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Anglers search for bait on
the edge of Wilsons Promontory N.P.
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Wilsons Promontory
Magnificent stretch of coastline with many
excellent walks
With its interesting blend of mountainous forests, fern
gullies, heaths, salt marshes, grey granite ranges and 130 km of
coastal scenery Wilsons Promontory, the most southerly point of
mainland Australia, is one of the country's largest and most popular
national parks. It lies 230 km south-east of Melbourne and can be
reached by turning south off the South Gippsland Highway at Meeniyan or Foster.
The Geology
'The Prom' is comprised of granite which has
weathered in places to form the large and interesting rocky outcrops
which are sprinkled about the park. Once an island, the accumulation of
drifting sand in the sheltered water that separates the island from the
mainland is thought to have connected about 100 000 years ago. The
promontory is in fact one of the highest points on a batholith (a huge
igneous rock deposit) which is 300-km long and, at times, 50-km wide
and which links Tasmania to the rest of Australia. Around 15 000 years
ago rising sea levels submerged the corridor thus isolating Tasmania as
a separate entity.
The History
Wilsons Promontory was known as 'Wamoon' or 'Wamoom'
by the Aboriginal peoples who collected shellfish there over 6000 years
ago. Middens along the western coast testify to their seafood diet. The
Dreamtime stories of Lo-An, Bullum-Boukan, and the Port Albert Frog all
make mention of the area.
George Bass sited the promontory on January 2, 1798 from
a small whaleboat while on an excursion from Port Jackson. Some sources
suggest that Bass named the area in honour of his friend - a London
merchant named Thomas Wilson. Others indicate that Wilson was a friend
of Matthew Flinders. Another story is that Bass originally called it
'Furneaux's Land' and that the name change was made by Governor Hunter.
In any case, Bass returned with reports of plentiful supplies and safe
anchorage, as well as 9000 seal pelts and several tons of oil. This
initiated a sealing rush which only petered out in the 1830s as the
number of animals dwindled. Sealers Cove, on the eastern coast, can
still be visited today.
Whaling was also practised from Refuge Cove until that
resource also became too scarce for commercial viability in the 1840s.
Other industries included quarrying and timber-cutting ceased in the
1850s after another excess of resource destruction, although the mill
reopened in the 1880s due to regrowth, which was again depleted by
1906. Tin was discovered near Corner Inlet in the 1870s. However, it
was not mined until World War I stimulated demand and it ceased in 1925
with the opening of the Mount Hunter mine.
After visits by naturalists and botanists in 1884,
campaigning for governmental protection of the site began competing
with cattle interests and settlement plans. As a result The Prom became
a national park at the turn of the century. A chalet for tourists and
naturalists was built in the 1920s and a training camp for commandos
was constructed at Tidal River during the Second World War. The
remnants of the latter site were used as the basis for the present
visitors' centre. The Yanakie Isthmus, a sandy bar connecting the
promontory to the mainland, was added to the park in the 1960s on
condition that the seasonal grazing which began in 1852 be allowed to
continue. As a result the park now covers 49 000 hectares. It includes
thirteen offshore islands and marine reserves around the coast. Cattle
enclosures can still be seen near the entrance. Running east to west
across the isthmus are two huge sets of dunes known as Big Hummock and
The Nobbies which are used as a lookout for the cattle during
mustering.
Wilsons Promontory is well-known for its wildlife. There are
six or seven hundred species of flora in the rainforests, dry
sclerophyll forests, grasslands, heaths, sheltered gullies and along
the marine littoral, including tea-trees, banksia, she-oaks now rare in
Victoria, pink swamp-heath, silky hakea, saw banksia, yellow
stringybark, blue gum, mountain ash, coastal acacia, spinifex and many
beautiful wildflowers. Before the logging and a severe bushfire in
1951, which affected the area's animal and plant life, trees 60 metres
high and over 7 metres in circumference grew on The Prom.
The fauna includes koalas, which can be found in the trees
around the Tidal River camp ground, along the Lilly Pilly Gully walk
and around Sealers Cove, grey kangaroos and emus on the Yanakie
Isthmus, wallabies at Tidal River, as well as rat kangaroos, New
Holland field mice, an unusual burrowing yabbie, wombats, possums,
bandicoots, and, on the islands, hog deer, which are now endangered in
their native Asian habitats. Birds include crimson rosellas,
yellow-winged honeyeaters, wattlebirds, yellow-tailed black cockatoos,
lorikeets, silver gulls, oystercatchers, dotterels, white-breasted sea
eagles on the coast and the grey thrush. The promontory functions as a
feeding ground for international migratory birds and includes
endangered species such as the ground and orange-bellied parrots.
Thirty shipwreck sites have also been conserved, including that of the
Clonmel (see entry on Port Albert).
Things to see:
Information and Access
Information about the promontory is available from the
visitors' centre at Tidal River, 32 km within the park, which also
contains accommodation and other facilities, including barbecues,
picnic areas, toilets and a museum with audio-visual displays. The
animals around the settlement are tame and some can be hand-fed. In the
summer holidays the staff act as guides on family adventure walks and
spotlight walks and provide demonstrations on animal tracking. The
number of people in the park is monitored and bookings for
accommodation must be made well in advance. Permits must also be
obtained from the National Parks and Wildlife Centre by those wishing
to use the "walkers only" campsites. Contact South Gippsland Tourist
Association for more information. (03) 5655 2233 weekdays 9.00 a.m. -
5.00 p.m.
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Walking on Squeaky Beach
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Walking in the Park
There are 22 walking tracks in the park and these are
mapped and described in the book, Discovering the Prom on Foot, which
is available from the information centre. Some are enjoyable strolls,
some are overnight treks. The Lilly Pilly Gully nature walk is 5 km
return and the Mount Oberon walk is 3.2 km return. It takes one hour to
climb the 562-metre mountain which offers excellent views of Tidal
River, Norman Bay and the headlands to the north. Pillar Point is 6 km
return and looks out over Tidal River. Longer walks are to Sealers Cove
(20 km return) and the granite lighthouse (40 km return) built in 1859
by convicts to ensure the safety of ships travelling between Melbourne
and Sydney.
Driving in the Park
The drive from the entrance at the Yanakie Isthmus to the
Tidal River settlement is quite beautiful and is well-signposted, with
car parks, beaches and bushland accessible via side roads. A brochure
is available which describes the features encountered along the way.
Five Mile Road branches off to the left and permits cars to travel as
far as Millers Landing Nature Walk (2.4 km), which leads through
banksia woodlands to mudflats and mangroves and fine views over Corner
Inlet. The track continues eastwards to Five Mile Beach and the
northern sections of the park. On the right of the track is Mount
Vereker at 638 metres. Further south is the tallest peak in the park,
Mount Latrobe, at 755 metres. Back on the road to Tidal River is Darby
River, with Darby Beach only 1 km west and, from there, a walking track
which leads to Tongue Point, overlooking the splendid coastline. This
is a more secluded spot than the main settlement although the safest
beach in the park is probably Norman Bay, adjacent to the Tidal River centre.
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Caravan Parks
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Tidal River Area
on Tidal River
Wilsons Promontory
VIC
3960
Telephone: (03) 5680 9555
Rating: **
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