Health Snapshot Message on Drains Around Their School

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Health Snapshot Message on Drains Around Their School Local students stencil a ‘drains are only for rain’ Health Snapshot message on drains around their school. IMAGE: Emma Kennedy Your rates at work: More ways to help 2O19 fostering water sensitive Report pollution people NSW Environment Line 131 555 In schools Report sewage leaks Through our Connecting Kids to Creeks Program we Sydney Water 13 20 90 are inspiring the next generation to look after our Dispose of chemicals safely waterways. Over 600 students, aged 3-17 years from local schools are involved in the program each year. Household Chemical Cleanout: By learning about our waterways, doing hands-on www.bmcc.nsw.gov.au/cleanout water science and taking practical action, these students are learning to be our waterway guardians Become a volunteer of the future. www.bmcc.nsw.gov.au/envirovolunteers To find out about our schools program visit: www.bmcc.nsw.gov.au/schools-program In our community We support over 500 conservation volunteers at 130 sites across the city—with advice, tools and the city within training. Come along and make a practical difference Locked Bag 1005 the city within a World Heritage 2 Civic Place to your local creeks and bushland! www.bmcc.nsw.gov.au Katoomba NSW 2780 a World Heritage National Park Visit: www.bmcc.nsw.gov.au/envirovolunteers PRINTED ON 100% RECYCLED PAPER T 02 4780 5000 CARBON NEUTRAL PRINTING E [email protected] National Park IMAGE: Ian Brown CREDITED IMAGES Boy in creek: Ona Janzen | Glenbrook Lagoon: Ian Brown Wentworth Falls: Murray Fredericks | Frog: Lucy Kidson PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER How healthy Protecting our creeks are our waterways? from stormwater runoff Council regularly monitors local waterways for ecological Stormwater runoff (from roads, roofs and paved areas) health and recreational water quality. is the number one cause of damage to our creeks. You can find detailed waterways reports at: www.bmcc.nsw.gov.au/waterquality Unlike sewage, stormwater runoff is generally not treated—it flows directly to our creeks, causing pollution, erosion, sedimentation and habitat loss. Ecological health results Based on testing that uses water bugs as indicators of waterway health. This year, Is your property Raingardens nine of the test sites had no water flow. ‘water sensitive’? Raingardens are specially-constructed gardens which reduce peak stormwater flows and pollution DRY % Waterways in good EXCELLENT A ‘water sensitive’ by absorbing and filtering runoff from roofs and 59 POOR to excellent health home or business paved areas. FAIR helps protect our % Waterways in poor GOOD 24 waterways from Find out more at www.melbournewater.com.au to fair health stormwater damage by Sediment control reducing runoff Is your property, unsealed driveway or building site Recreational water quality results and keeping shedding soil or sand into street gutters? Thousands of pollutants out of Based on weekly testing for bacterial tonnes of sediment are washed into our creeks every stormwater drains. contamination over summer. year, smothering habitats and silting up streams. Being water Wentworth Falls Lake sensitive also Find out more at Generally good microbial water quality. means using www.yourhome.gov.au/housing/sediment-control Suitable for swimming most of the time. water efficiently, recycling and Glenbrook Lagoon, Megalong Creek, reusing Minnehaha Falls (Yosemite Creek) stormwater where Susceptible to faecal pollution. Not always IMAGE: Ona Janzen possible. suitable for swimming. Minnehaha is currently closed due to geological instability. Rainwater tanks At all sites, avoid swimming during and for up Save up to 240,000L of drinking water a year and reduce to three days after rain, or if there are signs of peak stormwater flows by installing a rainwater tank. By pollution in the water. Before swimming, using the water from your roof in the garden, toilet or consider other risks such as water depth, laundry, you could also save up to $200 per year. temperature and submerged hazards. Find out more at www.sydneywater.com.au A single site can lose up to 4 truck loads of sediment in one storm. ● Excellent health These ratings are based on the types of G waterbugs found at each site. Waterbugs Good health (such as mayflies and crayfish) are widely G Fair health accepted indicators of ecological creek Ecological waterway health G Poor health health. A rich variety of sensitive waterbugs indicates a healthy waterway. in the City of Blue Mountains G Dry Colo Catchment Glenbrook Catchment Kedumba Cachment ●1 Waterfall Creek ●17 Magdala Creek ●38 Kedumba Creek ●18 Glenbrook Creek ●39 Leura Falls Creek Coxs Catchment ●19 Glenbrook Creek ●40 Gordon Creek 20 41 ●2 Fairy Dell Creek ● Glenbrook Creek tributary ● Lillians Glen 21 42 ●3 Centennial Glen Creek ● Florabella Pass Creek ● Jamison Creek 43 ●4 Megalong Creek ● Kedumba River Grose Catchment 44 ●5 Megalong Creek tributary ● Wentworth Falls Lake ●6 Pulpit Hill Creek ●22 Grose River tributary Nepean Catchment ●7 Pulpit Hill Creek tributary ●23 Hat Hill Creek ●8 Back Creek NEW ●24 Popes Glen Creek ●45 Fitzgerald Creek ●25 Bridal Veil Creek/ ●46 Long Angle Creek Erskine Catchment Govetts Leap Brook ●47 Blue Gum Swamp Creek 26 ● Yosemite Creek 48 ●9 Bedford Creek ● Frasers Creek 27 ● Katoomba Creek 49 ●10 Terrace Falls Creek ● Frasers Creek tributary 28 ● Govetts Creek 50 ●11 Lawson Creek ● Cripple Creek 29 ● Wentworth Creek 51 ●12 Cataract Creek ● Strathdon Creek 30 ● Water Nymphs Dell 52 ●13 Red Gum Park ● Lapstone Creek 31 ● Dantes Glen 53 ●14 Bedford Creek tributary NEW ● Knapsack Creek 32 ● Hazelbrook Creek 54 ●15 Wilsons Glen Creek NEW ● Glenbrook Lagoon ●33 Woodford Creek ●16 Erskine Creek NEW ●34 Linden Creek tributary 35 ● Springwood Creek ●36 Bulls Creek NEW ●37 Adams Creek Crayfish can live up to 50 years. They are slow Our fantastic crayfish! growing and only breed from about 9 years old. What’s in a name? People often confuse spiny crayfish with yabbies, which grow quickly, breed early and are introduced pests in our mountain streams. To tell them apart, look at their claws. If the bottom edge is smooth, it’s an introduced yabby, if spiny, it could be one of the two local spiny crayfish species. How you can help… IMAGE: R. McCormack R. IMAGE: When fertilisers, pesticides and detergents get into The Blue Mountains is home to one of the world’s street gutters and drains, they end up in our creeks. largest crayfish—the Giant Spiny Crayfish. In 2012, over 1,000 dead Giant Spiny Crayfish were killed by pesticides that found their way into Crayfish are a vital food source for other water Jamison Creek, at Wentworth Falls. creatures in our creeks, with only one out of 1,000 baby crayfish surviving to old age. The rest help So remember, only rain down the drain! Don’t take nourish the entire creek system, including turtles, crayfish from their streams. And don’t use yabbie platypus, water rats, water birds, lizards and snakes. traps—these can drown water birds and platypus..
Recommended publications
  • Volume 38 No 2 Autumn 2013
    Volume 38 Issue 2 Berowra Waters from the Great North Walk, A pleasant day walk. Autumn 2013 Wouldn’t you like to be here? Hiking in the Zanskar region of Ladakh, from Padum to Lamayuru. Photo: Nina Gallo Pagodas, Capertee region. Photo: Michael Keats, The Bush Club Walk Safely—Walk with a Club T h e Bushwalker The Official Publication of Bushwalking NSW Inc Volume 38, Issue 2, Autumn 2013 ISSN 0313 2684 Editor: Roger Caffin From the editor’s desk. [email protected] Graphic Design & Assembly: AME CHANGE: The Confederation is now known as Bushwalking Barry Hanlon NSW. There is an optional ‘Incorporated’ at the end, but that is just Proofreader: Roy Jamieson Na legalism and is not needed in ordinary use. However, I imagine that we will continue to refer to ‘the Confederation’ for quite some time as Confederation Officers: it is convenient. President: David Trinder Administration Officer: [email protected] Website: www.bushwalking.org.au Articles for Publication Address all correspondence to: We are always happy to receive pictures for the Inside Front Cover. If you would like to PO Box 119, Newtown, NSW 2042 see yours published, send them in. Note that I need the originals, straight from the camera and uncropped and unretouched, so we can set them up for the printing process. We need high resolution for large pictures. In particular, photos embedded in DOC files are not accepted, and neither are scans of standard photographic prints - with Bushwalking NSW Inc represents the possible exception of historical items where the print is all that exists.
    [Show full text]
  • HUT NEWS June 2021
    Hut News Issue no. 392 June 2021 Blue Mountains Conservation Society Inc. HUT NEWS June 2021 The Blue Mountains is not just another suburb of Sydney From the Land Use Subcommittee Following the profile of the Society’s Land Use Increasing development on the ridge tops puts Subcommittee in last month’s Hut News, members more stress on already overstretched infrastructure might be asking “why does the Blue Mountains and adds to the cumulative impacts of human Conservation Society concern itself with urban activity on the natural environment we live in and development and housing issues? Don’t we need on which our local tourist economy depends. This more housing in the mountains? Isn’t this just a is why the Blue Mountains Local Environmental NIMBY issue? And what’s this got to do with the Plan contains stringent planning controls and environment anyway”? development standards for housing and other development. Debates over a perceived lack of housing and housing diversity in the mountains regularly erupt State government policies like the new Low Rise in the pages of the Blue Mountains Gazette. Housing Diversity Code undermine these Certainly, access to housing is an issue and housing protections. This Code, now in force in the Blue supply is just one factor among many. But what is Mountains, allows fast-track approval for medium often lost in these debates is the recognition that the density housing which meets state-wide ‘one size Blue Mountains is not just another suburb of fits all’ development standards. Developments Sydney. It is a unique place, one of only two cities under the Code are not sensitive to local in the world located in a World Heritage Area.
    [Show full text]
  • Battle Lines for the Kowmung Battle Lines for the Kowmung Blue
    Guest Speaker World Heritage Nomination The guest speaker at the Society’s Great news!! The World Heritage submission for general meeting on Friday 31 July will be the Greater Blue Mountains has been completed and Gaye Spies, a leader and a pioneer in the sent to UNESCO in Paris for assessment. bush regeneration movement. The Greater Blue Mountains nomination covers an Gaye will talk about the Sugarloaf area of over one million hectares, that is about the size Creek bush regeneration project, an of Belgium or half the size of Ireland. The area is unusual and difficult task which was started made up of Nattai, Kanangra-Boyd, Blue Mountains, species. The whole campaign in 1985. At Castlecrag. it covers the whole Wollemi, Gardens of Stone and Yengo National Parks to raise the wall is based on sub-catchment and different ecosystems and the Thirlmere Lakes. fear and lies about the real including rainforest and waterfalls. The significant features of the area includes its effects of the wall-raising The meeting at the Conservation Hut, geological features — the escarpments, and its option and the spillway option Wentworth Falls, starts at 7.30 pm. biodiversity including its large variety of eucalypts. which has been adopted by the Visitors are welcome. There are 4 criteria for natural heritage and 3 for State Labor Government. cultural heritage. The Greater Blue Mountains area, we The Carr Government’s Bushcare Group on Tuesday believe, satisfies 6 out of 7 criteria. We are hopeful of decision in February to Here is your chance, leisure walkers a successful outcome at the meeting of the World construct a side spillway for and others busy on Mondays, to come and Heritage Committee in December.
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 Blue Mountains Waterways Health Report
    BMCC-WaterwaysReport-0818.qxp_Layout 1 21/8/18 4:06 pm Page 1 Blue Mountains Waterways Health Report 2017 the city within a World Heritage National Park Full report in support of the 2017 Health Snapshot BMCC-WaterwaysReport-0818.qxp_Layout 1 21/8/18 4:06 pm Page 2 Publication information and acknowledgements: The City of the Blue Mountains is located within the Country of the Darug and Gundungurra peoples. The Blue Mountains City Council recognises that Darug and Gundungurra Traditional Owners have a continuous and deep connection to their Country and that this is of great cultural significance to Aboriginal people, both locally and in the region. For Darug and Gundungurra People, Ngurra (Country) takes in everything within the physical, cultural and spiritual landscape—landforms, waters, air, trees, rocks, plants, animals, foods, medicines, minerals, stories and special places. It includes cultural practice, kinship, knowledge, songs, stories and art, as well as spiritual beings, and people: past, present and future. Blue Mountains City Council pays respect to Elders past and present, while recognising the strength, capacity and resilience of past and present Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the Blue Mountains region. Report: Prepared by Blue Mountains City Council’s Healthy Waterways team (Environment and Culture Branch) – Amy St Lawrence, Alice Blackwood, Emma Kennedy, Jenny Hill and Geoffrey Smith. Date: 2017 Fieldwork (2016): Christina Day, Amy St Lawrence, Cecil Ellis. Identification of macroinvertebrate samples (2016 samples): Amy St Lawrence, Christina Day, Cecil Ellis, Chris Madden (Freshwater Macroinvertebrates) Scientific Licences: Office of Environment & Heritage (NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service) Scientific Licence number SL101530.
    [Show full text]
  • September 2012 “Nature Conservation Saves for Tomorrow” Remembering Reg Toseland Reg Toseland Passed Away on 20 August at Albion Park, at the Age of 87
    Blue Mountains Conservation Society Issue No. 296 HUT NEWS September 2012 “Nature Conservation Saves for Tomorrow” Remembering Reg Toseland Reg Toseland passed away on 20 August at Albion Park, at the age of 87. Reg and Dulcie Toseland are fondly remembered by older members of the Society. They were both very active in the Society during the days when the old Conservation Hut was the headquarters of the Society and were among the volunteers who helped to operate it as a tea room at weekends, providing light refreshments, information and environmental education to the public. Reg was President of the Society in 1986. Then in 1987-1989 Dulcie was President and Reg had the job of Secretary. In 1990 Reg filled the position of “Hut Supplies Officer”. Following the opening of the new Conservation Hut, Reg became an "Elder Statesman" of the Society, and was an invaluable source of information and guidance to new members of the Management MONTHLY MEETING Committee. At this time, Reg became the Society’s 7.30 pm, Thursday, 27 September, 2012 Public Officer, a position he held until 2010. at the Conservation Hut, Wentworth Falls There are too few people like Reg Toseland in this world. One of the most positive people that I A threatened wonderland—The Gardens of Stone. A coffee have met, a conserver of our heritage in the Blue table book and a slideshow set to music. Mountains. A book on a spectacular part of the Gardens of Stone was A troubled body but an endless optimist, a far launched on 15 August by Ian Brown, editor and contributing thinking and all embracing friend.
    [Show full text]
  • DAMIT Or Conserve It? Holly at Pope's Glen Holly at Pope's Glen Weed of the Month Kowmung Walk. Kowmun
    Members of the Kowmung Committee DAMIT or Conserve It? Holly at Pope’s Glen have already poisoned willows on some In an expensive and highly organised Pope’s Glen Bushcare’s Alan Lane sections of the river. With the co-operation campaign, Hawkesbury Council backed believes that last month’s “Weed of the of the NPWS, further sections of the group DAMIT predicts a disaster on a Month” should be the weed of the month Kowmung will be tackled. A short but scale far eclipsing the combined tragedies every month. This point of view is steep day’s walk of Cyclone Tracy, Ash Wednesday bush- understandable—the holly in Pope’s Glen from Kanangra fires and Newcastle earthquake if the dam is amazing. It suckers under the ground Walls offers access wall is not raised: “Save us all—Raise the like bamboo and forms clumps of spiky to the river. Wall”. (No mention of possible side- bushes which are a bush regenerator’s For details on benefits of a flood-free Hawkesbury nightmare —and there are lots of holly joining a team plain—enormous real estate profits!) bushes in the surrounding gardens to contact Pip Walsh Raising the wall of Warragamba Dam provide a ever-renewable seed source for on 02.517.1121. will flood the valleys of two large wilder- more holly bushes to spring up in The Great Grose Gorse Walk ness areas in the Southern Blue Mountains, bushland. The Great Grose Gorse Walk, organised including the pristine Kowmung River. Maybe one day we can convince the by the Friends of the Blue Gum Forest, Downstream there will be major impacts Department of Agriculture to declare the on the Hawkesbury-Nepean environment.
    [Show full text]
  • HUT NEWS Issue No
    Blue Mountains Conservation Society Inc. Issue No. 308 HUT NEWS October 2013 “Nature Conservation Saves for Tomorrow” BMCS General Meeting: 10 am, Saturday 26 October at Faulconbridge Hall, Faulconbridge Whose home is it? When we talk about an open cut THE GREAT KOALA COUNT mine proposal, we sometimes get Most doctors wouldn’t recommend you being out bogged down discussing planning for the count, but at the next Consoc general and approval processes. It can be meeting, you’ll hear from two who do. They’ll easy to forget that Coalpac's plan to speak about how you can take part in the Great dig up 800 hectares of Ben Bullen Koala Count. It’s as simple as going for a bushwalk and having a look around. State forest will destroy the plants Dr Grainne Cleary is part of the team who’ve developed BioTag, an app for and animals that live there. SmartPhones to record the GPS location and details about any koalas spotted. After registering at www.koalacount.org.au and downloading BioTag, if you spot In this newsletter we highlight some a koala, just snap a photo and answer the questions. You don’t even need to of the birds and orchids found in the be in range at the time. If you don’t see any, that’s valuable info too. You don’t area scheduled to be stripped need a SmartPhone to take part—you can report manually on the website. bare—just a few of the plants which The Great Koala Count will be an ongoing annual event.
    [Show full text]
  • Blue Mountains Local Strategic Planning Statement 2020
    Blue Mountains 2040 Living Sustainably Local Strategic Planning Statement March 2020 2 Abbreviations ABS – Australian Bureau of Statistics CSP – Blue Mountains Community Strategic Plan 2035 District Plan – Western City District Plan EMP 2002 – Environmental management Plan 2002 EP&A Act – Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 GSC – Greater Sydney Commission ILUA – Indigenous Land Use Agreement IP&R – Integrated Planning and Reporting LEP – Blue Mountains Local Environmental Plan 2015 LGA – Local Government Area LHS – Local Housing Strategy Local Planning Statement – Blue Mountains 2040: Living Sustainably NPWS – NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service SEPP – State Environmental Planning Policy SREP 20 – Sydney Regional Environmental Plan No. 20 – Hawkesbury-Nepean River (No 2-1997) SDT – Sustainable Development Threshold STRA – Short Term Rental Accommodation TAFE – Technical and Further Education NSW The Local Strategic Planning Statement was formally made on 31 March 2020 Some images supplied by Daniel Neukirch Blue Mountains City Council | Local Strategic Planning Statement 3 Contents Acknowledgement of Ngurra (Country) 4 LOCAL PLANNING PRIORITY 3: Planning for the increased well-being of our community 58 Message from the Mayor 6 LIVEABILITY 64 Message from the CEO 7 LOCAL PLANNING PRIORITY 4: About the Local Strategic Planning Statement 8 Strengthening Creativity, Culture and the Blue Mountains as a City of the Arts 68 Community Consultation 10 LOCAL PLANNING PRIORITY 5: POLICY CONTEXT 12 Conserving and enhancing heritage,
    [Show full text]
  • CBC NEWS May - June 2015
    CBC NEWS May - June 2015 Explanation of Grading codes used in the CBC News Each walk is graded on expected difficulty, the distance proposed and the prevailing terrain. Walks are graded: Easy (3) to Exploratory (0). Please regard the grades and descriptions as a guide only. Grade Type Km Details G3 Easy 2 to 5 Relatively level and well-formed track up to 5 km. G2 Medium 6 to 14 Mainly on track. Up to 14kms. Ascents up to 300m. G2+ Medium to 15 to 18 Light scrubby vegetation often off-track. Ascents up to 800m. Rock hopping Hard creek crossings. G1 Hard 18+ Substantial off- track walking. Ascents over 800m. Possible rock hopping. Possible exposure (can include spikes and chains). G1+ Difficult ? Any negotiable terrain, heavy scrub, off-track. Ascents 1200m plus. Scrambling ability required. G0 Exploratory ? Exploratory walk. Abseil Trips are graded on a similar basis but using an A as the prefix – these walks should only be attended by walkers who have attended a club abseil practice day and who have the necessary experience and equipment. Grade 2 is recommended for prospectives and new walkers Explanation of Meeting Arrangements Strathfield: The Everton Rd entrance of Strathfield Railway Station (the Parramatta Rd side – nearest Platform 1) is the meeting place for the walk. This allows for vehicles to be rationalised. Glenbrook: In the parking area adjacent to the rear of the Caltex Service Station, Great Western Hwy, Glenbrook. Katoomba: In the railway station car park on the Great Western Hwy side of the railway adjacent to Gearin’s Hotel.
    [Show full text]
  • Ten Years Post-Wildfire Recovery and Health of Eucalypt
    Managing the Threat Program © BUSHFIRE CRC LTD 2010 Ten years post-wildfire recovery and health of Eucalypt forests and woodland in the Sydney Basin, Australia: Using remotely sensed vegetation indices Jessica Heath1*, Chris Chafer2, Tom Bishop1, Floris Van Ogtrop1 1 Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, University of Sydney, New South Wales 2 Sydney Catchment Authority, New South Wales *Contact details: [email protected] INTRODUCTION RESULTS The response of vegetation after a wildfire is •Figures 2-5 provide an example of the NDVI, NDVIc and NBR* for the Nattai subcatchment dependent on factors such as fire intensity and (1990/91- 2009/10), respectively. vegetation type. The majority of post-wildfire vegetation response studies conducted in Victoria, 1 NDVI •A obvious decline in the NDVI, NDVIc and NBR occurs at the time of wildfire (2001/2002 Australia, have been in communities dominated by 0.8 obligate seeders. These studies have found that there is summer). 0.6 a considerable delay in species germination due to a Extreme •The pattern of NDVI, NDVIc and NBR shows 0.4 Very high delay in water uptake by the seed bank. These studies High good vegetation recovery within two-three NDVI value 0.2 Moderate do not represent the response of vegetation in the Low years post-wildfire. Negliglible Sydney Basin, which is dominated by obligate 0 •NDVI, NDVIc and NBR patterns are similar to resprouter species. the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) (Fig. 5) and rainfall (Fig. 6) pattern during the study period. RESEARCH AIMS Fig 2. Nattai River subcatchment NDVI values To determine if vegetation in the Sydney Basin recovers NDIVc 0.7 0.8 NBR within 8 years post-wildfire.
    [Show full text]
  • Blue Mountains Bushwalking Guide
    Blue Mountains Bushwalking Guide GLENBROOK - BLAXLAND - WARIMOO 1. Glenbrook Crossing / Red Hands Cave — 8km circuit. 240 minutes, easy walk. Rainforest / ferns, birdlife, follows a creek, suitable in mist, picnic facilities. Aboriginal art site. After Information Centre on G.W. Highway turn first left into Ross Road, left into Burfitt Parade and follow road around into Bruce Road. Walk starts at NPWS Visitors Centre at end of Bruce Road. 2. Jellybean Pool — 2km return, 60 minutes, easy walk. Ideal Summer swimming hole, suitable in mist, picnic and toilet facilities. Walk starts at NPWS Visitors Centre in Bruce Road (see directions above). 3. Euroka Creek — 2.5km return, 60 minutes, easy walk. Views, birdlife, suitable in mist, picnic and toilet facilities. Start at Euroka Clearing in National Park, access from NPWS Visitors Centre in Bruce Road (see directions above). 4. Jack Evans Track (Erskine Creek) — 2.5km return, 90 minutes, medium walk. Views, birdlife, rainforest / ferns, suitable in mist, picnic facilities. Blue Gums, sandy beaches, rockpools. Start at carpark on Nepean Lookout Road in National Park, access from NPWS Visitor Centre in Bruce Road (see directions above). 5. Florabella Pass — 3km one-way. 150 minutes, medium walk. Views, birdlife, rainforest / ferns suitable in mist. Start at Ross Crescent, Blaxland. SPRINGWOOD 6. Wiggins Track, Sassafras, Glenbrook, Magdala Creek — 10km circuit, 300 minutes, medium walk. Views, birdlife, rainforest / ferns, waterfalls, suitable in mist, picnic facilities. Start Sassafras Reserve. To reach this (heading west) go to Springwood's main street called Macquarie Road. Turn left into Raymond Road, right into Springwood Avenue. The Reserve is signposted on your left.
    [Show full text]
  • (Lawson) and Terrace Falls Circuit
    Mt Wilson Mt Irvine Bushwalking Group Volume 21 Issue 7 July 2011 HAZELBROOK AND LAWSON WALKS TOPIC declaring the park was OUR JUNE temporarily closed due to helicopter activity associated WALK with track reconstruction in the WATERFALL CIRCUIT AT area. A quick call to the BMCC LAWSON AND TERRACE number quoted on the sign FALLS CIRCUIT AT determined that the work had HAZELBROOK been cancelled due to the th windy conditions and we were Friday 17 June 2011 free to continue. (How did we There is an old adage that warns ever manage without the you should be careful of what ubiquitous mobile phone?) you wish for. Last month we changed our schedule to slot As the terrain levelled at the these two circuits in, hoping the bottom of the stone steps the waterfalls would still be running Winter in the Bush muddy conditions prompted the well following the good rains tucking of trouser cuffs into early in the year; then the socks (my shorts wouldn’t heavens opened! Flooding on the Central and reach) and we continued North Coast, torrential downpours in the toward Lawson Creek. Soon, through the Sydney area and steady rain for days on end in forest canopy, we caught a glimpse of the the mountains. (In a note received recently silver veil of a waterfall. At creek level we from bushwalking group co-founder Mary made our way through a mossy fern-filled Reynolds, she stated their rain gauge at Mt bower to arrive at the base of the first falls for Wilson keeps overflowing in this appalling the day, Adelina.
    [Show full text]