Disappointed that the title wasn't A Tales of Two Desserts as clickbait, you know, with a cook as well. Thanks for sharing, I've spent half my working life in deserts, both Australia and Middle East.
Best video I've seen of the Great Victoria Desert - very well done. Perhaps you could also acknowledge the Maralinga Tjarutja people who granted you the permissions and manage the vast country out there, and do it very well. The communies of Oak Valley and Tjuntunjara are the only settlements in the whole of the GVD and manage the country.
Great Victoria Desert is full of mulga - fantastic firewood that lasts a long time and burns down to very hot coals - a campfire cooking paradise. There is no chance the wood supply will ever get depleted. There are not many tourists out there (compared to other deserts) because it is so remote and the roads are tough and a lot has never seen a grader since Len Beadell made the roads in the 1960's. Fire is very natural out there - the wildfires in the summer are caused by lightning strikes and renew the landscape.
That's fantastic Andrew & Team. Great drone footage, yummy food and very informative. Keep up the great work guy's.
Nice one guys
Disappointed that the title wasn't A Tales of Two Desserts as clickbait, you know, with a cook as well. Thanks for sharing, I've spent half my working life in deserts, both Australia and Middle East.
Best video I've seen of the Great Victoria Desert - very well done.
Perhaps you could also acknowledge the Maralinga Tjarutja people who granted you the permissions and manage the vast country out there, and do it very well. The communies of Oak Valley and Tjuntunjara are the only settlements in the whole of the GVD and manage the country.
Wondering where all the wood came from ?
Great Victoria Desert is full of mulga - fantastic firewood that lasts a long time and burns down to very hot coals - a campfire cooking paradise. There is no chance the wood supply will ever get depleted. There are not many tourists out there (compared to other deserts) because it is so remote and the roads are tough and a lot has never seen a grader since Len Beadell made the roads in the 1960's.
Fire is very natural out there - the wildfires in the summer are caused by lightning strikes and renew the landscape.