A
Review by Nigel
Hopkins
The Great Murray River Run Cruise
The famed explorer Captain
Charles Sturt never had it this good.
Back in 1830, when he and his crew rowed the length
of the Murray River in a heavy whaleboat, followed by a return
journey 1400km
back upstream, river exploration was an exhausting and dangerous
business.

Now, in an extraordinary development in river
tourism, explorers can cover in 10 days what took the intrepid
Captain Sturt more
than two months. Called The Great Murray River Run, it takes
place in two separate stages, each of five days.

The
first is a 560km journey that runs from Wellington, on the
shores of Lake Alexandrina near the mouth of the river,
to Border
Cliffs, 60km upstream from Renmark. The second stage of 426km
goes from Renmark to Mildura as a separate tour, although intrepid
explorers can combine both tours if they wish following a brief
stopover in Renmark.

Instead of a clumsy whaleboat,
modern river explorers travel in a fast, 13m Spirit of the
Coorong, powered by 400hp
motors
that whisk its maximum of 20 passengers along at up to 35km/h – while
at the same time being so maneuverable and shallow drafted it
can still nose into all the backwaters and side creeks.
Instead of makeshift camps
on sandbars, braving sometimes hostile Aborigines, today’s
explorers enjoy real comfort, staying in river town hotels
for the four nights of the first stage.
The second stage, from Renmark to Mildura, offers a rustic
change of pace with accommodation for four nights in original
shearing
quarters on working sheep stations.

All meals are included and, unlike Sturt whose
crew had to row hard for their return journey, passengers are
returned to their
starting port by coach.
“It’s possibly the only river trip
of its kind in the world,” says
Spirit Australia Cruises director Jock Veenstra. “You can
do wonderful river cruises on the Rhine or the Mississippi, but
there’s nothing like this.”
In total the two cruises cover more than 1000km
in 10 days, passing through all six river locks in SA, with side
tours that include
the Big Bend at Night tour to see wombats and other nocturnal
wildlife, a trip to Wentworth and a 52km journey up the Darling
River to Avoca Station.

Detailed histories are provided on the river,
historic relics, towns and communities, and some of the magnificent
homesteads
passed along the way, such as Moorna and Chowilla.
The new cruises were developed by Mr Veenstra
after passengers on his internationally renowned Spirit of the
Coorong Cruises
operating out of Goolwa commented that they wanted to go further,
yet there were no commercial cruises available.
Concern over the future
of 2530km Murray River has sparked even more interest among
eco-tourists wanting to
experience its unique
environment and add their voices to those seeking its protection.
The explorers’ mode of travel may have changed, but much
of the river grandeur that enthralled Charles Sturt remains.

There are still the 30m
high yellow cliffs, the remains of giant river red gum forests
lining reedy river banks
and wetlands,
an ever-changing maze of swamps, horse shoe lagoons and islands
that are home to some of South Australia’s most fascinating
birds and animals.
There are still the marks
of early indigenous cultures, with ancient red gums where bark
canoes were cut with
stone age flint
axes and engravings cut into river rock walls. And after Sturt
came a new history, when the river was Australia’s most
important transport highway with a huge commercial steamboat
trade and colourful riverside ports.

The Murray River is vital
to Australians for many reasons – its
prosperity, its environment, its communities and its future depend
on it. Modern demands for agricultural, domestic and industrial
use, as well as the importance of protecting its diverse ecosystems,
require a balance that needs constant attention.

The Great Murray River Run provides an unequalled
opportunity to discover the river, its history and its life.
Captain Sturt
would surely have loved to come along for the ride. |