| HEALESVILLE
is a small, pleasant town nestled in the foothills of the Great Dividing
Range. Collect information about the region at the visitor information
centre in the old courthouse building at the southern end of town,
just off the Maroondah Highway (daily 10am–5pm). Healesville’s main
attraction is the renowned Healesville Sanctuary (daily 9am–5pm;
free guides 10am–3pm if booked in advance; tel 03/5957 2800; 24hr
information line tel 1902/240 592 at 50¢ per minute; admission fee $14).
This
is a genuine sanctuary, established over fifty years ago to provide care
for injured and orphaned animals, some of which are then returned to the
wild; those that stay join the sanctuary’s programmes for education and
the breeding of endangered species. It’s a fascinating place in a
beautiful setting, with a stream running through park-like grounds, dense
with gum trees and cool ferns, and 3km of paths to follow past picnic and
barbecue areas. Many of the animals are in enclosures, but there are
paddocks of emus, wallabies and kangaroos you can stroll through.
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| Don’t
miss the excellent “Animals of the Night” enclosure (10am–4.30pm);
other star attractions include the aviaries (9am–4.30pm), a scary
Reptile House (Mon–Fri 9am–4.30pm, Sat, Sun & public holidays
9am–5pm) and a Platypus Display Centre (9.30am–4.30pm). The
informative “meet the keeper” presentations throughout the day are
worth joining: the raptors (birds of prey) at noon and 3pm are unmissable.
Just opposite the sanctuary, the Galeena Beek
Living Cultural Centre (daily 9am–6pm; $7) was built on the site of
what was formerly the Corranderk Aboriginal Mission. In the traditional
owners’ Woi wurrung language “Galeena Beek” means loving the earth;
the circular shape of the building symbolizes a meeting place. The
centrepiece is an exhibition about the history of Corranderk and the
Aboriginal people associated with it. There are regular screenings of
videos on aspects of local Aboriginal culture, and the art gallery sells
paintings and artefacts made by local artists.
Continuing north on the Maroondah Highway over
the Black Spur and Dom Dom Saddle towards Alexandra, the scenery becomes
progressively more attractive. Worth a brief stop is the Maroondah
Reservoir Lookout, just off the highway 3km north of Healesville, with
picturesque views across the forest-fringed dam.
There are very popular picnic grounds and gardens
in the park on the southwest side of the reservoir. Soon after the
reservoir, the highway meanders along bush-clad mountain slopes and enters
luxuriant wet eucalypt forest with incredibly tall mountain ash,
moss-covered myrtle beech, manna gum, tree ferns, gurgling creeks and
waterfalls. The Fernshaw Reserve and Picnic Ground is a good place
to stop and view the scenery. After the Dom Dom Saddle, 509m above sea
level and 16km past Healesville, the highway descends towards Narbethong,
where it enters drier country.
Three kilometres past Narbethong a turn-off leads
to scenic MARYSVILLE, 9km off the highway. A worthwhile detour, the
village is nestled in the foothills of the Great Dividing Range, with Lake
Mountain (1400m), a very popular area for cross-country skiing and
tobogganing, 20km further west.
In summer Marysville makes an excellent base for bushwalking,
being surrounded by wet mountain ash forests with many creeks and
waterfalls. The best-known, Steavensons Falls, can be reached from
the village by a walking trail or by road and is floodlit at night until
11pm. Just out of Marysville, the unsealed Lady Talbot Forest Drive
turns off the Lake Mountain road and then winds 46km through the forest,
past picnic areas and walking tracks (suitable for conventional vehicles,
though after heavy rainfall it’s best to check in Marysville for road
conditions). Return to Marysville via the Buxton Road, or turn right and
head straight north to Buxton where you rejoin the highway.
Further up, the Maroondah Highway passes the
drier Cathedral Range State Park, where to the west of the road the
mighty sandstone cliffs of Cathedral Mountain (845m) seem to rise almost
vertically behind the paddocks, overlooking the Acheron Valley. |