Monday, 29 September 2008

WESTERN AUSTRALIA Warren NP to Porongurup 23-29 September

Tuesday 23 September  WARREN NP -Drafty's Campground
Left Yallingup at 9am and drove down Caves Road, avoiding wineries.  Paid $12 each to don hardhats and use torches to visit Calgardup Cave on a self-guided tour.  Pretty floral display there, including fairy orchid, donkey orchids, tree hovea, Hypocalymma robustum, Scaevola calliptera, Baeckea camphor..., Hakea sulcata, Nematolepsis ...
November lilies (NOT native) were scattered among the trees.

Kennedia coccinea


Our little rig
Ate lunch at Augusta in very windy, fine conditions which detracted from views of lighthouse, ocean, river. 
Walked around Cape Leeuwin before driving on towards Warren National Park.

 Checked a campsite near Snottygobble Loop - long! walk to campsite and river.  On to Heartbreak Trail (one-way, no vans) and at 4pm made camp at Drafty's beside the Warren River.  Only campers in our sector but one tent around the corner.


Wednesday 24 September  WARREN NP -Drafty's Campground

Drive around Karri Forest Explorer trail.  Karri = Eucalyptus diversicolor because of paler colour under vs top of leaves.
Inspected Warren Campsite, very pretty, small campsites.  River flowing much faster than at Drafty's.  Talked to an ex-local who had seen jarrah tables selling for $22000; karri he thinks was mainly used for sleepers and building rafters.  On to Blackbutt Lookout where sign featured info re salt in water coming from wind.  Next we drove to Dave's Bicentennial Tree - David climbed about 12m up.  Two women were up the top.

To Pemberton and bought bakery treats, then to a dam with 3.5km wheelchair friendly walk around it.  But very windy and cold there.  I was getting fed up with driving around so we shortened the loop and only stopped once more to check out Beedelup Falls.  Very impressive water but few flowers.  Much money spent there on SS rails, walkways.  Nearby resort area used to belong to the "orange people".

 Back home for lunch and then a 3km return walk to Warren Camp to search for the eyepiece now missing from my binoculars.  Found it lying on the road near the river. Lucky! 
Two big tents with young families were set up in the sites near the other toilet.  Long chat with a nice young man who had a family history of holidaying in the area. They used snares for marron in season and enjoyed peaceful times here.


Thursday 25 September  WALPOLE 
Rained all night from 7pm.  We had just finished washing up, put metal cover over kitchen and retired inside for bridge.  Found our pillows quite wet in places when we awoke, but hadn't noticed any problem overnight.  Glad we didn't have the awning or shadecloth to deal with at pack-up time - they were both dry and folded inside the trailer.  I was worried about the condition of Heartbreak Trail but there were no problems driving out. 
Saw many tingle trees and the Circular Pool on Frankland River (circular current).
 
Climbing Drosera
Leucopogon verticillatus, the largest leucopogon, 1-4m
 Sidetrip to Pemberton in vain attempt to find Botanica Gallery. Booked into Coalseam Beach CP, then drove around Knoll Road.

  Friday 26 September  WALPOLE

Went to Swarbrick, an artistic celebration of the successful anti-logging campaign.  35m mirror entrance was a beautiful concept, with leaf shapes containing facts, poetry, history, political utterances, etched upon the bush itself. 
 
 
 

Walked up Mt Frankland, all 295 steps including ladder, but very cloudy and uninspiring view.

 
 

Lechenaultia biloba
Interesting fungus ?what it is
Egernia richardi, ID using location & white lips
Xanthosia rotundifolia, 'Southern Cross', only found in south-west WA



Saturday 27 September  VALLEY OF THE GIANTS

Set off for Valley of the Giants and the Treetop Walk around 9am with trailer hitched.  No problem parking and relatively few people around.  Cost $6 each for seniors to walk 600m in the treetops.  I hoped it would be a good experience for me but warnings about only 10 people at a time on a span or platform made me nervous.  There were 7 people ahead of us, several over-large, going very slowly.  Behind came 5 young people, the guys swearing profusely as they were scared.  I had to concentrate on getting through the vertigo problem and did not enjoy it, thanks to the other people.  David repeated the walk as he too was irritated by the 'neighbours'.
 
 
 
 
Dryandra formosa
White-breasted robin
Next came the Ancient Empire walk, just 400m through Tingle trees.
  Good info on signs made it very interesting.  I took notes here and earlier at an interactive computer station related to the plants around, viz:

 Red tingle only grows in 6000 hectares, within 10km from the coast, between Deep and Bow Rivers.  Flowers after 30 years with bumper crop every 4 years. Red = timber colour; tingle= Aboriginal word.
Yellow tingle 35m - no buttress or thickened trunk.  Flowers after 7 years.  Restricted area around BowRiver, Walpole; wider distribution than Red.
Rates Tingle 60m - smaller buds and fruits, shorter than Red.  Found between Frankland River estuary east of Walpole and an area east of Mt Frankland.
Hibbertia furfuracea

Other plants here include tassle. Chorilaema quercifolia, Clematis pubescens, Trymalium floribundum (Karri Hazel, leaves give soap lather, creamy sprays of flowers), Chorizema ilicifolium (Holly Flame), Acacia pentadenia (Karri Wattle), Crowea angustifolia, Hovea elliptica to 3m, Dampiera hederacea, Hibbertia serrata, Hibbertia furfuracea (narrower, non-serrated leaves), Diuris longifolia, pink enamel orchid.

Hoped to stay at Stirling Range Retreat CP but could not get a powered site.  Shopped at Denmark, a surprisingly upmarket town, very European, then drove to Mt Barker and on to Porongorup.  Checked in at the neat CP with talkative hosts, who pressed 5 folders of info onto me.  A bit daunting as we had to set up camp and I had to get washing done and dried. 



Sunday 28 September PORONGURUP

Spent 2 hours walking around Twin Creeks Conservation Area, heathland.  A 1.5m brown snake was curled beside a runnning drain but quickly disappeared at sign of a camera.  Only 15m further down, I saw a fat shingleback, Tiliqua rugosa rugosa, which didn't move anything but its eyes at our approach.


Many flowers in bloom, including:

Bossiaea ornata
Gompholobium scabrum
Anigozanthos humilis
Gompholobium polymorphum

Grevillea pulchella
Hakea sp.

Isopogon formosus

Kunzea recurva
Lechenaultia formosa
Petrophile divaricata

Synaphae petiolaris

 In the afternoon, we set out on the loop walk to Nancy Peak in Porungorup NP.  We were soon dismayed by the amount of weed understorey, just Hardenbergia and Scaveola flowering among bracken, deadly nightshade, cobblers pegs, and nettle-like plants.  Kept going up the steep path in the hope that the October 07 bushfire causing all this (we assume) did not reach the top.  One hour later at the top we found granite with moss, pigface, dianella, other small plants and a sign saying Hayward Peak - still had to conquer Nancy and lost interest in walking to an even steeper place.



Hayward Peak


View from Hayward Peak





No comments:

Post a Comment