| Murwillumbah
is the terminus of the coastal branch rail line from Sydney (one
train daily in each direction), and almost all buses on the north coast
route stop here. The tourist information office on Alma Street
(Mon–Fri 9am–5pm, Sat 9am–4pm, Sun 10am–3.30pm; tel 02/6672 1340)
has information about the immediate area, and about several other
magnificent national parks and state forests in the vicinity. It’s worth
dropping by the Tweed River Regional Art Gallery on Tumbulgum Road,
by Nicholls Park on the river (Wed–Sun 10am–5pm; free). It displays
the winners of the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize, which originated
here, as well as the work of local artists and travelling exhibitions.
The Tweed Valley and the surrounding area close
to the Queensland border are among the most beautiful in New South Wales,
ringed by mountain ranges that are actually the remains of an extinct
volcano. Some twenty million years ago a huge shield volcano (a
flat, shield-shaped landform rather than a cone-shaped peak) spewed lava
through a central vent onto the surrounding plain.
Erosion carved out an
enormous bowl around the centre of the resultant mass of lava, while the
more resistant rocks around the edges stood firm – these are now the Nightcap,
Border and McPherson ranges, the outer rim of a vast bowl.
Right at its heart is Mount Warning (1150m), the original vent of
the volcano, whose unmistakeable, twisted profile rises like a sentinel
from the Tweed Valley.
A well-marked bushwalking track leads to the
top from a car park just off the national park access road, itself a
turn-off from the road to Uki, southwest of town. The path is extremely
steep in its final stages (allow at least 4hr there and back) but you’re
rewarded by a sweeping view over the ranges of the volcanic rim and across
the Tweed Valley to the Pacific.
There’s a less strenuous, signposted
64-kilometre scenic drive through the Tweed Valley, which takes in
some of its best features. A patchwork of sugar-cane fields and tropical
fruit plantations is testimony to the fertility of the volcanic soil;
there’s even a tea plantation.
Between the villages of Tumbulgum and
Duranbah, the Big Avocado lures the wild-at-heart towards Avocado
Adventureland on Duranbah Road (daily 10am–5pm; free admission, train
and bus rides extra), a plantation that grows avocados, macadamia nuts and
many kinds of tropical fruit, and has been turned into a miniature theme
park where you can ride through the plantation in open-air buses and
miniature trains, or cruise around on man-made “tropical canals”.
There are canoes and aqua-bikes for rent, an animal park and playground, a
restaurant and café, as well as a fruit market selling plantation
produce.
Slightly less commercial are the tours given during the
cane-harvesting season at Condong Sugar Mill, on the Tweed River
about 5km north of Murwillumbah (guided tours July–Nov Mon–Fri
9am–3pm; $4). The turn-off for the Tree Tops Environment Centre
(daily 10am–5pm; free) is opposite the sugar mill; the centre is the
home of Griffith Furniture, which creates beautiful designs from salvaged
native timber such as red cedar, using traditional timber-working
techniques that you can observe in the workshop. Halfway between Nimbin
and Murwillumbah, UKI is a pretty little village with views of
Mount Warning; there’s a small relaxed market on the third Sunday
of each month in the grounds of the Community Centre. A stall sells
locally grown organic coffee, or you can sample some at the Uki Trading
Post (daily 9am–5pm).
Practicalities |
| Places
to stay in Murwillumbah include the Tweed
River Motel, on the Pacific Highway not far from the train station,
but in a good riverfront location and with a swimming pool, barbecue and
playground; you can also rent surf-skis or paddles. You can make the most
of the countryside by staying in rural or farmstay accommodation. Midginbil
Hill Holiday Farm, is a cattle station 30km west near Mount Warning,
offering activities such as horse-riding, canoeing and archery. Forest
Hideaway Units on Byrill Creek Road, near Uki, are small, motel-style
units each with a double bed and bunks, fridge and cooking facilities, and
there’s a swimming pool.
Places to eat include the old-fashioned Austral
Café, an eat-in bakery on Main Street. Govinda’s Natural Foods,
at no. 91, is run by Hare Krishna devotees and serves exclusively
vegetarian food but with Italian, Chinese and other influences besides the
predominantly Indian flavour. The Riverview Hotel, 267 Pacific
Highway, has a passable, inexpensive bistro serving hamburgers, steaks and
pasta, with a verandah overlooking the Tweed.
Border Ranges National
Park
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