Monday, June 17, 2013

Bunya Mountains

From our last stop at Casino we drove over the hills through Kyogle to Murwillumbah which nestles below Mt Warning, the rocky remains of an ancient volcanic core. Unfortunately the hills were shrouded in misty cloud so we couldn’t get any photos.
Next day we moved on into Queensland and over the next few days we skirted round Brisbane, through Ipswich and north through the hills on the Brisbane Valley Hwy past the Wivenhoe Dam to Kingaroy, the peanut and navy bean capital of Australia.  The area has rich red and black basalt soils, excellent for crops but it is the huge peanut silos which dominate the town. After a visit to the Tourist Information Centre and Museum we now know a lot more about growing and harvesting peanuts.

Blue tongue lizard sunning himself on the track 
 We drove up into the Bunya Mountains, named after the Bunya pines which cover large areas of the mountains. The area was logged from the 1840s and in 1908 was declared a national park although some logging continued till 1917. There are many unique plants in the area and also some rare birds and animals and the pine themselves are a very old species dating back to the dinosaur and beyond. The area was very important to the aboriginals who gathered the nuts and used the natural grass clearings for ceremonies. We met an aboriginal ranger who told us that some of the grass trees were over 1000 years old. They only grow a couple of cm per year but some are up to 5 metres tall. The aboriginals made a drink from the flowers in water which is a great pick-me-up, and the flowers when eaten are better than Viagra!    The roads were very narrow and twisty but sealed but the gradient on one was 20%! Not suitable for the bus and not for caravans although some had come in on a different route.
View from Mt Kaingarow with grass trees below the track
Bush Turkey
We climbed a short track to the top of Mt Kiangarow, through real tropical rain forest with lots of vines and moss hung trees. Little birds were flitting ahead of us down the track and whip-birds were calling in the trees. We saw a big blue-tongue lizard on the track and the view from the top was spectacular looking out to the east and west. We had a late lunch of scones and coffee at the tearooms and then drove down to a picnic area where there were bush turkeys and wallabies everywhere.
Wallabies 

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