CLEMATIS INDEX of EXCURSION LOCATIONS and OTHER ARTICLES of INTEREST Beginning from Issue No
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Alpine National Park ‐ Around Heyfield, Licola and Dargo Visitor Guide
Alpine National Park ‐ around Heyfield, Licola and Dargo Visitor Guide The Alpine National Park stretches from central Gippsland all the way to the New South Wales border where it adjoins Kosciuszko National Park. In this south‐western section of the park you will find pleasant Snow Gum woodlands, sprawling mountain vistas, spectacular rivers and gorges, as well as rich cultural heritage ‐ from the rock scatters of the Gunaikurnai people on lofty vantage points, to grazier’s huts nestling in protected folds of the high country. Hut is a further 3 km though groves of snow gums. Built in 1940, the Getting there hut is an excellent example of bush architecture. Continue 1 km This area of the Alpine National Park is situated approximately 250‐ south east from the hut to the carpark. 320 km east of Melbourne. To get to Heyfield take Princes Highway to Traralgon, then take Traralgon‐Maffra Road. Alternatively, stay on First Falls and Moroka Gorge – 6km, 3 hours return Princes Highway to Sale and continue onto A1 to Dargo From Horseyard Flat the track crosses a footbridge over the Moroka The main access is from Licola via the Tamboritha Road, which leads River before meandering through snow gum woodland and crossing to the Howitt and Moroka Roads. wetlands on boardwalks. It follows the river downstream to the First Falls. A rock platform is an ideal viewing point to see the rushing Mountain roads are often unsealed, narrow and winding. Take care Moroka River plunging into a deep pool. as roads may be slippery and surface condition poor. -
Heyfield/Licola Region
The Great Divide Fires December 2006 – February 2007 Heyfi eld/Licola Region Self-guided Drive Suggested Itinerary During the summer of 2006/07, Victoria’s ongoing drought had contributed to conditions conducive to the outbreak of fi res. Early in summer multiple lightning strikes ignited fi res across mountains in eastern Victoria. A combination of dry conditions, high temperatures and strong winds resulted in the fi res spreading and eventually combining to form a large single fi re complex. The amalgamated fi re came to be known as the Great Divide Fire. It was to become one of Victoria’s largest and longest lasting fi res. The initial fi res began on December 1 2006. It was not until 69 days later, on February 7 2007, that the fi res were contained within a controlled perimeter. A total of 1,116,408 hectares in the Great Dividing Range was affected by the fi re, with 677,782 hectares burnt in Gippsland. Multi-agency fi re fi ghting crews, members of the community and even personnel from Canada, New Zealand and the USA, worked tirelessly under demanding conditions to protect townships, private and public resources and agricultural assets. Introduction Stop 1: Township of Licola This self-guided drive gives visitors a chance to see the impact of The community of Licola is one of many towns that were directly the one of Victoria’s largest and longest lasting fi res – The Great threatened by the fi res. The fi re got very close to the town and Divide Fire. The drive will take you through the Heyfi eld/Licola reached many of the surrounding properties. -
4X4 Nov Trek P79-82
Great Aussie Trek Series The climb up Billy Goat Bluff Track is longlong andand steep,steep, butbut therethere areare plentyplenty ofof good views to admire. Ron and Viv Moon delight in showing off Victoria’s magnificent High Country to all and sundry –– here’shere’s just another reason why! his interesting trek takes you from High Country such as McFarlane’s Saddle access to many popular camping sites on the small mountain town of Dargo and Arbuckle Junction. From this major the river’s bank before arriving at the T first along the valley of the road junction the route heads south small hamlet of Licola. Wonnangatta and then up the steep and descending from the surrounding snow There are a number of places where spectacular Billy Goat Bluff track to the plains country of the Lost Plain and you have the opportunity to dangle a line Pinnacles and the impressive view from Holmes Plain finally crossing the and there’s no doubt there’s a good the fire lookout tower. From there the Wellington River, where the blacktop chance to catch a good size trout in any of route follows the Moroka Road past some begins. The bitumen road snakes beside the rivers you cross or pass on this trek. of the well known names of the Victorian the Wellington for a few kilometres giving Apart from the fishing, the area is also 4X4 AUSTRALIA 79 Great Aussie Trek Series The route passes through idyllic pastoral country along the Wonnangatta River. Licola, at one end of the trek, isis aa handyhandy resupplyresupply point.point. -
Post Wildfire Indigenous Heritage Survey
Perspectives Heritage Solutions Pty Ltd Joanna Freslov December 2004 AAV Project No. 2833 Post Wildfire Indigenous Heritage Survey Volume 2: Management of Impacts from Wildfire and Suppression Activities A Report to Parks Victoria, the Department of Sustainability and Environment and Aboriginal Affairs Victoria i POST WILDFIRE INDIGENOUS HERITAGE SURVEY Perspectives Heritage Solutions Pty Ltd PO Box 713 • Hurstbridge VIC 3099 Phone (03) 9718 1554 • Fax (03) 9718 1829 Cover plate: High intensity burn in the Mitta Mitta River valley, near Anglers Rest (view east) ii WILDFIRE IMPACTS AND MANAGEMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Executive Summary During the 2003 a large bushfire burnt over 1.2 million hectares of private and public land in the high country of northeast Victoria and Gippsland. The fire and suppression activities affected a range of values in the highlands including Aboriginal heritage values. The Public Land Ecological and Cultural Bushfire Recovery Program determined that the best way to address and enhance effective cultural heritage management was an increased understanding of the nature and extent of the impact of bushfires on Indigenous heritage values.1 The Public Land Ecological and Cultural Bushfire Recovery Program aimed to collect this information through a project which would investigate and assess the impact of the bushfire and fire suppression activities on Indigenous cultural heritage values on public land. This project also included an assessment of the impact of the bushfire on non-material heritage values including spiritual places and historic attachments. The project was to be managed jointly by Parks Victoria (PV) and the Department of Sustainability and Environment (DSE). Parks Victoria and the Department of Sustainability and Environment therefore commissioned Perspectives Heritage Solutions Pty Ltd to conduct a an archaeological survey for Aboriginal cultural heritage values within 12 study areas (later expanded to 14 areas) in the highlands and alpine regions of northeast Victoria and Gippsland (Figure 1). -
Walking and Talking with the Bushwalking Victoria President
December 2015 Issue 264 Walking and Talking with the Bushwalking Victoria President ....................... 1 First Quarterly Meeting of Club Presidents........................................................ 4 Tracks and Conservation News ............................................................................ 5 Generous Donation from Melbourne Bushwalkers ............................................. 6 New Multi-day Interstate Tracks......................................................................... 7 Grampians Peak Trail 3-Day Loop ...................................................................... 7 Lake Mountain Tracks New Map ...................................................................... 8 Federation Walks Weekend 2015 ....................................................................... 10 McMillan's Walking Track - an Adventure ....................................................... 11 Volunteer Track Ranger Program ...................................................................... 15 Survey of Attitudes to Bushwalking News Victoria ......................................... 15 Bushfire Safety for Walkers and Campers ........................................................ 16 Contributions ....................................................................................................... 16 Advertisements .................................................................................................... 17 ................................................................. 19 Walking and Talking with -
ISC East Gippsland Region
Bemm River. Courtesy Alison Pouliot The vast majority of the East Gippsland region is covered by natural forest. The steep East terrain and spectacular Snowy Mountains in the north give way to sloping foothills, broad Gippsland coastal plains and extensive dune systems in the south. Region Four river basins form the region – Far East Gippsland (basin 21), Snowy (basin 22), Tambo (basin 23), and the Mitchell (basin 24). East Gippsland Region The region includes four basins and some of Victoria’s most Three reaches were tested in the Tambo basin. Swifts environmentally significant and valuable rivers. These river Creek (reach 9), and Tambo River (reach 23), showed highly systems flow to the Southern Ocean through extensive elevated salinity and levels of phosphorus. Reach 2 on the estuarine systems including the Gippsland Lakes, the Nicholson River had excellent water quality. estuaries of the Snowy and Bemm Rivers, and the inlets Five reaches were tested in the Mitchell basin. Results were of Tamboon and Mallacoota. generally good to excellent with slightly elevated results for Pockets of cleared valleys and floodplains throughout the phosphorus and turbidity. Notably, reach 7, in the lower region support agriculture such as dairying, horticulture, section of the Mitchell River where forest gives way to wool, cattle and sheep production. The production of cleared land, had an extremely poor result for turbidity. hardwood timber is also a significant industry in East Gippsland. Hydrology Since European settlement, there has been a history of The hydrological condition of streams varied across the erosion and sediment transport associated with the region’s East Gippsland region. -
Wellington Shire Rural Zones Review Final Report Volume 1
Wellington Shire Rural Zones Review Final Report Volume 1 Wellington Shire Council 27 January 2009 Document No.: Final Report Prepared for Wellington Shire Council Prepared by Maunsell Australia Pty Ltd Level 9, 8 Exhibition Street, Melbourne VIC 3000, Australia T +61 3 9653 1234 F +61 3 9654 7117 www.maunsell.com ABN 20 093 846 925 In association with EnPlan Partners 27 January 2009 60041216 © Maunsell Australia Pty Ltd 2009 The information contained in this document produced by Maunsell Australia Pty Ltd is solely for the use of the Client identified on the cover sheet for the purpose for which it has been prepared and Maunsell Australia Pty Ltd undertakes no duty to or accepts any responsibility to any third party who may rely upon this document. All rights reserved. No section or element of this document may be removed from this document, reproduced, electronically stored or transmitted in any form without the written permission of Maunsell Australia Pty Ltd. Wellington Shire Rural Zones Review Final Report P:\60041216 Wellington Rural Zones Review\6_Draft_docs\6.1_Reports\Report\Final Report\Wellington Report Volume 1 - Final.doc Revision 0 27 January 2009 Quality Information Document Final Report Ref 60041216 Date 27 January 2009 Prepared by Viesha Berzkalns & Graeme David (EnPlan) Reviewed by Lisa Ryan & Michael Dunn Revision History Authorised Revision Revision Details Date Name/Position Signature 0 27/01/2009 Final Report Lisa Ryan Associate Director – Environmental Management and Planning Wellington Shire Rural Zones Review Final -
East Gippsland Shire Flood Emergency Plan
East Gippsland Shire Flood Emergency Plan A Sub-Plan of the Municipal Emergency Management Plan For East Gippsland Shire Council and VICSES Unit(s) Bairnsdale, Bruthen, Swifts Creek, Bendoc, Buchan, Orbost, Cann River and Mallacoota Version 1.0 July 2012 Intentionally Blank East Gippsland Shire Flood Emergency Plan – A Sub-Plan of the MEMP – Version 1.0 July 2012 ii Table of Contents DISTRIBUTION LIST ................................................................................................................................... V DOCUMENT TRANSMITTAL FORM / AMENDMENT CERTIFICATE ...................................................... V LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS & ACRONYMS ............................................................................................ VIII PART 1. INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................ 1 1.1 MUNICIPAL ENDORSEMENT ............................................................................................................. 1 1.2 THE MUNICIPALITY FLOOD RISK PROFILE ........................................................................................ 2 1.3 PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF THIS FLOOD EMERGENCY PLAN ................................................................ 2 1.4 MUNICIPAL FLOOD PLANNING SUB-COMMITTEE (MFPC) ................................................................. 2 1.5 RESPONSIBILITY FOR PLANNING, REVIEW & MAINTENANCE OF THIS PLAN ......................................... 2 1.6 ENDORSEMENT OF THE -
Vol. 11, 1970 30 C
Vol. 11, 1970 30 c Terms and Conditions of Use Copies of Walk magazine are made available under Creative Commons - Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike copyright. Use of the magazine. You are free: • To Share — to copy, distribute and transmit the work • To Remix — to adapt the work Under the following conditions (unless you receive prior written authorisation from Melbourne Bushwalkers Inc.): • Attribution — You must attribute the work (but not in any way that suggests that Melbourne Bushwalkers Inc. endorses you or your use of the work). • Noncommercial — You may not use this work for commercial purposes. • Share Alike — If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one. Disclaimer of Warranties and Limitations on Liability. Melbourne Bushwalkers Inc. makes no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of any content of this work. Melbourne Bushwalkers Inc. disclaims any warranty for the content, and will not be liable for any damage or loss resulting from the use of any content. LOCH WILSON & co. SPECIALISE IN AND OFFER A WIDE RANGE OF New Zealand Woollen & Waterproof Clothing and Gear for Bush walkers Campers Cavers Mountaineers Rock Climbers Ski- Tourers * Our experience is at your service THE GEAR WE OFFER IS DESIGNED TO PROVIDE MAXIMUM EFFICIENCY WITH MINIMUM WEIGHT SWISS SHELLITE STOVE OILED JAPARA PARKAS com Light • Compact - Efficient b ine eHective waterproofing with light weight and great resistance BOOTS are strong, but light and to wear and tear comfortable PACKS & TENTS are lightweight SLEEPING-BAGS o Her warmth but strong without excess weight CALL, PHONE OR WRITE FOR OUR LISTS (We can post anywhere in Australia) 692 GLENHUNTL Y ROAD, CAULFIELD, VICTORIA, 3162 Phone: 53-7353 (All Hours) Vol. -
Mining Heritage of the Australian Alps- Appendixes
AUSTRALIAN ALPS MINING HERITAGE CONSERVATION & PRESENTATION STRATEGY APPENDIX 1 SITE GAZETTEERS 67 APPENDIX 1: SITE GAZETTEERS A selection of Site Gazetteers for some important Alps National Parks mining sites (not included in the sample Heritage Action Plans) is presented here. These Gazetteers can be used as templates for further recording of important mining sites/landscapes that may be undertaken by or on behalf of Parks Victoria and the National Parks & Wildlife Service of NSW. Summary information only is included. Acknowledgement is given to the North East Victoria and Gippsland reports produced by the Historic Gold Mining Sites Assessment Project (Victorian Goldfields Project), for some information on Victorian sites, and Mike Pearson’s Kosciusko report (1979) for some information on NSW sites. Sites included are: Brandy Creek Mine, Bogong Unit, Alpine National Park p 70 Accommodation Creek Copper Mine, Snowy River National Park 71 Lobbs Hole Copper Mine, Kosciusko National Park 72 Mt Murphy Wolfram Mine, Mt Murphy Historic Area 73 The Tin Mine, Kosciusko National Park 74 Good Hope Mine, Grant Historic Area 75 Grey Mare Mine, Kosciusko National Park 76 Maude & Yellow Girl Mine, Mt Wills Historic Area 77 Mt Moran Mine, Mt Wills Historic Area 78 Red Robin Mine, Bogong Unit, Alpine National Park 79 Champion Mine Battery Site, Bogong Unit, Alpine National Park 80 Razorback Mine, Bogong Unit, Alpine National Park 81 (Template for Site Gazetteers) 82 __________________________________________________________________________________ Map references are AGD 1966 grid references. 69 ID Name BRANDY CREEK MINE Other Names White’s workings, Cobungra sluicing works, Umaeri GMC’s workings; includes Cobungra township. Location Beside Brandy Creek Fire Trail, on a spur between Murphy’s & Brandy creeks, approximately one kilometre from the Great Alpine Road. -
Environmental Condition of Rivers and Streams in the Mitchell, Tambo and Nicholson Catchments
ENVIRONMENT REPORT ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITION OF RIVERS AND STREAMS IN THE MITCHELL, TAMBO AND NICHOLSON CATCHMENTS ENVIRONMENT REPORT ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITION OF RIVERS AND STREAMS IN THE MITCHELL, TAMBO AND NICHOLSON CATCHMENTS Freshwater Sciences EPA Victoria 40 City Road, Southbank Victoria 3006 AUSTRALIA Key contributor: Stephen Perriss Publication 858 ISBN 0 7306 7620 X © EPA Victoria, June 2002 ABSTRACT This report provides an assessment of the environmental condition of rivers and streams in the Mitchell, Tambo and Nicholson catchments. Together, these river systems form the eastern part of the Gippsland Lakes catchment. Since European settlement, forests in these catchments have been cleared for agriculture, urban development and mining of gold and other metals. In general, the impacts from these activities have been less severe than in the catchments of the Latrobe, Thomson and Avon river systems, which form the western part of the Gippsland Lakes catchment. The environmental condition of the rivers and streams in the Mitchell, Tambo and Nicholson catchments was assessed against the draft State environment protection policy (Waters of Victoria) (SEPP WoV) biological objectives. Habitat condition and water quality measures were used to explain why sites may be degraded. The environmental condition of sites largely reflected landuse in the catchment. In the Mitchell catchment – where agriculture and human settlement are largely concentrated in the lowlands – water quality, habitat condition and biological scores were markedly lower compared to sites in the upper catchment. Diminished riparian zones and poor water quality are identified as issues that may help to explain low scores for the draft SEPP WoV biological objectives in the lower reaches of the Mitchell River and its tributaries. -
Moroka Hut Undergoes a Facelift
Media Release Friday 25 May 2012 Moroka Hut undergoes a facelift Good news for visitors to the Moroka River area in the southern section of the Alpine National Park with Parks Victoria announcing that repairs have now been completed on the historic Moroka Hut. Parks Victoria Ranger Mr Norm White stated that Moroka Hut had sustained significant damage to the chimney/fireplace, structural support poles and the saddle/wood shed at rear of hut. “The damage caused was mainly due to oversized fires in the fireplace and general vandalism which is very disappointing,”said Mr White A hard working and competent group of eight volunteers from the Victoria High Country Huts Association (VHCHA) and Latrobe Four Wheel Drive Club gave up their spare time over the Australia Day long weekend and returned to complete this project late last month. Supervised on site by Kerry Dyce and his offsider Apples, who are contractors for Parks Victoria, the tireless volunteers worked alongside Parks Victoria Ranger Norm White to replace all damaged (unsafe) parts of the hut and update the hut with suitable materials in keeping with the structural integrity of the hut. All new materials and rubbish had to be carried in or out as the hut itself is walk-in only and is closed to vehicles to prevent damage to the surrounding area and the hut itself. Parks Victoria Ranger in Charge Mr Mike Dower stated that Parks Victoria has a great working relationship with the VHCHA and the Latrobe Valley Four Wheel Drive Club. This project is one of many undertaken by the VHCHA this year including rejuvenation of the historic Wallace’s and Fry’s huts, in other parts of the Alpine National Park.