GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #9 | Page 24

EDGE Kimberley WORDS: LINDA LEE RATHBUN IMAGES: STEVEN DAVID MILLER/NATURAL WANDERS OF THE THE EASTERN GATEWAY TO THE KIMBERLEY, KUNUNURRA SHOULD BE ON EVERY RVER’S TRAVEL LIST. IT’S JUST THAT BREATHTAKING LAKE ARGYLE Many Australian towns were established to provision a particular industry. In the case of Kununurra, it was to support the 1963 construction of a diversion dam which, in turn, was the first step in developing the ambitious Ord River Irrigation Scheme. The goal of this scheme was to capture the daily wet season flow of 2500 gigilitres of water into a reservoir that could then be used to irrigate the fertile Ivanhoe and Packsaddle plains. Aerial view of Lake Argyle. 24 gorv.com.au If you are going to Kununurra, it is worth a stop at Lake Argyle. You can spend a night or two at the caravan park there or take one of the guided tours on offer from Kununurra. Your visit should include a cruise on the lake (the sunset tour is lovely) and a stop at the Argyle Homestead Museum; the homestead was dismantled and reassembled at its current site before the dam was completed and the area flooded. If the budget allows, a scenic flight with HeliSpirit is most interesting, giving you an aerial view of the same terrain you experienced on your cruise. KUNUNURRA ATTRACTIONS Kununurra is very busy during ‘the season’ (June, July, August). There are a number of caravan parks, including a few that sit beside Lake Kununurra. If Lake Argyle and the dam intrigued you, or you missed Lake Argyle altogether, a