Sought
to Divert the Murrumbidgee 6
February 1945 The Murrumbidgee Irrigator (Leeton, NSW) |
Our readers are all familiar with the
much discussed and debated project of the Snowy River diversion scheme for the purpose of Augmenting the flow of the Murrumbidgee
River for irrigation and hydro electricity. But it will probably come as a surprise to them
to learn that not so long ago a nice little scheme for the diversion of the
Murrumbidgee River into another stream for hydro electricity purposes, was nipped, in the bud by the Irrigation
Commission. The author of the scheme was the head
guide, Mr. Hoad at the Yarrangobilly
Caves, discoverer of the celebrated Jilabean cave,
said to surpass in sheer splendour anything to be seen at Jenolan or in any
other part of the world. Mr. Hoad has
lived for 40 years at the Yarrangobilly Caves and
has devoted his life time to improving the caves, making them more accessible
to sightseer by cutting stairways in the solid rock, improving the
ventilation, hewing out pas-sage ways and arranging the electric lights so
that they will show up the many underground wonders to the best advantage. When the Jersey cave was first
discovered Mr. Hoad and other guides had to crawl
on their stomachs for a long distance through a narrow tunnel before they
reached the great underground cavern's that are one glittering mass of
contrasting colours and symmetrical shapes and forms that no earthly ar tist or sculptor could paint
or carve. Mr. Hoad,
and another guide, Mr. Dunn, spent many laborious hours hewing out a passage
way into the caverns and putting down steps for the convenience of the
visitors. With regard to the diversion of the
Murrumbidgee River into the stream that flows through the Yarrangobilly
valley past the Caves House, Mr. Hoad's idea was to
augment the stream that at present supplies the hydro electricity with which
the caves are lighted. The Murrumbidgee river which rises
near Kiandra, which is 15 miles from Yarrangobilly,
flows within four miles of the top of the ridge overlooking the Caves House. Mr. Hoad
explained that the river is only 40 feet below the top of the ridge and it
would be a very simple matter to construct a race that would divert the
Murrumbidgee into the stream that flows through the Yarrangobilly
valley. When permission was sought of the
Irrigation Commission, it was refused on the ground that it would interfere
with riparian rights. |