My
father grew up near to the Warrumbungles, and told many stories about exploring
and climbing the old volcanoes.
His work
as a school teacher took him away from the mountains, but it didn't dint his curiosity. His interest in the wild took him back many
times – once as part of a photographic expedition – more often to teach his kids
about the bush and to climb.
Warrumbungles - central spires- my fathers collection, shot from 1950/60s |
His
interest in the outback stretched from the great wetland beyond Warren
to the forests of the Southern Alpines. Where
ever he went, he engaged with the old bushmen, those who could teach him about
the history of the places, and the value of the native trees and bushes. He was chosen as a trustee for the Dubbo Arboretum
(subsequently, after he retired, transformed into the Taronga Western Plains Zoo)
and I hold an old record of his appointment as a ranger with pride.
He
had his own names for the mountains. He
called them the Warrumbungles, preferring the name used by the original people
to an alternative given by early explorers and still occasionally used by the
graziers who ran sheep and cattle on the pains.
He was careful with names. He
told us the names he used, but always told us that they were names he had heard
from others, and that he was not sure of their real name: the Watcher, the
Breadknife, the Butterknife and Timor Rock.
He aged too fast. As his memory
dimmed, I sat with him and he would look at his pictures, and would teach me
their names.
I
struggle to better his pictures of the old volcanoes. This time when I visited, it had stormed here
- and in the canyons the little waterfalls and creeks were flowing. It
smelt of pepper and eucalyptus - heavy in the canyons - subtle on the rock
faces higher.
Warrumbungles 2014 - Central Spires - note signs of fire on the left center horizon |
My
father told me the volcanoes are protected by two guardians – Timor Rock guards
the front entrance, The Watcher guards the back entrance.
My
father told me how he climbed Timor Rock while at school. Lacking climbing gear, he took his school
shoes off at the bottom of the mountain, and climbed it barehanded, without
ropes with a friend. He said that
climbing it was not so hard, although they disturbed a couple of snakes along
the way, but getting down proved to be almost impossible. Today the climb is rated intermediate to
difficult with ropes necessary at a number of points.
Warrumbungles 2014 - Timor Rock |
Guarding
the back entrance to the Warrumbungles is Chalker's Mountain. My father
called this mountain the Watchman. The
Watchman always takes my breath away - but as I then enter the park, first the Spilt Rock and then the
twisted shapes of the natural spires (especially the Breadknife) and tors make
me feel very small.
Warrumbungles 2014 - Watchman |
Warrumbungles 2014 - Split Rock |
One
of the most striking formations in the Warrumbungles National Park is the
Breadknife. A volcanic dyke 800m
(2,600') high. Note the tree at the top of the structure - and regrowth
in the trees burnt in recent bushfires. Climbing the structure has been
forbidden for many years. I shake my
head in disbelief each time I see it there.
Warrumbungles 2014 - Breadknife |
Nearby
is Belougery Spire – an attractive rock for climbers with medium and advanced
chimneys and traverses. Just after this picture was taken, an eagle
dropped from the overhang in the top left of the spire, and circled over me
down to the creek below. I disturbed it (or perhaps a second eagle) a
little while later, this time watching it rise out of the forest.
Warrumbungles 2014 - Belougery Spire |
My
first memory of the volcanoes were of a land newly burnt by bush fire. I was upset by the devastation – but my
father took care to show me how the bush regrew after each burn. He said that, if it didn't burn, the trees
would become overburdened with pests that would create far greater chaos. Still, it seems that this is a place that attracts
greater than its fair share of fires – every few years, fires impact the
forests – and recently severe fires have devastated the region.
In
mid-summer, lightning ignited the wilderness. Fanned by westerly winds, fires
tore through the valleys. Eighteen
months later the bush is regenerating in most places. In some places, particularly where the fire
was intense and the soil is shallow, the trees have not come back this time.
Warrumbungles 2014 - View of Anglo-Australian Observatory from recreation area (burnt out) |
Warrumbungles 2014 - View from Anglo-Australian Observatory (detail of panorama) |
High
in the mountains is the 154" Anglo Australian Telescope - one of a number
of telescopes at the Siding Springs Observatory. My father was very
excited about plans to build here – we often traveled the new roads that
opened up the region and went to the new observatory when it opened. Fire lapped against the observatory last
year, and for a little while it was unclear whether it had suffered the same
fate as the Mount Stromlo observatory in the Canberra fire storm a decade
earlier. Apart from damage to external buildings, the telescopes were
largely unaffected.
154" Anglo Australian Telescope |
Deep
inside the valleys of the Warrumbungles are the Xanthorrhoea – long-lived grass
trees. This type of tree is extremely
long lived. The black trunk only grows a little each year - the actual
rates vary from place to place. The trunk on this one was as high as me.
I am told that the variety is the Xanthorrhoea Glauca – a slow grower,
averaging about 20 mm a year (I am also told that the trees here are perhaps
only bested by a colony at the Gibraltar Ranges near Glen Innes). With a number of these trees between 3 – 5 meters,
some of these trees are well over 100 years old but could easily be much older,
perhaps predating white settlement. The age of the trees is even more
remarkable because they burn with everything in the valley. Nevertheless, it is the first to re shoot after
a fire - developing a healthy flower spike.
The tree is very efficient at resisting fire - the grass leaves form a
protective humid zone and the trunk chars very slowly. As here, it is
usually the first tree to recover from a bush fire. There are regular
bands on the trunk suggesting periodic natural disasters, perhaps in the form
of an intense fire. The flower spike is very sticky - the first people and
early settlers used it as a resin - the first people used it to cement stone ax shafts to wooden handles and spear shards to hafts. Settlers used it
as a glue and as a substitute for shellac for furniture.
Warrumbungles 2014 - Xanthorrhoea |
Outside
the park – plains that stretch forever, and emus.
I have been coming here since I was four. It is a sharp playground, and I have not yet mastered all the rides. If you are thinking of coming over – do it in the Australian Winter - in Summer you will sizzle.
Warrumbungles 2014 - Recreation area (burnt out) |
I
sometimes wonder if living nearby to this would take some of the magic off the colors. But then I remember the anticipation in my dad's eyes as we got
closer to this destination.
Thanks. In offering comments on this, a number of people helped me complete this page. Thanks for the encouragement and ideas: +Judy Waller , +Nina Anthonijsz +Ann Pollak , +Belinda Kamel , +Charles van Dijk , +Francine Hirst , +Iblis Bane , +Jan Glasziou Rainbird , +Jenny Gray , +Kathleen Robinson , +Klara Moody , +Linda Milek , +Lucky Triana , +Mad Summer , +marilyn David , +Marjo Slingerland-Boks , +mary g Cadigan , +Mike Disbury , +Monique Helfrich , +Paul Jones , +Renee Leach , +Robin COALSON , +Sandra Llewellyn , +Sofie Dagher , +sunarti samijan , +Tina Phillips , +Trudy Grossman , +Viscount Anthony Fuller , +Éva Markoné Szilvásy, +Maria Marian , +Peter Brauner , +Richard Baker
Copyright in all pictures on this age here is gifted to the public domain.
Peter Quinton
Palerang
June 2014
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