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Showing posts with label Marysville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marysville. Show all posts
Friday, September 4, 2009
Tower Motel, Marysville
One of the few buildings left untouched by the Black Saturday bushfires, the Tower Motel in Marysville ia lovely choice for a weekend away. Only 90 minutes from Melbourne, it is within easy reach of the Yarra Valley, which is Victoria's premier wine region.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Steavensons Falls, Marysville
Steavensons Falls are Victoria's highest waterfall and descend 84 meteres to the bush and fern-fringed Steavensons River below. The Falls were named after John Steavenson, who first visited the site of what is now Marysville in 1862, the falls opened to tourists in 1866.
They are a popular attraction and at night are illuminated by floodlights powered by hydro-electricity created by the thundering water.
This photo was taken before the Black Saturday bushfires which decimated the area.
They are a popular attraction and at night are illuminated by floodlights powered by hydro-electricity created by the thundering water.
This photo was taken before the Black Saturday bushfires which decimated the area.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Phantom Falls Creek, Marysville
THIS LAND OF OURS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This land of ours so red and vast
Doth stretch before the eye
And show unto me all the beauty
Of a far and distant past.
Of gums so tall
And eucalypt
They tower o'er me
And sweet their fragrance to inhale
Their beauty for to see.
Oh yes, this precious land of mine
With all your beauty free
And listen to the sweet carol
Of birds in fancy free.
My country you are more to me
Than earth or fire or sky
For I shall love this land of yours
Until the day I die.
Lady Talbot Drive Mountain Ash and Ferns
tallest flowering plant, reaching heights of more than
100 metres. Extensive Mountain Ash forests occur in
Victoria's Central Highlands (east of Melbourne), the
Otway Ranges and Strzelecki Ranges in Gippsland. They can reach heights of 150 metres and their girth can exceed 15 metres at the base. The only other species that comes a close second in height is the Californian Redwood ( Sequoia sempervirens).
These photos were taken along Lady Talbot Drive which was named after the wife of Sir Reginald Talbot, Governor of Victoria between 1903 and 1908.
Lady Talbot Forest Drive is a round-trip of 46 kilometres and takes about 2 hours if driven at a leisurely pace without stops. Lady Talbot Forest Drive is an unsealed track that follows a winding path through eucalyptus forest along the Taggerty River. The drive begins a few minutes from Marysville, approximately 500 metres east of the town’s centre on the Marysville-Woods Point Road and continues through the Marysville State Forest and the Yarra Ranges National Park. There are magnificent tree fern gullies and creeks lined with ferns and mosses, old growth myrtle beech forest and waterfalls cascading over huge granite boulders. There are several lovely spots along the way for picnics.
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These photos were taken not long before the devestating Black Saturday bushfires which destroyed Marysville and other areas of Victoria. 38% of the Yarra Ranges National Park was burnt. The drive is currently closed.
I will be posting about Marysville before, and after the bushfires at a later date.
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