Yulara to Ceduna

Yulara to Marla

I made a donation to the NT consolidated revenue coffers leaving Yulara and headed east on the Lasseter Highway to Erldunda.

At Erldunda we turned onto the Stuart Highway and headed south –  117 kilometres to the iconic Kulgera Pub and Roadhouse.

Crossing a border anywhere is always an occasion and in Australia there are not many opportunities to partake in the experience. From NT to SA is not that significant and without the signage one wouldn’t be aware of the change in jurisdiction.

We found a patch of grass at the Marla Caravan Park where we stayed the night.

Marla to Ceduna

Four hundred kilometres into South Australia is the raw, outback opal mining town of Coober Pedy.

While travelling south on Stuart Highway before we reached Glendambo we came across a Wedgetail Eagle feasting on roadkill.

With a wingspan of up to 2.8 metres, the Wedge-tailed Eagle is Australia’s largest bird of prey and one of the largest in the world.  They are found all across Australia, mostly in open country.

I intended to take the dirt track past Lake Gairdner through to Ceduna, saving many kilometres against driving all the way south to Port Augusta on the bitumen. While Gosses Road would have been shorter still, I decided to take the more travelled Tarcoola Road out of Glendambo. Longer but safer for a single vehicle.

The Tarcoola Road takes one to Kingoonya and then another dirt road winds its way south through lake country to Ceduna where the Eyre Highway commences. Kingoonya is an important depot on the east-west railway, the sole rail link across the continent from Sydney to Perth.

This track south out of Kingoonya is the Gawler Ranges Road.  It is generally in good condition and, providing there is no water/bog holes, it could be navigated by a 2WD. There were numerous bog holes when we travelled it, none of which presented any issue.

We arrived in Ceduna after dark.  It was drizzling when we booked into the foreshore motel overlooking the Southern Ocean.

 

 

© Kim Epton 2026
594 words, 44 photographs.

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