Hectic Red
John Kinsella, 2 March 2000
“... Quartz sparks randomly on the pink and white crust of the salt flats, spread out beyond the landing, where bags of grain – wheat and oats in plastic and hessian – lips sewn shut, packed tight, flexing dust and dragging their feet to the edge, are tipped onto the truck – feed- grain, filling out the flattop, another body sack waiting to be fed, from top to bottom, the sheep hollow-gutted in the long dry, green-feed deficient and this the diminishing stock of back-up tucker; the best paddocks up beyond the salt all hoofed and bitten, stray tufts targeted and levelled, dry roots crumbling and dropping to dried-out stream-beds beneath, so no new encrustations of salt emerge back down in the low places, just the old crust, pinking off – at night, the crazy pick-ups spinning wheels and throwing headlights, the bonnets rising and falling in choppy waves, the light as unstable as a camera and the darkness dropping in like black sacking; bleak rabbits dashing about, their blood infra, the forecast – hectic red ... ”