Birdsville Navigates Economic Lull Amidst Environmental Splendor
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- Birdsville, Australia, faces an unusual winter economic lull despite a desert flood and lush landscapes.
- Businesses are struggling with low tourist numbers following the cancellation of a major music festival, though some optimism remains for upcoming events.
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Birdsville, an isolated Australian town, is experiencing an unusual winter economic lull despite a desert flood and lush landscapes, with businesses struggling due to low tourist numbers.
On a winter's day in one of the country's most isolated towns, only a scattering of intrepid travellers have arrived to see the desert in flood.
It is strange for this time of year. Birdsville should be stirring with the promise of peak season but it feels hushed, the streets eerily quiet.
Despite the environmental splendour, there is an economic lull.
At the Birdsville Hotel, Martin and Maureen Barratt have arrived from Darwin and are asking where to get a coffee. The local cafe and bakery are closed.
"We've been here hundreds of times over the years, and I've never seen it like this. It's pretty sad.
"The caravan parks are dead. How people are surviving I don't know."
The couple will spend the next six weeks in town, preparing for a gruelling 322-kilometre trek across the desert in September, with Mr Barratt walking alongside his son and grandchildren while Ms Barratt follows in a four-wheel drive.
They will bear witness to Birdsville navigating the ripple effects of flood, fuel fears and the cancellation of a massive music festival, at a moment when the surrounding country has rarely looked so green and alive.
'Weirdest season'
Pilot Amelia Mexted, 21, is at the pub doing paperwork, unable to fly on a rainy day.
"It's unusual to have weather issues during winter but the issues we're seeing are just one day of rain passing through," she says.
It is her second tourist season and she is up at dawn every day to fly those wanting to see Lake Eyre.
"It's a different flood to last year; there's more water in Lake Eyre, more birds," Ms Mexted says.
Aerial tourism has remained resilient, but the roads tell a different story.
Every business is waiting with bated breath for tourists to arrive.
Caravans start to trickle in
For the Ellises, who own the pub, bakery and aviation tour group, optimism lingers.
"We're finally starting to see those caravans coming through … hopefully, moving into the school holidays, that will pick up even more," Talia Ellis says.
"We've not had a fuel issue and we're starting to see the uncertainty about availability waver."
The Big Red Bash being called off this year triggered a wave of cancelled travel plans.
"We felt like maybe we just have to run our skeleton core team and are hopeful that people will still come out.
Ms Ellis says the reopening of the bakery is imminent.
Lyn Rowlands has started opening her cafe when she knows there are larger groups of people in town or events are on.
"It's pretty sad at the moment," she says.
"There hasn't been any or enough travellers coming through to warrant us at the cafe to open our doors.
Alex Oswald wears many hats around town: working as a mechanic, running the power station, volunteering with the fire brigade and SES, and, for the past six years, leading local tours.
He is also not so optimistic about tourism picking up this year, but hopes the council and community will band together to help everyone get by.
Birdsville without the crowds
There is a complicated mix of emotions in Birdsville.
Mayor Francis Murray says it is a testing time.
"Businesses are struggling in 2026," he says.
He hopes upcoming events such as the Camel Carnival, Birdsville Races, and the possible reopening of the South Australia road will provide the boost the community needs.
For now, it is the perfect time for those wanting Birdsville without the crowds.
"That's hard to experience when you have 10,000 people descending on the town at once."
While there is a tension between optimism and uncertainty, there is one clear message.
Birdsville is open for business, and the desert has never looked better.
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Upcoming events may boost Birdsville's economy.
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Offene Fragen
- Will upcoming events boost the local economy?
- How long will the low tourist numbers persist?

