Australia’s Coober Pedy: A Gemstone in the Desert

Painted Desert tour in Cooper Pedy, South Australia.
Painted Desert tour in Cooper Pedy, South Australia.

Australia’s Coober Pedy: An Underground World

By Laura Siciliano-Rosen

The sterile, dusty landscape of Coober Pedy. Photos by Lauda Siciliano-Rosen except as noted
The sterile, dusty landscape of Coober Pedy. Photos by Laura Siciliano-Rosen and Scott B. Rosen except as noted

In a land as rich with eccentricities as the Australian Outback, Coober Pedy manages to stand out.

A small town in South Australia plopped down in a nearly uninhabitable desert, it is dry and sterile, grassless and unpretty. The rock-strewn ground, lumpy with great mounds of dirt, coats sneakers in orangey-pink dust that takes weeks to come off.

An Apocalyptic Land

An inexplicable amount of junk — rusty street signs, abandoned tires, plastic doll heads — dots the moonscape terrain. There is little vegetation except where determined residents make watering efforts, for the climate is extreme and water expensive in this strangely apocalyptic land.

Actually, there’s little hint of life in Coober Pedy besides the locals, the black flies that swarm the air, and the camouflaged grasshoppers that leap from the dust.

But beauty, as it turns out, is not skin-deep.

The existence and lifeblood of this town just had to be owed to something magical and precious, something capable of fueling the human imagination so completely with dreams of prosperity as to entice them to such a no-man’s-land. And that’s where opal comes in.

The dog fence, built in the 1800s to control the dingo population, is a stop on Radeka's Desert Breakaway Tour.
The dog fence, built in the 1800s to control the dingo population, is a stop on Radeka’s Desert Breakaway Tour.

A rich history

In 1915, a teenager named Willie Hutchison was looking for water in the area following an unsuccessful search for gold with his father, when he happened upon opal, a hydrated form of silica similar to quartz but softer and often iridescently colorful when precious.

Coober Pedy Opal has since transformed the town into a bona fide mining town of close to 1800 residents, and a fascinating stopover for Outback visitors.

Less than a century old, the town’s history is short but remarkable and marked by a number of novel developments that have made living and visiting there both possible and enjoyable — like underground businesses and a grassless golf course with “greens” of oiled sand.

Half of Coober Pedy's residents live in underground "dugout" homes.
Half of Coober Pedy’s residents live in underground “dugout” homes

Construction workers from the country’s Transcontinental Railway and soldiers returning from World War I were among the first to populate Coober Pedy in 1917, back when it was called the Stuart Range Opal Field.

To escape the heat of summer, the cold nights, and occasional dust storms, these settlers lived in underground “dugout” homes, a concept that turned worked-out mines into practical shelters.

Fittingly, the town’s name was changed in 1920 to Coober Pedy from the Aboriginal words kupa piti, which loosely translates as “white man in a hole.”

Modern dugout homes are, like the opals, hidden riches of the land. Half of the residents live underground today, and, as I discovered on my visit to Coober Pedy, it’s impossible to imagine the luxury concealed within the unassuming orange sandstone hills scattered around town.

No two dugouts are ever the same, but they often begin on ground level with doors and garages and descend deeply into endless cool spaces of utmost comfort and modernity.

An underground house in Coober Pedy - photo courtesy of Wikipedia
An underground house in Coober Pedy – photo courtesy of Wikipedia

Even the persistent flies, which spent most of their time hitching free rides on my tank top, were somehow, magically repelled by the houses’ cave-like, stone-sculpted interiors. Most unbelievable, however, is how inexpensive it is to build and buy these very large homes: According to the District Council, the average value of a dugout today is approximately US$70,000, ranging up to $300,000 for the largest dugout homes.

Making the most of it

Dugouts are featured in many of the tours offered in town, including the one I booked with Radeka’s Downunder, an underground motel, which takes participants around both Coober Pedy and the starkly beautiful landscape surrounding it.

The tour guide explained that residents often discover opal in the process of building their homes, which results in new extensions to the original property layout — so the houses get bigger and bigger.

Coober Pedy is home to an inexplicable amount of junk.
Coober Pedy is home to an inexplicable amount of junk.

It’s taken a while for the townspeople to become so remarkably adapted to their environs: In a typical boom-and-bust pattern, the years following the first opal discoveries were plagued by plummeting profits and difficulty obtaining water and provisions.

It wasn’t until the influx of European migrants in the 1960s and ’70s that opal mining expanded into a multimillion-dollar industry, and Coober Pedy truly became a modern mining town, and a culturally diverse one at that, with approximately 42 nationalities represented in the population today.

The Miners Club

During happy hour at the Italo-Australian Miners Club, a popular pub in town, I sat at the bar between a miner-turned-house painter named Frank, who had come from Rome nearly 30 years ago and boasted of his magnificent dugout home, and an aging Bosnian who’d lost a few fingers in pursuit of his fortune.

The bar was dense with them — wizened old men speaking in thick accents from around the globe, bellies bulging from years of sharing stories over beer, fried fish, and cheap steaks, as they were that night. Some had been in Coober Pedy for decades, and will likely never leave.

The addiction is understandable. There’s undeniable power in the idea that it’s possible to kick over a rock and become rich in the mines of Coober Pedy. In fact, young Willie had reportedly found that first piece of opal lying exposed on the ground’s surface back in 1915.

An ironic take on Coober Pedy's barren landscape, from a town lookout point.
An ironic take on Coober Pedy’s barren landscape, from a town lookout point.

This is an increasingly rare occurrence these days, but the process of “noodling,” or fossicking — searching through piles of discarded waste for overlooked opal pieces — still provides enough income for some non-miner residents to live on.

The lure of the hunt in Coober Pedy

Tourists can give it a go as well, in supervised fields away from the danger presented by the roughly one million mine shafts around town. I visited one such field on Radeka’s tour and spent 15 minutes in the field.

Donning my netted bushman’s hat to keep the flies out of my face, I pored over the loose rubble and kicked through piles of dirt and rocks, squinting, as so many had before me, for a gem in the rough — a glassy rock, sometimes clear or whitish-gray, sometimes toffee-colored and sparkly.

(Actual instructions from the tour guide were to lick potential finds in order to reveal colors beyond the dust, but to avoid the black ones, which were simply “what the kangaroos left behind.”)

Underground Pottery
At work in the studio of Underground Pottery – photo courtesy of Underground Pottery

When that didn’t work, I lightly ran my fingertips through the chalky dirt piles, scattering the rocks about as the orange dust attached itself to my skin and clothes. Anything that I or the others on the tour deemed remotely opal-like was presented to the tour guide for a quick appraisal, but none of us had any luck, and that’s often what it boils down to.

Lots of Opal Jewelry

There’s no shortage of stores selling opal jewelry or even just non-precious (common) opal pieces, so, having admitted defeat in the mines, I picked up a little souvenir before heading to one of Coober Pedy’s more recent tourist draws — Underground Potteries, family-run since 1982. The gallery, a pretty display of finished pottery and local photographs for sale, offers instant respite from the uncomfortable outdoors.

Inside, I was invited further underground by the owner’s son, Derek, who sat alone at a workstation shaping a vase in the quiet, spacious studio. While we chatted, I rolled the soft, earthy scraps of clay he wasn’t using through my fingers, enjoying the cool, smooth texture on my skin. It soothed my hands, still dry and dusty from the opal hunt.

A collection of junk art outside of a local shop.
A collection of junk art outside of a local shop.

Strangely comforted, I considered for a moment the wild idea of abandoning my hectic New York City existence for a radically different one in Coober Pedy. How would that feel, working like Derek in the stress-free confines of a cool underground studio, deep within the sunburned Outback? Might it be peaceful, rewarding even?

The thought passed quickly, however, when I considered my grubby clothes and the bushman’s hat still hanging from my neck. I thanked Derek and walked out, leaving Coober Pedy’s myriad treasures to the intrepid pioneers of the past, the resourceful builders of the present, and the wistful dreamers of the future.

Getting to Coober Pedy

Coober Pedy is roughly nine hours by bus, heading south from Alice Springs (approx. 425 miles), or eleven hours north from Adelaide (approx. 525 miles) via the north-south, paved Stuart Highway (Hwy 87). Buses depart daily from both cities on Greyhound and cost US$180 one-way. If you have a car, the ride will be a bit shorter. It’s a long haul, but the drive through isolation, peppered by roadhouses, kangaroos, emus, and a lot of stark beauty, is really part of the experience.

For a much shorter, albeit less interesting, journey, Regional Express Airlines offers two-hour flights from Adelaide most weekdays.

The Desert Cave
At the Desert Cave, you can choose a room above or below ground. Photo courtesy of desertcave.com

The best time to visit Coober Pedy is during Australia’s cooler months, April through October. Be aware that while days are generally sunny and mild to warm, nights can be quite cold.

WHERE TO STAY

Accommodation options range from campgrounds and caravan parks to unique and comfortable underground hotels.

Radekas Downunder, at 1 Oliver Street, (+61 8 8672 5223), is a centrally located backpackers inn and motel with both underground and above-ground lodging. Radekas offers several tours, including the four-hour Desert Breakaways tour I booked ($46).

For something closer to luxury, the Desert Cave Hotel on Hutchison Street +61 8 8672 5688) also has above and underground suites, with the usual room amenities plus a pool, gym, and sauna, an upmarket restaurant, and an “underground bar and gaming room.” Doubles are $220 several tours are also on hand here.

Coober Pedy Dining

Italo-Australian Miners Club, on Italian Club Road (+61 8 8672 5101), only serves food on certain nights of the week, but its popular happy hour is far superior to anything the kitchen might produce. At other times, it’s still worth popping into this Coober Pedy institution for a beer and chat with the locals.

Traces on Hutchison Street (+61 8 8672 5147) is one of the surprisingly many Greek restaurants in town. Centrally located, they specialize in gyros and mezes, mixed platters of meat and/or seafood, and pride themselves on cheap “backpacker specials.”

Umberto’s, in the Desert Cave Hotel, offers creative Australian cuisine (think kangaroo, fish, and regional beef) and a largely Australian wine list, in more upscale environs. Dinner for two with a bottle of wine runs about $80.

For More Information

For more information, visit Coober Pedy.com

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