On the Back Road to Tumut Holiday Tour By Leonard Ward, Motoring Editor 4 January 1968 The Canberra Times |
Round trip from Canberra of about 165
miles which is worth doing, although travel will not be fast because
of road conditions. There is an added interest to this
trip because the outward leg takes one over a route which soon could
be properly surveyed and made. This is the back-country road to
Tumut, which not only cuts off many miles compared with the
route via the Hume Highway and Gundagai, but opens up country
which will be needed to supply the growing capital with dairy pro-ducts,
vegetables and timber. Once a journey to be undertaken
only by the intrepid, preferably with a four-wheel-drive vehicle, now
- thanks to the activity of the NSW Forestry Commission - the
really difficult parts have been bypassed by comparatively new fire break
dirt roads in the pine and hardwood forests, and there is no
difficulty involved in covering the route at a moderate speed.
However, it would be unwise to tackle it in wet weather. The outward journey is along the
Cotter Road to the point where it branches, the road on the left
taking a sharp turn to drop down to the picnic area below the dam. The journey is continued along the
high road to a point in the mountains about 30 miles from Canberra known
as Piccadilly Circus. Here is the boundary of the Australian Capital
Territory with NSW and here also the road divides,
the one to the left going to Mount Franklin. The right hand road is taken down
the Brindabella Mountain. There are seven miles of this and it is
narrow, hard, stony and winding, and care is advised both for the
sake of car and occupants and the possibility of meeting upcoming
traffic; passing is difficult. On the left of the road the
ground falls away sharply into the lovely valley in which winds the Goodradigbee River, but so dense are the trees that
scarcely a glimpse of it is obtained until a mile or two from the
bottom when the whole valley opens out in all its grandeur. Concrete bridge The river is crossed by a solid
low level concrete bridge and then one is on the forest road, rough
in places but easily negotiable. It winds first through great
stands of messmate and mountain ash and then enters the pine forests.
Some 23 miles from Tumut, the
road surface changes to formed gravel for 10 or 11 miles and
then to a good bitumen surface for the rest of the journey to Tumut. The total
run is 75 miles. The return journey should be made
through Wee Jasper, about 45 miles from Tumut. Again a hard, stony road is encountered
and there is scarcely a straight half mile in it, but the variety of
scenery, from rolling grazing country to dense pine forests, makes it worth
it. Wee Jasper itself is at the
confluence of the Goodradigbee River with the
southern arm of the Burrinjuck Dam, and from it the road leads straight
through to Yass, but a clearly marked turnoff several miles from Wee Jasper
brings one back over a reasonable road to Canberra. The distance from Tumut to
Canberra by this route is about 90 miles. |