Overland
Journey to the Ovens and Melbourne No. VI 31
December 1853 The Sydney Morning Herald |
The country about Wingello is rather
picturesque, and the land well adapted to the purposes of cultivation. It struck me that the geological
appearances here were more indicative of the presence of gold than at
any other place along the road we had passed. They are such as I had frequently
noted at Spring Creek and many other parts of the Victoria gold fields Long
sloping hills, literally whitened with fragments of quartz, and large granite
ridges present themselves in very tempting array to the gold seeker. Like all other gold seekers, however,
we were too intent upon our ultimate destination to lose any time in
giving the place a trial. The far-famed wonders of Reid's Creek
had only just then been revealed, and I believe that even if we had struck
upon a moderately profitable gold field here or elsewhere along the road, we
should not have been deterred from prosecuting our journey to the Ovens
so great was the attraction in that quarter. At the same time I do not think that
this was by any means a wise policy, as from my experience I am
satisfied that there are hundreds of places along the country over which
we travelled, where gold is to be found probably in as great abundance
as at any of the gold fields yet discovered. But until parties can be induced to
prospect and thoroughly explore these regions, it is not likely that anything
will be done in the way of actual discovery. At the usual hour in the morning we resumed
our journey. The road for the first three or
four miles was particularly good - a fact which we did not fail to
notice after the wretched travelling of the previous day. The next township on the road is Marulan,
a miserable looking place with only about half a dozen houses to
denote its existence. Were it not for one or two
public-houses, which have a rather imposing effect, it would be difficult to trace
any reason for calling it a town at all. At the time we passed, however,
it had every appearance of doing a thriving business. The stores and public-houses
especially were thronged with customers. The road on leaving Marulan passes
over a very hilly country, a good deal of which is remarkable for
beautiful and diversified scenery. This is particularly the case at
Towrang, where the road passes over a high mountain, and descends
through a deep cut into a finely grassed and comparatively level
country. On the one side is a series of
high mountains, thickly wooded, with numerous creeks and watercourses,
whence the beautiful stream of the Wollondilly receives its supply. On the other side is a fine open
park-like country, with numerous neat little farms and homesteads, bespeaking
an air of comfort and prosperity which we seldom saw equalled during the
previous part of our journey. Although you could occasionally
meet with a deserted habitation, bearing all the signs of premature decay,
yet there was not that general, that lonely and desolate appearance of
desertion, which in many other instances we found to be the only
characteristic of what were once well tilled and profitable farms. Even at the time I speak of there
was a considerable quantity of land under cultivation on both sides of the Wollondilly.
The green luxuriant aspect of the
land had a very pleasing effect, contrasted with the pure limpid
appearance of the stream. The place where we camped was on the banks
of a deep blind creek, which intersects the road at the base of the mountain.
It is passable by means of a
large wooden bridge, tolerably well-built when compared with the generality
of bridges in the interior. Although dry at the time when we
crossed it, the channel of the creek has every appearance of being
the receptacle of a large volume of water in times of wet weather. Schistose rocks and fragments of
quartz are to be found in considerable quantity in the bed and sides, as
also on the slopes of the mountain. On a broad woody flat, a few
hundred yards lower down, nestled as it were in the very bosom of nature,
is a neat little enclosure which upon examination I found to be the last
resting place of the older settlers and inhabitants of the district. The sight of a grave yard is at all
times a subject of melancholy interest to the contemplative mind, but
when met with in the wilds of a comparatively uninhabited country - where
"all nature dies and lives again," unattended by any of the arts of
civilization, the scene is one which awakes the sweetest and most
elevated affections. The next morning (February 24th) we
again proceeded on our journey, and in a few hours the beautiful
little town of Goulburn burst upon our view. We could see its red brick buildings
and the broad plains with which it is surrounded long before we had the
pleasure of entering its streets. The road for several miles before
reaching Goulburn is nothing but one continuous descent, so that the
township at the first glance has the appearance of being situated in a
very low flat country, wholly different from anything that precedes it. Goulburn is admitted on all hands to
be the largest and prettiest inland town in the colony, and so far
as my humble opinion goes, it well deserves the reputation. The streets, are
straight, broad, level, well laid out, and the houses for the most part
are neatly and substantially built, some of them are even beautiful in point
of architectural arrangement and design. The whole place has an air of
business activity which at once indicates the extent and importance of
the traffic of which it is the chief centre. It is, in fact, the great centre point
of supply for the whole of the agricultural and pastoral districts or
the southern division of the colony. As we knew there was no other town
along the road nearer than Yass (which is distant from Goulburn about
sixty miles), where we could make sure of getting supplies, we determined
to remain during the remainder of the day in order to make the necessary
purchases. We found the stores generally well
supplied with all kinds of stock, with the exception of maize and fodder
for horses. The former was not to be had at
any price, and the latter was so exorbitantly dear as to be almost beyond
the reach of persons with limited means. There was no alternative, however, but to
purchase, as we were told - what we afterwards found to be perfectly correct
- that nearly the whole country for hundreds of miles along the
line of road had been completely denuded of pasturage by the bush fires,
which we had already seen raging with fearful violence in different parts of
the country between Camden and Goulburn. Having camped at Goulburn all night we
resumed our journey in the morning as soon as we could get our things
packed. The road from Goulburn in the
direction of Yass passes over a fine open level country, highly adapted
to every kind of agriculture. The trees, which are chiefly box,
are proportionately very few in number and generally very large, whilst
the pasturage is abundant and of the best description. There is generally a good supply
of water, although at the time I speak of many of the holes were dry,
or the water in them was so impure as to be hardly fit for use. In the evening we camped at a
large pond, close to the junction of the Maneroo and Yass roads. The
grass about here was not very good, as is generally the case in the
vicinity of water holes where sheep are in the habit of being depastured. But as the shades of evening were
rapidly setting in, and as we did not know where to find water further
on, we thought it wiser to remain here than risk the chance of being
compelled to camp without water. Our only course was to give the horse
a double feed of oats to make up for the deficiency of herbage. |