The rest of the Red Centre: Hiking Kings Canyon and Ormiston Gorge

Compared to most countries, Australia is pretty flat. So flat in fact, that the flat white coffee was invented here because navigating the frothy peaks of a venti cappuccino will often give an Australian a bad case of vertigo.

You’d expert the middle bit of Australia to be the flattest, as it is largely desert, but somehow we did the most hiking and rock climbing here in the Red Centre of Australia.

Hike 1: Kings Canyon rim walk 

After traipsing around Uluru and Kata Tjuta for a few days we returned north towards Alice Springs to find Kings Canyon. It’s about 3.5-4 hours along the sealed Lasseter Highway to Kings Canyon, but if you have an offroad vehicle and balls of steel, you could attempt the shortcut known as the Red Centre Way.  Kings Canyon sits within Watarrka National Park, which covers about 71,000 hectares (274 square miles) and has been home to the Luritja Aboriginal people for more than 20,000 years.

We did the 6 kilometre Kings Canyon rim walk, which, aside from the 500 step climb at the beginning, was a breeze compared to the entirely flat Uluru 10 kilometre base walk. Possibly because we were distracted by the changing views of the canyon as we oscillated between the 300 metre high cliffs and picturesque rock pools at the bottom of the gorge. There are gates that stop you beginning the rim walk after 9am on any day over 36 degrees celsius, so there is some danger there, but to be honest we were more worried about falling off the edges of the canyon rim. It’s a long way down.

King's Canyon lookout, Northern Territory, Australia
King’s Canyon views
King's Canyon valley, Red Centre, Northern Territory, Australia
Posing posse at King’s Canyon
King's Canyon lookout, Red Centre, Northern Territory, Australia
How’s the serenity?
King's Canyon, Red Centre, Northern Territory, Australia
A long way down

Walking through the ‘Lost City’ of beehive-like domes gave us a sense of what exploring the Kimberley’s Bungles Bungles on foot may have been like (but at least three times bigger). We also saw the remains of an ancient sea bed. Finding outback marine fossils has been an unexpected but welcome theme of our roadtrip around Australia. Gareth’s totem animal must be a bi-valve.

Climbing down into the ‘Garden of Eden’  at the bottom of the gorge we also saw cycad ferns, which date all the way back to the time of the dinosaurs!

Sandstone domes, King's Canyon, Northern Territory, Australia
Domes eroded by the wind
King's Creek, King's Canyon, Northern Territory, Australia
Paradise at the bottom of King’s Canyon gorge

Hike 2: Ormiston Gorge and Pound circuit 

That night we stayed at a free camp on the outskirts of Alice Springs between the rubbish piles and the runway. You can find it on Wikicamps if you’re desperate but we wouldn’t rate it as a top spot for campervans. The following day we drove out to the West MacDonnell Ranges. It’s another 160 kilometres west of Alice Springs but if we had known better we would have bunked down at one of the campsites here overnight instead.

After taking a look at Simpsons Gap, we decided to stretch the legs with another hike. There are quite a few stops along Larapinta Drive to choose from but we picked Ormiston Gorge. It takes about 3-4 hours to complete a circuit of Ormiston Pound and there’s a permanent waterhole at the end that you can swim in. We attempted to return via the river and got a little stuck, however it was lots of fun to scramble from rock to rock – the boulders in the river change colour in the dying light from grey to pink and purple. All of our hikes in the Red Centre and the wider Northern Territory have been absolutely beautiful, worthwhile as long as you can manage the heat properly. We learned from our mistakes hiking Katherine Gorge and brought plenty of water.

Simpson's Gap, Larapinta Drive, Northern Territory, Australia
Simpson’s Gap
Ormiston Gorge, Larapinta Drive, Northern Territory, Australia
Picture perfect at Ormiston Gorge
Finke River, Ormiston Gorge, Northern Territory, Australia
Traipsing the Fink river bed
White gum tree, Ormiston Gorge, Northern Territory, Australia
The wizened white gum of Ormiston Gorge
Ormiston Gorge, Red Centre, Northern Territory, Australia
The money shot

Hike 3: Devils Marbles 

Our last hike on the way out of the NT was the Devils Marbles geological formation, a pit stop on the Stuart Highway about 100 kilometres south of Tennant Creek. Make sure you get out of your campervan or backpacker bus and spent some time walking around this site. It will be the most interesting thing you see for many hundreds of kilometres, whether you’re travelling north to Darwin or east to Queensland.

The Devil’s Marbles, known by the local indigenous people as Warlu Warlu, are a collection of red, round granite boulders. It’s the roundness of them that blows your mind, they almost look man made. In fact, they’re the eggs of the Rainbow Serpent, so keep that in mind as you slide around their convex curves and refrain from carving JACE WOZ ERE ’17.

You can camp here too and catch the Marbles by sunset, which is apparently spectacular. In theory it’s also safer to camp around lots of people at this major tourist attraction, as the Stuart Highway rest stops have a well deserved creep factor for backpackers.

Devil's Marbles Karlu Karlu, Northern Territory, Australia
Looking through the eye of the devil
Devil's Marbles Karlu Karlu, Northern Territory, Australia
Spot the tiny human!
Devil's Marbles Karlu Karlu, Northern Territory, Australia
Hungry for croissant
Devil's Marbles Karlu Karlu rock formation Northern Territory, Australia
The epic egg
Wide shot, Devil's Marbles Karlu Karlu rock formation Northern Territory, Australia
Pano-rific rocks
Devil's Marbles, Karlu Karlu from above, Northern Territory, Australia
Eggs from above

Highs: The geological wonderment of the Red Centre’s gorges, gaps and granite eggs

Lows: We now have to drive over 1,500 kilometres of flat, flat road from Tenant Creek to Townsville

Devil's Marbles road, Red Centre, Northern Territory, Australia
The red and winding road

 

6 thoughts on “The rest of the Red Centre: Hiking Kings Canyon and Ormiston Gorge

      1. 30 hours that sounds actually really fun haha..but yeah..with time constraints probably need to fly direct and hire a tour guide…though it’s not as fun i presume..

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