The Otway Fly cantilever.
The canopy walk.
The Redwood forest.
Mait's Rest Rainforest Walk and a tree whose roots grew over a fallen tree that has since rotted away.
The charred forest of Wye River.
Monday,
March 14th (continued)
The
first thing I did when I left the Otway Farmstay was drive to the end
of their local rural road to the Otway Fly Treetop Adventures. Here
is a old growth natural forest that contains both a ziplining trek
and a canopy walk. I opted for the latter. It is "a one hour rainforest walk experience that is approximately 2 kilometres in total length and features a 600 metre long and 30 metre high stell structured treetop conopy walk that takes you right into the tree tops. It's the longest and tallest walkway of its type in the world and includes a thrilling cantilever." It was a beautiful walk through the forest. It was amazing to
think of how they constructed it in the forest! The forest was alive
with the calls of the kookaburra, magpies, cockatoos and other
parrots.
When
I left I drove to Beechforest, about 15km away, to get gas. Then I
continued down a winding dirt Binns Road to a stand of California
Redwoods planted here 80 years ago. The grove was spectacular and
cathedral quiet. The trees are not as big in girth but are already
about a hundred feet tall. I realized just how quiet it was and
reflected on the natural forest where I had heard all the birds. This
is a mono-culture where there is no diversity of the flora and the
native animals and birds have little interest in living here. This is
foreign territory to them.
From
there I drove south and entered the Great Otway National Park where I
drove to the southern point to see yet another lighthouse, this one
Cape Otway Lighthouse. All of the lighthouses look very similar and
must have been built around the same time by the same architect. This
one is billed as the most historically important one in Victoria as "the lightstation is the oldest suriving lighthouse on mainland Australia and the headland is the southern most point on south-western Victoria." There
was also an Aboriginal walking trail here that took you past several
exhibits of their house structures and camps.
When
I left I retraced my route back to the Great Ocean Road and turned
back east. Shortly after I arrived at yet another old growth native
forest walk called Mait's Rest Rainforest Walk. I had past it on
Saturday and decided to hike it today. It was a beautiful walk
through an incredibly lush forest with no one else around. This was
the most natural of the forests I visited today and the one I enjoyed
the most.
I
continued east towards home and descended off the highlands back down
to the coast and the small towns that dot the shore. A bushfire
ripped through a town here called Wye River on Christmas day this
year, destroying 116 homes, but luckily killing no one. The day was
40+degrees and windy. I drove through the town which sits on forested
slopes overlooking the sea. Evidence of the fire was still everywhere
through the forest and the charred buildings.
I
left there and followed the coast back to Angelsea where I picked up
the highway that took me to Geelong and the freeway that went to
Melbourne. 400 kms today.
I
left Saturday at 10am and returned Monday night at 10pm after 1300
kilometres. What a great road trip!
Canopy Walk looks cool!
ReplyDeleteWow, must have been interesting trying to build that canopy walk
ReplyDelete