Two 4X4s have been left stranded on a salt pan inside Bowling Green National Park, south of Townsville, after drivers pushed the limits in the wrong place. In early August, both vehicles became hopelessly bogged. One has since been recovered, while the other still sits stuck out on the pan.
A Sensitive Place, Not a Playground
On the surface, salt pans look like a tempting shortcut or a chance for a unique photo op. But beneath that thin crust lies endless mud, and once it breaks, vehicles sink fast. This isn’t just bad for the environment — it’s devastating for your rig.
The area is Ramsar-listed as a wetland of international significance, home to fragile ecosystems of birdlife, crustaceans and other species that don’t cope well with tyre ruts and compacted soil.
The Cost of Ignoring Warnings
Local recovery operators say dragging vehicles out of the pans is a nightmare. Cars can sit for weeks before conditions allow a retrieval, and by then salt corrosion has often written them off. Bills run into the thousands, on top of potential fines of more than $3,000 for driving in a protected area.
In this case, one vehicle is believed to have bogged while trying to pull the other free, a familiar story when drivers underestimate how unforgiving these environments are.
A Reminder for the 4X4 Community
4X4ing is about freedom and adventure, but it also comes with responsibility. Incidents like this don’t just hit the hip pocket; they give authorities ammunition to further restrict access to the places we all enjoy.
There are plenty of legal, safe areas around Townsville to put your 4X4 through its paces. Salt pans like this one aren’t on that list, and the consequences of treating them like a playground are clear.