Swimming with Crocodiles: The True Story of a Young Man in Search of Meaning and Adventure Who Finds Himself in an Epic Struggle for Survival

Swimming with Crocodiles: The True Story of a Young Man in Search of Meaning and Adventure Who Finds Himself in an Epic Struggle for Survival

by Will Chaffey
Swimming with Crocodiles: The True Story of a Young Man in Search of Meaning and Adventure Who Finds Himself in an Epic Struggle for Survival

Swimming with Crocodiles: The True Story of a Young Man in Search of Meaning and Adventure Who Finds Himself in an Epic Struggle for Survival

by Will Chaffey

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Overview

In the tradition of Into the Wild, here is the riveting story of a young man seeking his own truth and finding adventure in the awesome, unforgiving power of nature. Will Chaffey is eighteen when he boards a plane in New York bound for Australia. Taking time off to work and travel, Will meets an enigmatic wanderer and herpetologist. Together they cross the inland desert to the tropical northwest coast, home to the saltwater crocodile, a known man- eater and a predator who has been hunting since the age of the dinosaurs.

They devise a plan to explore the remote Prince Regent River, a trek so dangerous it had never been attempted by outsiders. Passing through harsh, primeval country, shadowed by their own exhaustion, and physically worn down, they find themselves locked in a life-and-death struggle when their food runs out and, unable to leave, they are stalked by a hungry crocodile. Filled with scenes of great natural beauty, Swimming with Crocodiles is at once the affecting account of a journey into adulthood and a hair- raising epic of survival.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781628721287
Publisher: Arcade
Publication date: 07/01/2011
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Will Chaffey earned his BA from Harvard University. He is married with two children. He lives in Needham, Massachusetts.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

THIRST

Let him live under the open sky, and dangerously.

Horace

The four-wheel-drive track to Port Warrender on the northwest coast of Australia was not frequently traveled. The thin wheel ruts cut past narrow canyons and across palm-studded plateaus of orange sandstone. Termite mounds sat solid as concrete in the middle of the track. As we turned up a hill of yellow grass, a faded sign warned of abundant crocodiles and mosquitoes near the coast. The radio in our jeep picked up nothing but static from one end of the dial to the other.

We had crossed a desert continent to arrive here — rattled west from the rain forests hugging the eastern seaboard across the dry flat interior with its roadhouses and isolated towns, through Queensland, the Northern Territory, Western Australia, the Tanami, Gibson, and Great Sandy Deserts, the Durack and Leopold Ranges, and over the rugged basalt, shale, and sandstone plateaus of the Kimberley in a tiny Daihatsu jeep averaging no more than twenty miles per hour.

In the back of the jeep I had a loaf of hard bread, tomatoes, cheese, some spicy sausage, a few cans of sardines, rice, a knapsack with a few spare clothes, a camera, boots, a manual typewriter, and not much else. My traveling partner, Jeff, had brought ten gallons of water and ten gallons of extra fuel in jerry cans. There would be no one to help us here should the jeep break down.

The engine growled in compound low down a final ridge, and the road, such as it was, ended. Jeff and I stepped out into the quiet heat.

North of us, huge inlets of gray mud spread away from the coast. Outcroppings of maroon sandstone rose above the tides, interspersed with green pockets of vegetation. Through all pervaded an intense heat and the vast eternal silence on the edge of outer space.

It was early in the month of May and the beginning of the dry season in the far north. The dry begins with the end of the rains in April or May, and already Crystal Creek was no more than a trickle. In a few more weeks water would evaporate from all but the deepest pools between the rocks. By November the wild dogs and cockatoos would linger by their dwindling waterholes, waiting for rain.

The creek trickled through a fissure in the fractured sandstone a hundred yards away. Jeff stood beside the jeep cutting slices of sausage and cheese onto bread for breakfast.

I walked to the edge of the creek, studying the intersection of blue sky and orange coast under the sun. These rocks may have been the first to emerge from an ocean that covered the entire planet 2,000 million years ago. A white finger of beach jutted into the azure waters of the Timor Sea in the distance.

Having crossed the continent, I wanted to touch the sea.

Pockets of green behind the beach meant mangrove swamps, home of the estuarine or saltwater crocodile, Crocodylus porosus, a creature virtually unchanged since the days of Tyrannosaurus rex and its ilk. In retrospect, I brought with me a great deal of inexperience. The sun shot like a kite into the sky.

"Hate to come all this way and not reach the beach."

"Not me," Jeff said, chomping on the sandwich under his beard. "Watch out for crocs."

My first enduring image of the crocodile was a picture in black and white of a foot and the lower half of a leg rising out of a cardboard box: the remains of a Peace Corps worker attacked near Lake Turkana, Africa, in 1962. He had been twenty-six years old and all that remained of him was a foot and a few pieces of flesh. In the Top End, often all that remains are a few buttons, some fingernails, or a rifle propped against a tree near an innocent-looking billabong, or water hole.

Judging the land from this height, the journey to the beach looked to be no more than two hours walk.

"I'll stay here," Jeff said, declining my invitation to walk to the coast, "but you go ahead."

Standing beside the jeep, I held my compass at arm's length and sighted down the needle to the spit of beach in the distance: a bearing of 300 degrees.

"See you in a couple hours," I said and set off, trying to follow the compass heading in a straight line over the broken terrain.

Jeff called after me, "Drink plenty of water before you go." At the thin fissure of Crystal Creek I filled my stomach and my canteen with water.

The jeep, a white speck in an immensity of orange stone, disappeared behind me. My eyes moved often from the compass needle to the fractured landscape of boulders and spinifex grass.

Captain Phillip Parker King was the first to systematically chart parts of this thirsty coast back in 1818. He had written of the landscape: "The surface of the ground was covered by spinifex, which rendered our walking both difficult and painful; this plant diffuses a strong aromatic odour." The sharp spines poked into my ankles above my boots, but King was right, the fragrance was delightful.

The needle of the compass did not deviate from the symbol N on the face of the dial: magnetic north. I walked carefully, not wanting to tread on a snake, or twist an ankle. Jeff had reminded me how far we were from civilization before I set out: 1,300 miles from Perth, and more than 1,800 miles from Brisbane, Sydney, or Melbourne.

As the sun neared its zenith I crossed a ridge and again viewed the coast. My shirt was soaked with sweat. The beach beckoned in the distance.

When my boots stopped, an immense silence rushed in like the tide. I had never before experienced such utter quiet, never felt so small. I walked across the afternoon, farther from home than I had ever been before, a stranger to planet Earth.

The Kimberley region of northwest Australia is an impossibly ancient landscape. One of the world's longest wilderness coasts, it contains some of the oldest rocks in the world and the earliest celled life forms. The rocks of the Pilbara and southern Kimberley region, at close to 3.6 billion years old, are among the most ancient on Earth. Farther south on the coast at Shark Bay, rare communities of single-celled organisms called stromatolites, one of the first forms of life to arise some 3,500 to 3,700 million years ago, still lived in warm shallow waters as they had since long before the explosion of life forms in the Cambrian.

The tide was out. Near the coast I encountered an inlet of gray silt fringed by knobby-rooted mangroves. Should I skirt the inlet, or press on in a straight line? I took a sip from my canteen. Almost empty. Should I turn back?

I hung my boots over my shoulder and sank up to my knees in the sucking mud, studying the shade under the mangroves. How fast do big reptiles move, exactly?

Small fish with bulging eyes walked upon the slick mud with their fins: the first signs of animal life on this distant, quiet planet. The fish had large eyes and square heads. They moved atop the mud, occasionally hopping onto rocks and turning their heads to stare at me. What were fish doing on land up here?

From this place, the oldest terrestrial wilderness on Earth, the bog between land and water, it was not hard to imagine the beginning and endpoints of human history. Man's ancestor, an amphibian, a gilled salamander with the ability to breathe air and water, crawled out of a swamp perhaps like this one on the Euramerican continent at the end of the Devonian period, the age of fishes, some 370 million years ago, giving rise to amphibians, reptiles, and mammals.

One of the fish studied me. Cousin? Had I crossed these swamps before? Had, somewhere, a little heart been beating every few seconds for all this eternity? Fossil evidence indicates man's amphibian ancestor evolved from one of three groups of lobe-finned fishes: the lungfish or dipnoans, which still live in rivers on the eastern side of the Australian continent and in Africa; the coelacanths or actinistians, long thought extinct before being discovered still swimming in the deep waters off Madagascar in 1938; or the rhipidistians, now extinct.

Judging from the intelligent movement of the creatures from rock to rock, these cavorting fish were kin, separated from me by a mere 370 million years. Would their progeny one day evolve into an intelligent being, able to walk some remote coast and speculate on the passage of time? Perhaps in another 370 million years. How strange it was, sentience.

Reaching the far edge of the mud flat, I stopped and took a swig from my canteen. So thirsty. Must not drink too much. It was all I could do to stop swallowing and leave a little water in the bottom for later.

"The true peace of God," Joseph Conrad wrote, "begins at any spot a thousand miles from the nearest land." Perhaps in this modern world the same could be said about our proximity to man-made things. I had never been this far from a gas station, a telephone, or a hospital.

Water began spilling back against the coast, trickling in a narrow gray stream into the inlet. The tide had turned. I clambered over the mangrove roots to the edge of the sea.

What had appeared from the jeep as white sand was in fact bleached coral. My boots scattered shells as I walked out on a narrow peninsula. White, green, orange, blue. Beach, mangroves, sandstone, ocean. The smell of mud and salt, the sun on my skin, the line of sight before me, jolting up and down with each step. Thirst impinged on my hallucination of reality. I was utterly, utterly alone.

There were no other sounds, no breeze in the air. I had reached this distal point after walking five hours over ridges, boulders, and mangrove thickets. I celebrated with a final gulp from my canteen.

Turquoise water lapped quietly against the shore. Islands of red stone loomed in the distance. Somewhere beyond the horizon lay the islands of the Indonesian archipelago: Java, Sumatra, Bali, Timor.

What was real? I shook the canteen. Empty.

I waded up to my knees in the warm Timor Sea, keeping an eye out for crocodiles.

Captain King, in his journeys to the northwest coast, wrote of the reptiles:

The appearance of these animals in the water is very deceptious; they lie quite motionless, and resemble a branch of a tree floating with the tide; the snout, the eye, and some of the ridges of the back and tail, being the only parts that are seen ... The animal that we fired at was noticed for some time, but considered to be only a dead branch, although we were looking out for crocodiles, and approached within six yards of it before we found out our mistake; the length of this animal was from twelve to fifteen feet; I do not think that we have ever seen one more than twenty feet.

Not more than twenty feet? Nothing to worry about then.

I took a picture of myself with the self-timer on my little camera: a thin figure sitting uneasily on a rock near the water's edge, my face shaded by the brim of my hat.

So thirsty. I tried drinking a handful of the sea, and spat it out. Too salty. Time to head back.

Behind the beach, a ridge rose above the jagged coast. I could see nothing of the landscape behind it, nor the white jeep that lay somewhere a good distance beyond. No water for the journey.

I looked at my compass, orienting myself 180 degrees from the bearing I had followed from the jeep. Better get a move on. I clambered over mangrove roots, over hard curved elbows and stunted sharp ends. With a start I found myself staring at a pool of gray water.

The tide had come in.

Wait a minute. I had crossed mangrove thickets to get here, mangroves that were now flooded with the rising tide. What was I thinking when I did that? I couldn't walk in a straight line back to the jeep — I would be wading up to my neck in briny water.

Jeff and I had studied the tracks in the mud days before: a wide swathe with star-shaped claw prints at intervals on either side, disappearing into the water. Crocodile tracks. I must find some other way around. To wade across these partially submerged inlets now would be madness. This was dinosaur country.

I climbed over the roots and leapt from rock to rock. The tide had filled in the low area behind the beach, and always when it seemed I was about to break through the swamp and begin my ascent away from the coast, the way was blocked by a stretch of gray water.

Should I take a chance and swim for it? The other side was so close, only fifty feet.

I walked the length of the beach, growing desperate. How had I been so stupid?

If there was a way over, it had to be through here ... My God, this was supposed to be just a little hike and already I was in serious trouble.

At the end of the beach I climbed through the mangroves to find a broken line of boulders stretching across the water, their tops jutting just above the rushing tide. There was no time, I had to go now. I leapt across the boulders and quit the coast with profound relief.

Two hours later, climbing steadily, I stopped. No water. Thank God for my hat. Hold on, had the sun been over my left shoulder or my right before? Where was I?

Silence receded to the jumbled orange boulders and escarpments from one side of the horizon to the other. It all seemed wildly desolate. Was I headed the right way? I was returning on my initial bearing, wasn't I? The beach now lay below the ridge.

Damn it. Why hadn't I turned around earlier and taken a back bearing?

Something was wrong. There was no bay there before. The orange peninsula seemed more to the east than I remembered it on the few times I had looked back. It wasn't supposed to be there.

The landscape had changed. The Kimberley tides, with a variation of forty feet I later discovered, are the second-highest in the world, and the highest of any tropical coast. What had been land was now water. My compass was telling me to move in a direction utterly contrary to my sense. I should head that way, I thought. Or maybe that way? The landscape, a pile of giant boulders, said nothing. I felt the first surge of panic. The ocean had been over there, I told myself, now look where it is!

My only interest now was finding a white speck among this orange stone: the jeep.

Jesus, it was hot. I had walked for seven hours just twelve degrees of latitude from the Equator. Without water, I could die in a day. Jeff had reminded me of that when I set out.

"Would die in two days," he said. "Definitely."

Trust your compass, I thought, not reassured. The needle pointed to magnetic north no matter what direction I turned, as it should. The jeep should be somewhere in that direction, almost sixty degrees off my compass heading. Was my compass wrong? Don't panic.

I had been in Australia for four months. The stories of people becoming lost, disoriented, and dying in the bush were all too common. If there was ever a place to disappear in, it was here.

The explorer Leichhardt and his party had perished without a trace in a trackless interior, swallowed up by a monotony of space and time. In 1967, Prime Minister Harold Holt had disappeared while swimming off the Victorian coast. The prime minister! I couldn't imagine the president of the United States ever just disappearing, never to be seen again. But that was Australia.

More recently, two boys from Halls Creek had gone missing with their truck, three hundred miles to the south. They were sixteen and seventeen years old, the eldest only a year younger than me. I had heard the story on the radio upon first arriving in the country. Now, I did not want to be among the disappeared. There was so much space to get lost in, so many cracks in the rocks.

I stumbled over the boulders, fighting the urge to change direction, keeping a lid on panic. I had read that pilots sometimes rejected the artificial horizon that told them they were flying upside down. Believing they were right side up, they crashed when they tried to land.

My father had told me once to trust the compass.

"A compass will almost always be more accurate than your own sense of direction." He had added as an afterthought, "Unless there are large deposits of iron about. Then your compass might point to them."

Deposits of metal or ore affect the bearing of compasses. Were there such deposits here? The sandstone was laid out in great terraces, like reefs marooned by a receding sea. It was an unsettling thought.

A rock wallaby bounded away silently and disappeared among the boulders. This was home to someone.

I followed the compass, looking from its face to the rockstrewn country before me, gaining altitude as I moved away from the coast.

A rock pigeon sputtered out of the spinifex, pffft! its white quills suffused with bronze disappearing in waves of heat.

This could not be right. I had been walking for hours, over one ridge and down another. No sign of the jeep. Soon I would be among the eucalypt savannah, the endless tall grass, the scattered trees. How would I find the jeep then? I would be totally lost.

I looked toward the coast at the mangrove swamps now submerged by the tide, forlorn and lonely under the sky. Please, God ... God, I am begging you, please ... The rocks were silent.

Coming up on three and a half hours without water.

I could walk for weeks, months even, without finding a road — except that I would not last that long. I could wait until nightfall, hiding from the sun by day, perhaps finding my way back to the track at night.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Swimming With Crocodiles"
by .
Copyright © 2011 Will Chaffey.
Excerpted by permission of Skyhorse Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

1 Thirst,
2 Departures and Arrivals,
3 Mitchell Plateau,
4 Millaa Millaa,
5 Wild Bill,
6 Perry Farm and Middlebrook Road,
7 By the Road,
8 The Academy,
9 Frank and Earl,
10 Tanami,
11 Getting Out of Alice,
12 Alice to Melbourne,
13 Melbourne,
14 Back to Millaa,
15 Swahili Spoken Here,
16 West,
17 Flood: The Flight from Wyndham,
18 First Steps,
19 Landmarks,
20 The River,
21 The Cave in the Cliff,
22 Oralee Creek,
23 Crossing,
24 Cascade Creek,
25 Taxonomy of Crocodiles,
26 Waiting,
27 The Fig Tree at the Coast,
28 Plan B,
29 Mount Elizabeth,
Epilogue: Pilgrim Latitudes,
Selected Bibliography,
Acknowledgments,

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