- Weddin Mountains National Park
Weddin Mountains is a national park in
New South Wales (Australia ), 291 km west of Sydney. It is a small crescent shaped range running roughly north south with steep cliffs on the eastern side sloping more gradually down to the plane in the west. Weddin mountains is a small patch of remnant vegetation which ecaped clearing due to its ruggednes. It has lots of aircraft passing overhead on their way from Sydney to Adelaidecite web | author = McFadyen, Michael |publication= Michael McFayden's Scuba Diving Web Site| title = Western NSW National Parks Trip - Part 5 | url = http://www.michaelmcfadyenscuba.info/viewpage.php?page_id=578 | accessdate = 2007-06-11] , is part of the Lachlan Fold system and isWiradjuri cite web | author = NRMA| |publication= Open Road| title = Bush Islands | url = http://www.openroad.com.au/travel_greatdrives_bushislandscentralwest.asp | accessdate = 2007-06-11] country.Infobox Mountain
Name = Weddin Mountains
Photo = Weddin Mountains From Eualdrie Rd.jpg
Caption = The Weddin Mountains rise from the surrounding flat land. This view is looking south from the Euraldrie road.
Elevation = convert|750|m|ft|0|lk=on
Location =New South Wales, Australia
Prominence =
Coordinates = coord|33|58|20|S|148|01|23|E|type:landmark_region:AU
Topographic
Type=
Age=
Last eruption=
First ascent =
Easiest route = hike
Translation =
Language =Facts
*"Area:" 83.61 km²
*"Date of establishment:" November 12, 1971
*"Managing authorities:" New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service
*"IUCN category:" IIGetting There
Weddin Mountains National Park is most often approached from
Grenfell . Travelling west from Grenfell on the Mid Western Highway there are sign posts to Holy Camp and Ben Halls Cave. The Google Earth root fromGrenfell will take you along Euladrie road which ends at a farm two kilometres from the park with farmland in between.Wildlife
There are 216 species cite web | author = NW National Parks and Wildlife Service | title = Atlas of NSW Wildlife | url = http://wildlifeatlas.nationalparks.nsw.gov.au/wildlifeatlas/watlasSpecies.jsp | accessdate = 2007-06-11] of animals recorded in Weddin Mountains National Park, the vast majority of which are birds. The species list includes three types of wallaby one of which is the endangered Brush Tailed Rock Wallaby. Pest species seen in the park are cats, rabbits, foxes, goats and sheep..
= Bush Rangers =Ben Hall , who plundered the Forbes-Grenfell area in the 1850s used the Weddin Mountains as a refuge. He holed up in a cave on the north-west side of the park with his gang, which included Johnnie Gilbert andFrank Gardiner . It is rumoured Ben Hall buried atreasure here that has not yet been located.Seaton's Farm
There is a walk around 'Seaton's Historic Farm', which is now part of the national park. Seatons Farm is how one man and his wife turned every bit of wire into something useful. Jim Seaton hand made 3 km/1.8 miles of kangaroo proof fence by hand, with posts of local saplings, which are rot and vermin proofcite web | author = Allenberg, David |publication= Degree Confluence Project| year=2002| title = Degree Confluence Project | url = http://www.confluence.org/confluence.php?id=1265 | accessdate = 2007-06-11] . The property was occupied in the late 1920s and during the Depression it was set up as a farm. Times and the land were hard and the buildings represent this. The sheds have walls made from flattened corrugated iron so that it stretched further. One of the sheds is full of old wire, iron sheets, bottles, everything you can imagine. All the old machinery is still there, sitting where it was when the family sold the property to the Government in the 1980s. A unique place, showing how the less well off farmers did it in the early and mid 1900s.
Ben Hall's Cave
Near Seaton's Farm is Ben Halls camping and picnic area with well designed fireplace/barbecues, large enough to permit the use of camp ovens, your own barbecue or for an open fire as well as having its own BBQ plate. It is a short walk from here to Ben Hall's cave.
Holy Camp
Holy camp is 19 km south-west of Grenfellcite web | author = NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service| year = 2006 | title = Weddin Mountains National Park | url = http://www.nationalparks.nsw.gov.au/parks.nsf/ParkContent/N0036?OpenDocument&ParkKey=N0036&Type=Xo | accessdate = 2007-06-10] , Coordinates coord|33.897857|S|148.002901|E|type:camp. The last 3.8 kilometres are dirt road. It is one of the entrances to the park with a pit toilet, parking area, picnic tables and fireplaces. Camping is allowed. There is a small water tank filled from the toilet roof but don't rely on it. From here you can walk to Eualdrie and Peregrine lookouts.There is lots of wildlife in and around the carpark including lace monitors and skinks by day and brushtail possums and owlet nightjars by night.
Walks
The Eualdrie walking trail leads from Holy Camp and is advertised as a 2.6km 2.5 hour return trip passing through Perregrine lookout which takes 1.5hr return. This was tested as 30 minutes to Perrigrine lookout, 23 minutes more to the Cairn at the summit and 40 minutes return. Perrigrine lookout is south of the carpark and from there the path turns back on itself as it proceeds upwards so that the cairn at the summit is a little north of the carpark. The path appears to continue past the cairn at Euradrie Trig (height 750m) and can be followed down to Ben Halls cave.
Literature
This small range is mentioned in a surprising number of [http://www.google.com.au/books?q=weddin+mountains&lr=&sa=N&start=0 publications.] Two of note are [http://oldpoetry.com/opoem/show/24649--Anonymous-Oceania-A-West-Country-Ballad A West Country Ballad] which refers to a bounty hunter who unsuccessfully tried to capture Gardiner in the Weddin mountains and [http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/lit/romance/RobberyUnderArms/chap0.html Robbery Under Arms] where Weddin mountains gets a mention as a hideout.
See also
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Protected areas of New South Wales (Australia) References
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