fish and the fish attracted the dolphins. Black shark like shapes were often the first things you saw, emerging from the water and quickly sinking back into the surf. Triangles with curved edges, fin blades knifing through the water. Strangely I only ever saw them swimming left to right, heading west through the bay, morning commuters swimming through a one way system. On one morning the pod of dolphins stopped and fished in the rip. Tails would break through the surface and you could see the bodies of these sleek marine mammals rolling in the water together. It looked like play, but it wasn’t. Fish, probably salmon, broke through the surface in showers, taking flight from the snapping teeth behind them. The dolphins were herding the fishing to the surface, cutting off most of the escape routes, to catch them. So here in the surf, visible from my own bed, was an animal that has been mythologised to the point where biology becomes almost invisible. Intelligent they may be, peace loving vegetarians they are not. After the splashing died down the dolphins, as ever it seemed, headed west into the rest of the bay. How many times would they have to head west before it became a pattern, before it raised itself about the level of coincidence? Would I be 95% confident that it would happen the next day, and what would it mean if it did not? Was I just being lulled by my pattern seeking brain, generation upon generation in the building, which finds faces in the curtains, songs on the wind and God in the clouds? Pulled by a construct building mind towards a pattern where one may not exist, created in an instant or just a few days What is really needed is the passage of a deeper time, a longer time on watch and quiet dispassionate observation. Once you have found such a place, such a record of passing time, you really can start to look for patterns.

The weather takes a turn for the worse, the windows buzz, and the New Holland Honeyeaters take cover in the bases of the bushes. A bird of near paranoid nervousness at the best of times, now it verges on madness. Calling to friend or foe alike with sharp, percussive notes, it dashes from cover to cover, seemingly blown by the wind, almost not in control. They seem more like windblown litter than a bird, the wreckage of a beach party or a Friday night football game. The wind keeps blowing as we drive, bumpy, down the rough dirt track to the road.

A Black Snake winds its way across the track. Even in a country where the fauna is of unequalled toxicity, a humble Black Snake still causes a rush of excitement. Just like the kookaburra, a snake is never just a snake. They have too much mythology to be just a snake. Apples, gardens and snakes; maybe the blood pressure spike they produce is hard wired, not just a matter of education and bad PR. We hurry out of the car to watch the back half disappear into the bushes. I shush the kids and we listen for the long rustle of movement that marks the difference between the scurry sound of a lizard and longer, slower rustle of a snake. As we stand and listen the snake reappears just down the track and heads for the other bushes on the other side. I hope it was the same snake; if it was not then the bush around our house must have been carpeted with serpents.



Gusts of wind send leaves bumble tumbling across the road. Sticks, mostly small but some surprisingly large, clutter the road. Occasionally they kick up with the turn of the wheels and rattle through the arches, a sharp scatter snatch sound. Trees’ branches wave, grass trees bend to the force, and the whole landscape is alive with movement; back and forth, pushed and released, the call and response of plant congregation and the minister wind.

When we arrive at Kelly Hills the wind is even stronger, the car park a pickup sticks of fallen wood. Normally shade is the goal, trees the target. But today, parking far from the trees seems like a good idea – parking in an open space is the premium, parking under a tree a way to increase your insurance premium. Even as the branches buck and weave a Forest Raven sits on a low branch and croaks its disapproval at our arrival. Its neck hackles puff out and show the white base to the feathers. A large spider rushes over the covered table. Everything seems shaken and uncertain in the wind. The woodland feels angry, and as the branches fall, distant and close, you can understand how the woods, the dark forests of the past, were thought to hold danger and lurking spirits. Today would not be a day for off path adventures, or wild wood camps.

A metal door shuts the entry into the cave, a dull sheen in the rough rock face. All around it are pictures of animals, some of which we have seen and others which have long since ceased to be found here. Tasmanian Devils, short faced Kangaroos, animals from the end of the last ice age. Here, in the mud of the cave floor is a history written for long enough, buried deep enough, to be able to track the changes of life and time, the passing of creatures great and small, and the change of the weather from year to year. I can’t read this history, but I know that there are people who can. The ice retreats and the continent dries and the impact of people grows. The mega fauna – animals that would put those from the Africa of today in the shade – slowly (or possibly rapidly) disappear and the world that is Australia changes for ever. Fire changes. Plants change. And the animals at both the beginning and the end of this change as well. The herbivores the size of small cars are all gone, so are the marsupial lions with their huge teeth, the giant birds and huge lizards. Across most of Australia their place has been taken by cats and dogs, foxes and rats, goat and camels. Kangaroo Island is a little different to the mainland, but even here the change is felt. It’s not been a fair exchange.

To step into the cave is to enter a world of calm. A steep flight of metal stairs leads down into the darkness, away from the light and the wind. A quick switch flick sends a yellow candle light out along the paths. People talk in whispers – the same way they do when they enter a church, even if they don’t believe. Maybe it’s the pressure of the rock roof above, maybe it’s the pools of darkness that hang in the corners, but even in the open caverns you can feel the gentle tug of claustrophobia.

If myth can be trusted, these caves were found when a horse, or possibly cow (or maybe a sheep) fell into one of the entrances. The caves have been found, but the horses’ saddle and tack remain lost. The rock in the cave is heavily decorated; stalactites, stalagmites, curtains and straws. Sometimes we pass over flowstone floors. All of the decorations are the product of the slow drip and evaporation of water. The water has long gone, the solid building up year after year. Solvent, solute and evaporation, the basic science of solutions, the basic chemistry of decoration. Some of the decorations have stored chemicals, picked up by the slow flow of water through gum leaves and soils, and show a red gold colour.




As a kid there were show caves less than an hour from my Somerset home, and latter on in life I took other people kids into the simple caves of Yorkshire. These caves were cut into limestone, solid and grey. These caves were wet, with reflective pools and stream beds. Long Churn was an underground river, and the through trip was almost always in water; you could leave the cave by climbing a waterfall that crashed into a pool called Dr. Banister’s Hand Basin. There was water everywhere. The caves at Kelly Hills were very different. The rock which the caves snaked through was formed from the compacted, ancient, windblown sand dunes and the cave was almost bone dry. The tinkle drip of water which was the background ambience to most caves I have been in was missing. Without the lights the place would have been completely dark, and without the water it would have been completely silent. Water had formed all the decorations but it had long since ceased to trickle through the cracks and crevices. The caves and their decorations were a ghost, a memory, of an older wetter time. The weather has moved on and left the caves low and dry. The decorations can be studied to find out about rainfall patterns and the past. These are the kind of views long enough to find patterns and flow, to give a better understanding than a single day, or even a lifetime. Our path returned to the metal stairs, and climbed back up to the wind and light, into the weather of now.



If anything the current weather grew worse as we drove into the wind and towards the western end of the island. Short, sharp showers rattled across the roads, the car skipped sideways in the stronger blasts. The temperature ticks down one degree, then another, then another. We start to take a mental inventory of the clothes in the back of the car. I wonder about the efficacy of wearing the picnic blanket, but under these conditions it would be more of a kite than a coat. We stop for hot chocolate or coffee depending on age, and then we press on, tacking into the growing wind. In spite of all this P goes to sleep and H looks heavy eyed but resists slumber as a point of older brother pride. The car park is, unsurprisingly, rather empty. My family has little interest in braving the tempest to look at some rocks, remarkable or not. So wearing a little less than I would have liked I walk away from the car and into the wind. “I’m going out, I could be some time”.

Bush tops whip in the wind. Children move sideways in wind powered vectors of slight and uncertain control. I arrive at the “take a picture here” spot and I’m pleased to oblige. I’m even more pleased to have a fence rail to hang on to. The Committee for the Sensible Naming of Tourist Attractions has been at work here again and the Remarkables laid out before me actually are. These huge, battered and weathered boulders sit on a small headland, open and exposed to the passing force of wind and salt, to baking heat, chilling cold and a deeper expanse of time than most of us can comprehend. These processes have sculpted the rocks into forms weird and wonderful – arches, pillars, caves and sheltered coves of rock. They call out to be touched, and this act gives them a greater scale and a sense of age. If the wind and the sea can do this to rock – to the unimaginable roots of the Earth – what could it do to the temporary flesh that coats my insubstantial bones?

To get close to the rocks you step off the wooden path and on to a gentle up slope studded with pockets where smaller rocks once were and where others still lie, encased. These are rocks spat from the vents of ancient volcanoes, explosive moments frozen into solid time of the cooling rocks around them. Xenoliths - alien rocks.



The crowds dance around each other to take their pictures and flash their smiles and peace signs. I see a familiar face among them, and I take a half hitch step towards saying hello – wondering if memory has failed me and when I say “Hello Helen” the person will look at me blankly, or worse still say “My name is David”. Thankfully, neither occurs and my memory is correct. We chat as if the 15 years and more since we worked together was yesterday, and then she has to go, driven by the tyranny of a coach tour timetable.



I wander close to the edge of the cliff and feel the full force of the wind. Some families let their children do the same. The children stagger in the winds blast and flirt with falling to land who knows where. Even here I can taste the salt in the air, feel it whipping into my skin. The wind picks at the loose and the unsound. The families continue to let their offspring flirt with natural selection on the cliff edge. I walk to a more sheltered spot. And in that moment I can tell that I’m seeing – as well as I can – all the patterns that I need to see to understand how the world came to be this remarkable. Natural selection, matter on the move, random collisions, chance meetings and the deep expanse of time. All other time scales are detail written into fabric woven by these forces. Remarkable as it may seem, I walk back to the car reassured by the forces that whirl around me.

Comments

Arija said…
You certainly brought K.I. to life. A thoughtful and thought provoking essay. I always kept my chicks close in dangerous conditions but then again, I did not believe in Dr.Spock.
Where did you stay to have such a view?
Fun60 said…
I can only dream of what it must be like to watch dolphins from your window with that vast expanse of blue sky meeting the sea.
I feel as if I know Kangaroo Island now. What a wonderful family holiday.

We've seen dolphins at play and it is mesmerizing. Everything else was like visiting a brand new place -- but you make it real.
Muzz said…
Excellent as always - details that bring things to life, provoke thoughts and trigger personal memories of places, times and events, intertwined with deeper ruminations of the bigger picture.
Love the pics - a fine selection.

(Great to see flexible comment posting has returned!)
Grayquill said…
You have a gift in describing. At moments I was right there with you. Nice writing!
Rambling Woods said…
Oh wow...I was taken on the experience with you...amazing..Michelle
Rune Eide said…
Extremely interesting report from "another world". Totally different - but at the same time not. I agree with your conclusion.

PS Thank you for a nice comment!
Kala said…
Wonderful commentary and beautiful images. Wish I could see all this in person.
KB said…
Amazing pics. Thanks for sharing with Walkabout.
Liz said…
How wonderful to be able to enjoy such a view every morning before work! It must make the day that much better to wake up to that. Beautiful!

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