As someone who is German and lived in (urban) West Australia for a while and worked in its emergency services as a career paramedic:
People have no idea how fucking large Western Australia is and how fucking empty it is.
There are stations (farms) larger than a fair share of German states.
And yes, my dear Americans, it’s even large by your standards - WA straight across is roughly the distance from SF to St.Louis and if you need an actual road it’s basically the distance from SF to the east coast. With the difference that only 2.9 Million people live there - not even a third of greater SF and almost all of them live in the Perth metro region.
Outside of that there are very few population hotspots - after the 2.3 Millions in Perth the second largest town, Bunbury doesn’t even have 100k.
Anyway, the area she got lost in is actually “that remote”, to be honest. The nature reserve is only slightly larger than Luxembourg but fairly “close” to civilization as it’s a nature reserve that is basically defining the end of the civilization in that area. To the west it’s all farms and such. To the east? The big nothing. You only cross one road after 300km and only two more for the next 2000km…
The question I have is what she was doing there.
Because it’s not an area you visit spontaneously, not an area you travel through or make a quick detour when going east.
Really strange.
Have you heard the story of the death valley Germans, by any chance? It seems to be a common theme with European tourists getting into trouble in remote areas.
As someone who is German and lived in (urban) West Australia for a while and worked in its emergency services as a career paramedic:
People have no idea how fucking large Western Australia is and how fucking empty it is.
There are stations (farms) larger than a fair share of German states.
And yes, my dear Americans, it’s even large by your standards - WA straight across is roughly the distance from SF to St.Louis and if you need an actual road it’s basically the distance from SF to the east coast. With the difference that only 2.9 Million people live there - not even a third of greater SF and almost all of them live in the Perth metro region. Outside of that there are very few population hotspots - after the 2.3 Millions in Perth the second largest town, Bunbury doesn’t even have 100k.
Anyway, the area she got lost in is actually “that remote”, to be honest. The nature reserve is only slightly larger than Luxembourg but fairly “close” to civilization as it’s a nature reserve that is basically defining the end of the civilization in that area. To the west it’s all farms and such. To the east? The big nothing. You only cross one road after 300km and only two more for the next 2000km…
The question I have is what she was doing there. Because it’s not an area you visit spontaneously, not an area you travel through or make a quick detour when going east. Really strange.
Have you heard the story of the death valley Germans, by any chance? It seems to be a common theme with European tourists getting into trouble in remote areas.
Yeah
We had one foreign Tourist do this per month on average.mostly not that dramatic,but still.