We left Greater Perth and headed South, 1 1/2 hours into the Perth Hills. Many of the oldest towns were built to support the Jarrah forest timber industry in the mid to late 1800s, but is now marketed as “the adventurers playground” have mountain bike and timber rail trails to explore, listed heritage sites, canoeing, and provide free camping which we are sharing with just a few other campers at this time of year and is great as it gives us an opportunity to shop local for food, petrol, touristy items and gifts...you never know what you will find. They are all surrounded by rejuvenated forests.
JARRAHDALE - Timber, now old mill site and buildings heritage listed. We camped on the old mill site
Pole celebrates the average height of the old Jarrah forest
Following the old rail trail to the mill (our camp)...weird growing branch
Single mens accommodation at the mill
Another forest trail, the sign said the TOP DOG stood on top of the log to saw, and the UNDER DOG stood in the pit and sawed from below, is that where these phrases came from ?
Saw this awesome Bobtail Lizard
We visited Serpentine Dam and Serpentine NP and falls and hiked up to the Bluff...Perth skyscrapers could just be seen on the horizon
The day-use area was lovely and the kangaroos very friendly
BODDINGTON - Timber until the 1961 Dwellingup bush fires decimated the industry, then Bauxite mined from 1979 to present, and now has WA’s largest Goldmine which commenced in 1987.
Our camp in town on the picturesque Hotham River
Lots and lots of these amazing sculptures by a local artist, here are just a few
Baccus, Lord of the Vine
A drive out through the bauxite mined hills to Tullis Rail Bridge which was built in 1912 over the Hotham River to link Pinjarra, and was used until 1968, but burnt by campers Easter 2009. It is now a picnic area and 3 km trail and no camping!
Cute pom pom flowers along the trail at Tullis Bridge
Bauxite is close to the surface and the forests are replanted as quick as they are mined...
The mine cuts across the road out to Tullis Bridge and we had to wait for the gates to be opened to continue
PINJARRAH - Farming region and by 1840s was the social & economic centre on the Murray River, with rail links to Perth and Dwellingup. Since 1974 it has Alcoa aluminium refinery, receiving bauxite transported by train and a 50km conveyer belt through forests. We had a 1 night stay, the town was pretty, but the camp ground was right next to the railway line and trains full of bauxite continued through the night. It was great for the library, Kmart and Coles.
MARRINUP - Timber 1880s until 1930s. The old townsite is now the campground, although we couldn’t find any evidence of a township, a few kms further into the forest are the remains of the 1940s Prisoner of War camp which was built to house 1200 Italian and Germans.
Our view
Thank goodness for rail access trails, or abandoned rail trails (this rail is still used for tourist train tours Pinjarrah to Dwellingup, found this track on the way back from the Marrinup Falls
and hundreds of kilometres of mountain bike trails through the forests, they make it easier to get our 10,000 steps per day
Surprising what you find in the forest....who has a carriage in their drive-way?
Huge hike to and around the POW camp
The Italians and the Germans had their own separate compounds, lots of interpretive boards and very well signposted
Derek is stood in the detention cell, not very spacious..
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NANGA BROOK- Timber milling town from 1900 to 1961. The mill site is now a campground and part of a National Park, however the old town site is outside of the NP and only for tent camping. Kms and Kms of mountain bike tracks again throughout the NP
NANGA BROOK- Timber milling town from 1900 to 1961. The mill site is now a campground and part of a National Park, however the old town site is outside of the NP and only for tent camping. Kms and Kms of mountain bike tracks again throughout the NP
Next stop is Wellington Dam in between Collie and Bunburry, before we head to the Margaret River region for Christmas.
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