Sight-Seeing
in Tumut District - A Tourist's Impressions 20 June
1908 The Muswellbrook Chronicle |
Railway
accidents were in the air; murmurs and broken scraps of conversation along
the corridor of the car all hovered round the same topic. When the
mail drew up at Picton and the delay lengthened from minutes to an
hour, anxious faces were thrust out all along the train, but we
safely reached Cootamundra in time for breakfast. Changing trains, the 65-mile Journey to
Tumut was commenced. As
the train advanced, evidences of the dry season were apparent in the
waterless creeks, and the old gentleman in the corner informed us that
this was the worst season, experienced in the last thirty years. In the
vicinity of Gundagai, though acres and acres of magnificent
agricultural country were passed from which a bountiful return had
just been harvested, no large stacks of fodder or barns full of hay were
observed, so it did not seem as if the pastoralists took the dry
weather seriously enough to lay in any store of
reserve fodder. Indeed,
in one spot, an up-to-date reaper and binder might be observed
standing out on a bare paddock left where it was last used, its
gaunt fleshless arms raised as if in a deprecatory attitude at
the treatment meted out, and at another the only protection
afforded a modern stripper was that of a willow tree. The
train at last rattled into Tumut. This busy little town is set down on
the edge of a fertile plain, through which a life-giving stream
(that may indeed be called a river) rushes, surrounded
by protecting hills. That
this district is bound to play an important part in the history of
our development is obvious, for if the conditions holding at
present are below normal, it must indeed be a God-gifted country in
a good season. The
surroundings of Tumut are naturally pleasing, and careful hands and
an aesthetic eye have considerably enhanced nature. A
lovely vista of willow-lined river is obtained from the substantial
bridge that carries the Bombowlee Road across. A
clear, pellucid, never-failing stream is the Tumut here, where
rowing races might be held over a course a mile in length. On
the rich river flats, and further on the Lacmalac
and Brungle Roads, well-cared for farms, with their sound crops of maize
ready for pulling, stand shoulder to shoulder; here and there good
patches of tobacco leaf; everywhere well-bred dairy cattle; troops of
children hurrying along to the town school - all a silent testimony to the
closer settlement policy. A
few years ago these fiats pastured the stock of Bombowlee
station - to-day they are the heritage of a numerous population of
sturdy farmers. A
trip out on the Kiandra-road, up the West Blowering
and along the East Blowering Roads, returning by a
detour over the Tumut Plain, revealed further crops of maize, averaging about
50 bushels of the magnificent weevil-proof maize for which the Tumut
district is so famous. The
Chinese farms at the head of the Tumut Plain in many cases have
goodly-sized areas under tobacco; indeed, as in other parts, the
Celestial seems to grow more tobacco than the Australian. Streaming
through the slip- panel on one farm a little mob of medium-weight horses
was observed. These
animals were of the thick-set cob type, hardy and active, and will
no doubt bring a handsome return to the shrewd breeder, who is
keeping his eye on the rising horse market. Some
very fine crops and farms are found in the vicinity, of Gilmore. In places
here, as in other parts of the district, the young maize stalks have been docked
to provide feed for dairy herds, and the harvest seemed to be unimpaired
by the process. The
practice of cutting and stooking the maize does not seem to be followed. The
experiment might very well pay, as the maize ripens just as well, and
the stalks can be used as feed; the cobs, after the corn has been
shelled, may also be ground up to pollard, and one of the best
feeds for cattle and pigs will result. The
dairy industry is now an established factor in this prosperous
district, and some very fine herds have been bred up in the last
few years. At
the butter factory, in this season when the rainfall has fallen
below the average, the output is 5 tons per week, but twice that
amount is generally made. The town
has reason indeed to congratulate itself on the up-to-date management
and appliances of its butter factory. Adjacent
to the railway station stands the freezing works, where at the present
time about 220 crates of rabbits are treated per diem*. It
is an object lesson in itself to see the care and
attention bestowed upon the packing of the succulent bunny for the
English market. The rabbits
trapped each night are brought in by rail and road, and dealt with
the same day. With
lightning-like dexterity and never-failing eye the
Government grader handles each rabbit. They
are sorted into grades according to weight, damaged and light
weights being rejected. They
are then placed in a cool chamber for twelve hours and after wards
in a refrigerating chamber for three days. At
the present time 220 crates per diem* are packed, but as many as
4,000 have been dealt with in that time on one occasion. About
fifteen hands are employed in the works, while about 260 men are
engaged in trapping. Three
hundred pounds per week is paid to these workers by whose united
effort the plump Tumut rabbit appears on the Birmingham steel-worker's
table. The growth
of the export trade in frozen rabbits and rabbit skins is a
noticeable development of recent years, and is carried on principally
with the United Kingdom. In
1905 it amounted to £308,051 from the whole of New South Wales. A
visit to the Tumut district would not be complete without paying a
visit to the wonderful limestone caverns of the Yarrangobilly
Valley, and not least among the pleasures of this visit is
the journey - a distance of 47 miles. Setting out
from Tumut, the main Kiandra-road takes an almost due southerly
course for a mile or two, and then winds over a few foothills,
coming down on a level fertile tract. Away
to the left stretch the golden cornfields of the Tumut Plains.
About 7 miles out the road crosses the Tumut River, and admiration is
balanced between the beauty of the sylvan glade through which this clear
running stream rushes, or the magnificent farm lands, reaching as far as
the eye can see to the right, and continuing up the right side of the
Tumut to West Blowering. An
undulating stretch of road through sound pastoral country brings
the traveller to Talbingo, near the 23-mile post. A
holt may be made with comfort, and the trout ponds on the Jounama Creek inspected. Continuing
the journey, a sharp ascent is now made up Talbingo Mountain for 8 miles,
then over Cumberland Mountain, and
a descent to the Yarrangobilly River. Eight
miles and a halt from, crossing the river, and after a rundown of
3 miles from the Kiandra-road, the Caves House is approached
between two bluffs of limestone. Here a welcome is always assured from
Caretaker Hoad and his kindly family. The
Jersey Cave is usually inspected first. Just within the entrance a
heaped mass of fallen roof and broken floor gives a chaotic impression of the
cave, but as the visitor winds his way among the glistening
formations, bewilderment and ecstasy succeed chaos. The
shawl formation is truly wonderful; the size of the stalactites,
ringing like the notes of a good piano when struck by the guide,
Cleopatra's Needle, a stalagmite 18 feet 10 inches in height, the
inexplicable Mystery formation, the huge parsnips and carrots descending
from the ceiling, the columns, statues, and porphyry vases rising
from the floor, make an enchanted castle scene. The Queen's
Canopy is a glittering grotto that engages attention as the
strong magnesium beams search out and throw up in bold relief the
beautiful tracery and delicate colouring. The
Castle Cave has splendours of its own. Barely through the entrance
is the Wool Room. The
formations attain titanic proportions; in instances, stalactites 6
feet through depend almost to the floor. In this
cave, as in the Glory and Grotto Caves, the
face of the formations turned towards the entrance has a fleecy
appearance, caused no doubt by the disintegration of the limestone
deposit in the strong draught which circulates in these caves. After
passing by Parkes's Statue and the Rawson Shawl with its serrated
edge, through the Queen's Boudoir, the sightseer is admitted to the
glory of glories, King, Solomon's Temple. Standing
in majestic grandeur, this imposing mass of formation, dark in hue,
traversed by a dozen shades, with fringes of the most delicate and
slender stalactites, is frosted with a mantle of glittering white,
which throws back the light like a thousand diamonds. The
wonder-sight of the Glory Cave is the rightly-named Frozen
Waterfall. The
Grotto and the Harrie Wood Caves are also
wonderful sights. Not
the least enjoyable part of a visit to Yarrnngobillv
Caves is a plunge into the Thermal Spring bathing pool, always at a
temperature of 80 degrees, and a supper of delicious Murrumbidgee rainbow
trout after passing through the skilful hands of Mrs. Hoad. The
return to Tumut is most enjoyable, though made over the same road
as the outward journey. The ever-changing
panorama at every turn in the swift descent from Talbingo Mountain
is not to be readily forgotten, especially when the fertile valley of
the Upper Tumut spreads itself at your feet. *per diem = per day. |
The above
article appeared in more than a dozen other newspapers in 1908. Ed. |