Motorcyclists
Ride To Mountains & Visit Yarrangobilly
Caves 16
September 1949 The Murrumbidgee Irrigator (Leeton) |
Last Friday night a party of eight
Leeton motor cyclists set off for a week-end tour of the mountain
country near Yarrangobilly Caves and Mt. Talbingo. The party comprised of Kevin Ashton,
Roy Butcher, Sid Davis, Charlie and Jim Hockey, Alf Johnson, Jack and
Bill Washington. The trip from Leeton to Tumut was
uneventful and the party camped for the night at the foot of Mt.
Talbingo. On the Saturday morning the party
rode to the Yarrangobilly Caves where they spent
the day inspecting the world-famed caves and swimming in the luke-warm thermal pool. The Saturday night was spent at the
foot of Talbingo and on Sunday the party travelled home to Leeton. The Talbingo climb, recognised as one
of the stiffest in Australia, embraces two mountains. The road winds around the first
mountain until a panoramic view of the Tumut river valley is spread
out, Talbingo village nestling immediately below the road and the
slopes of the mountains on either side of the valley dotted with small
farm houses. The road then winds onto the
other side of the mountain and crosses a ridge onto the second mountain.
From here the Buddong
Falls can be seen on the right, a silver strip of water, falling over
a sheer rock face on the opposite mountain, while on the left, ranges of
mountains stretch as far as the eye can see. The road continues to climb until the
Cumberland Ridge is reached, 3900 feet, and from here on follows
the ridge for a few miles, through typical snow country, clad in
gnarled and twisted snow gums, with small brown bushes growing in
profusion on the ground. The mountainous terrain soon
flattens out somewhat and Yarrangobilly
village is reached, a small hamlet scattered along the banks of a snowfed creek. The road continues to drop rapidly from
here, on into the caves valley. As it rounds a bend on the last peak before
the caves, the Caves House can be seen through a clearing in the trees,
set against a rugged background of bare rock cliffs. Behind the Caves House, the road to
Kiandra and onto the coast, leads through a cutting in what appeared to have been
a wall of rock. On either side of the
road, rocky crags jut out, rising to a height of nearly a hundred feet. It is through this natural gate way
and around on the other side of the mountain, that the caves entrances
are located, while the caves themselves run through the mountain facing
the caves house. The party visited the Jillebenan Cave, the smallest and oldest of the four
caves. On account of its great age, it
is infinitely more beautiful than the other three caves, each winding in
its pas- sages revealing a scene of breath taking beauty. A feature of this cave is the
coral-like formation on the stalactites, which shows that the cave
was submerged in water, many thousands of years after it was originally
formed. Another feature of the cave is
the great amount of a stalactite formation known as mysteries, which
have baffled scientists since their discovery. These small stalactites have
defied the laws of gravity and instead of growing down wards, with
the steady accumulation of limestone, they
branch off horizon tally, and even grow upwards again. This cave was only discovered in 1910
and for this reason has retained its natural colour to a greater extent than
the other caves at Yarrangobilly or the Jenolan
Caves. A theory has been put forward
regarding the formation of these caves, that at
one time a river, probably the Murrumbidgee, flowed through the valley
until a volcanic eruption threw a wall of rock across the mouth of the
valley. With its natural path blocked, the
river seeped through the mountain side, washing away the soft stone and
forming large caverns. The course of the river was later changed
and the gap in the rock wall formed by another volcanic eruption and
during the years the limestone formations have formed in the caverns,
excavated by the water. On the return trip the party rode along
the Kiandra road as far as Bullock's Hill, where a few small patches
of snow still remained. When the same party had made a
trip to this country a few weeks previously, the snow had been lying
feet deep on the ground from the Cumberland ridge to the Caves
House. However the recent heavy rains
had melted most of the snow, leaving only a few patches on the
higher and more sheltered peaks. A short way from Bullock's Hill on the
return trip is Rules Point, on Kelly's Plains, where the Yarrangobilly ski run is situated. It is on these plains that the
Murrumbidgee river rises, a crystal clear creek, a few feet wide, fed by
countless trickling streams from the mountains on either side of Kelly's
plains. |