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Timber footbridge over Yarra
River
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Warburton
Small
town in the upper Yarra Valley
Warburton is a quiet, attractive and rather charming
old goldmining town of some 2000 people set in a fertile green valley
by the Yarra River. It is located 76 km east of Melbourne via the
Warburton Highway and 159 m above sea-level.
Prior to European settlement the area was occupied
by the Woiworung Aborigines. When gold was discovered in 1863, a rush
ensued and a new town was laid out 2 km from the initial settlement and
named after police magistrate Charles Warburton Carr. It also
functioned as a service centre to goldfields further east.
With the arrival of the railway in 1901 the town became
a railway terminus and the salubrious mountain air and scenic
attractions began to draw Melburnians, resulting in the provision of guesthouses.
Seventh Day Adventists moved here from Melbourne
in 1904. They set up a printing works in 1906, a sanatorium and
hospital in 1910 and a health food factory in 1923.
Floods struck the town in 1934 causing a degree of
permanent relocation .
The Seventh Day Adventists, and their industries, are still
a strong presence in the town. A timber-milling industry has also
emerged on the back of the local forests.
Swimming, fishing, bushwalking, horseriding and birdwatching
are popular local pastimes and tobogganing is enjoyed on Mt Donna Buang
in winter.
Things to see:
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Replica goldmining
water-wheel at the Warburton Water Wheel Information Centre
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Tourist Information
Warburton Water-Wheel Information Centre,
Warburton Highway. There is an interpretive display detailing the past
of this goldmining and timber region. Volunteers are able to assist
with information on accommodation and tourist attractions. It is
currently open from 11.00 a.m.-3.00 p.m. weekdays, 10.00 a.m. - 5.00
p.m. Saturdays and 10.00 a.m. - 4.00 p.m. Sundays, tel: (03) 5966 9600.
Upper Yarra Arts and Entertainment Centre
The Upper Yarra Arts and Entertainment Centre in
Warburton Highway hosts art exhibitions, live shows and cinematic
screenings, tel: (03) 5966 5160.
Yarra Valley Showcase
The Yarra Valley Showcase in Main St features items
by local woodworkers and craftspeople. It is open from 10.00 a.m. to
5.00 p.m. from Wednesday to Monday, tel: (03) 5966 5544.
The Lilydale to Warburton Rail Trail
Warburton lies at one end of the Lilydale - Warburton
Rail Trail which allows you to walk or ride your bicycle or horse for
38 km along a clearly marked course following the route of the old
railway line which was built in 1901 to relay local fruit, vegetables
and timber to the Melbourne line (it closed in 1964).
The track can be subdivided into several sections which
can be walked singly or collectively. The first section heads west to
Millgrove (3.3 km).
It can be started at Warburton station (or you can, if
you wish, start at East Warburton and make your way along the cycling
paths, across the river and along the highway to Warburton). Beyond
Warburton it passes by the gateway to Yarra Ranges National Park, Tommy
Finn's Trout Farm and Mt Little Jo.
The Millgrove to Wesburn segment (1.7 km) is followed by
the Wesburn to Yarra Junction
section (3.4 km) which is a particularly attractive trek that crosses
the Little Yarra, offering fine views over the Central Highlands and
Yarra Ranges National Park. It concludes at the Yarra Junction museum ,
open Sundays and public holidays from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. (see entry
on Yarra Junction).
The Yarra Junction to Launching Place section
(2.2 km) cuts back and forth across the Warburton Highway and ends at
The Launching Place Hotel (parking is available between the hotel and
the general store).
The Launching Place to Woori Yallock section (6.4 km)
finishes at the Woori Yallock station which is in Syme Rd (close to the
Warburton Highway). There are parking and picnic facilities. The next
portion, from Woori Yallock to Killara (4 km), terminates at Killara
station in Sunnyside Road. There is a carpark and a picnic area with
horse facilities. The Killara to Seville section (3.2 km) is followed
by the Seville to Wandin section (3.4 km) which concludes at the Wandin
station, near the Warburton Highway. There is a carpark and picnic area adjacent.
The Wandin to Mt Evelyn walk (5.4 km), passes
through some damp fern gullies and remnant bushland. It ends at the
former Mt Evelyn station (now restored and used as a library) where
there is an adjacent picnic area.
The final section (5 km) is from Mt Evelyn to Lilydale. It passes through an area rich
in fauna (such as kangaroos and birds) and springtime wildflowers and
terminates at the corner of the Maroondah Highway and Queens Road.
For a map ring the Yarra Ranges Shire (tel: 1300 368
333). If you require more details ring (03) 5964 4842. Bicycle Victoria
can be contacted on (03) 9328 3000.
Walking Tracks
There are a very large number of outstanding forest
walks which radiate outwards from the town into the forests of mountain
ash (the second-largest tree species in the world). Many are scenic and
take in sites associated with the goldmining and timbergetting which
have been the economic backbone of the district. Some are outlined in
the pamphlets 'Golden Views 1' and 'Golden Views 2', available from the
town's information centre. The Department of Natural Resources and
Environment also puts out a number of brochures outlining other walks,
notably 'Yarra State Forest Walks and Drives', tel: (03) 5966 7203.
Only some of the walks are dealt with below.
Many of the trails follow the old timber tramways which
were built to convey timber from the forests to bush sawmills. They
often followed rivers as the gradient tended to be more even there.
Intricate trestle bridges associated with the tramways remain at river
crossings, as do some tunnels which were blasted through hills when the
gradient was too steep.
Horsepower was the mode of haulage until steam-powered
locomotives arrived in 1913 and motor locomotives in the 1930s. A major
forest fire in 1939 destroyed a good deal of the track system and many
sawmills but by that time road transport was in the ascendency and the
tramway were not used beyond the 1940s.
The sleepers and rails were made of local timber although
steel rails were used on the busier sections and eventually on all
lines where locomotives were introduced. The trees were cut with axes
and cross-cut saws. The logs were prepared then relayed to the landings
beside the tramway by big steam winches beside the track. Placed on
carriages they were taken to bush sawmills then along the tramway to
the main rail lines at Powelltown or Warburton.
The Ash Wednesday fires of 1983 devastated the
area, particularly at High Lead and The Bump.
La-La Falls
To access the picturesque La-La Falls, follow the signs
from Park Rd (opposite the Sanitarium Factory) along Old Warburton Rd
to the start of the track on Irruka Rd (about 1 km from Warburton). It
is a 3.2-km return walk through ferny glades and tall mountain ash
forest.
Big Pats
Two lengthy trails lie a short distance from the East
Warburton bridge. On the eastern side of the bridge turn right into
Riverside Drive. After 500 metres there is a left turn into Big Pats
Creek Rd. After about 2 km you will come to a tiny settlement and, to
the left, a picnic area beside Big Pats Creek, named after a local
goldminer of old.
This treed area has barbecue facilities and is the starting
point of the Walk Into History, the Upper Yarra Track and Richards Tramline.
Richards Tramline
Richards Tramline (7-km one way) heads east from Big
Pats to Braham Rd passing through the Mississippi Creek Valley.
The Walk Into History and Optional Extras
This 33-km, two-day walk passes through some
well-preserved sections of the historic timber tramline, past old mills
and other relics of the early timber industry, to Powelltown. A map of the area is
essential and there are some creek crossings.
The first section (9 km) follows the ascent of the Federal
tramway, built in 1933, from Big Pats Recreation Area to Starlings Gap.
The bush workers used to walk this section on Sunday evenings so as to
be ready for work at Starlings Gap on Monday morning. Some ran back to
Big Pats Creek on a Saturday for the football match. The two sawdust
heaps along the route mark the sites of two sawmills. Starlings Gap is
a good place to rest or camp overnight (there are fireplaces, toilets
and tables).
The next section (8.8 km) passes through the Ada River
Valley. 7.5 km along this route is a tramway junction which presents
three choices: (a) head north to the New Ada Mill (2.8 km return) (b)
head east to the Federal Mill (4.3 km return) or (c) continue south
along the Walk Into History to the Ada No.2 mill, cross the Ada River
and ascend to Doweys Spur Rd.
The third section (4.6 km) ascends to Doweys Spur where a
winch once hauled the log bogies to the summit. The track then drops
415 m in altitude over a distance of 1600 m on what is known as High
Lead. At the bottom of the decline it follows Big Creek (note the
myrtle beeches) south-east for 1.4 km. An option at this point is to
watch for the sign which indicates the start of the Latrobe River Walk
(8 km return) which follows the tramway eastwards along the Latrobe
River to the Latrobe River Camping Area where an overnight stay is a possibility.
If, instead, you wish to follow the main track,
cross the Latrobe River and follow it southwards for 1 km to the High
Lead carpark on the Powelltown-Noojee Rd. The sawdust heap is the only
remnant of the community of Nayook West which consisted of 150 people
in the 1920s.
From the High Lead carpark it is 4.2 km along the Latrobe
River to The Bump, a ridge which separates the Latrobe River Valley
from the Little Yarra River Valley. As the gradient was so steep a
winch was originally placed atop the ridge to haul the log bogies up
and down the highest point. In 1925 a 313-metre tunnel was blasted
through The Bump. It was sealed for safety in World War II though the
entrances are still visible.
The last section is a leisurely 6.3-km walk west along the
Little Yarra River to Powelltown.
Ada Tree Circuit
The highlight of this stroll through myrtle beech
rainforest is the Ada Tree (an ancient mountain ash) which is one of
the largest known flowering trees in the world. Thought to be over 300
years old it is 76 m tall with a circumference of 15 m. The walk starts
from the carpark and picnic area on Ada River Rd (12 km north of the
Powelltown-Noojee Rd). From the carpark follow Island Creek to the tree
and return along the same route. More information on this walk can be
obtained from the Warburton Waterwheel Visitor Information Centre,
telephone 5966 9600 or Dept of Sustainability & Environment at
Powelltown, telephone 5966 7203.
The Upper Yarra Walking Track
If you have followed the Walk into History from Big
Pats past the Federal Mill to the Ada River Rd carpark, you have
embarked on the first stage of the 81-km Upper Yarra Walking Track,
which follows the Ada River Rd northwards a short distance from the
picnic area before heading east again to Baw Baw National Park (there
joining up with the Alpine Walking Track, allowing you to walk right
through to Canberra).
Acheron Way
The highly scenic Acheron Way (36 km) starts 1 km east of
Warburton and heads north to St Fillans on the Maroondah Highway near
Marysville. The densely forested,
mountainous route offers views of Mt Victoria, Ben Cairn and Mt Donna Buang.
Rainforest Gallery
8 km north along Acheron Way, at the intersection
with Donna Buang Rd, is a spot known as Cement Creek where there is a
rainforest boardwalk circuit and a raised platform which allows
visitors to view the canopy of a two-to-three-hundred-year-old forest
at an elevation of some 30 metres.
Mount Donna Buang Scenic Reserve
If you turn left at Rainforest Gallery onto Donna
Buang Rd it will lead you to Mt Donna Buang (1250 m). The closest
snowfield to the state capital, it is a popular day-trip destination
with Melburnians. The main activities are tobogganing and sightseeing
(there is a lookout tower with excellent views of the Yarra Valley, the
Dandenongs, the Cathedral Ranges, Mt Buller, Mt Baw Baw and Melbourne).
Accommodation and toboggans are available at Warburton though they can
also be hired from the mountain. In summer there are lookouts, walks
and wildflowers aplenty. There is no public transport to the site. The
cost, in winter, is $5 per car per day. Ring the Department of Natural
Resources and Environment at Woori Yallock for further information and
reports on snow conditions, tel: (03) 5964 7088.
Barbecue facilities, toilets and parking are available at the
summit and Ten Mile Turntable. A 1.2-km walk joins these two points.
There is also a 3-km walk to Cement Creek which partially follows an
old timber tramway parallel to Cement Creek. Another 7-km walk follows
the ridgeline through some lovely myrtle beech groves and mountain ash
forest to Acheron Gap.
Ben Cairn
At Mt Donna Buang the Healesville Rd (or Ben Cairn Rd)
branches westwards. After about 7 km it passes a small carpark which is
the start of an 800-m walk to Ben Cairn (1041 m) from whence there are
outstanding views.
Mt Victoria Walk
A very steep and rather slippery 7-km walking trail
leads from a point just east of the Warburton Golf Club to Mt Victoria
(1106 m above sea-level).
Little Peninsula Tunnel Picnic
Ground, Big Peninsula and Upper Yarra Goldfield Walk
About 14 km east of Warburton on the Upper Yarra
Reservoir Rd there is a signposted turnoff to the Little Peninsula
Tunnel Picnic Ground. There are barbecue facilities and a short walk to
the Little Peninsula Tunnel which was created to alter the course of
the river in the goldmining era so that the prospectors could scour the
river bed. The Big Peninsula is about 3 km further along the road.
The Upper Yarra Goldfield Walk to McMahons Creek (12 km)
is a loop track which passes some remnants of 19th-century goldmining
activities, including the tunnel, some water races, open-cut mines,
mine shafts and small dams. The track starts a short distance west of
Big Bills Creek on Peninsula Rd where parking is available.
Upper Yarra Reservoir Park
The Upper Yarra Reservoir is located 25 km north-east of
Warburton in Yarra Ranges National Park. It is located in the Yarra
Ranges National Park. 1 km inside the park boundary is a Parks Victoria
office which can furnish you with information relating to the area's
walking tracks, such as the short Fern Gully Trail. There is also an
excellent lookout and a five-star camping ground, tel: (03) 5968 8566.
There is no boating on the lake.
Just before the turnoff into the park is the old gold
town of Reefton and the historic Reefton Hotel at McMahon's Creek.
Warburton Forest Drive
The Warburton Forest Drive (47 km) starts at the
Information Centre and covers some sites already mentioned in the walks
above. Follow the highway east, turn right into Kellys Rd just before
the bridge over the Yarra River, following Riverside Drive. Turn right
into Big Pats Creek Rd then continue south on Smyth Creek Rd to
Starlings Gap. From here you can head east along Big Creek Rd then turn
right into Ada River Rd, past the start of the Ada Tree Circuit Walk.
Alternatively, from Starlings Gap, continue on a short distance then
turn right into Blacksands Rd, turn right up Mt Bride Rd then right
into Brittania Creek Rd which follows an old tramway past Brittania
Creek Falls (the 'Brittania' was a small shack wherein a former
midshipman sold liquor in the gold days). Brittania Creek Falls Rd
continues on to the Warburton Highway. Turn right back to town.
Tours
Yarra Valley Winery Tours
offer personalised tours for travellers, social, business and
conference groups which include lunch, wine tastings at Yarra Valley
wineries, a pick-up and return service and an on-board tour host, tel:
(03) 5962 3870. Ballooning over the valley is conducted by Go Wild
Ballooning (tel: 03 9890 0339) and Balloon Aloft, tel: 1800 028 568.
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Tourist Information
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Warburton Water Wheel and Visitor Centre
3400 Warburton Highway
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 9600
Rating:
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Motels
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Warburton Lodge
18 Park Rd
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 2037
Rating: ***
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Warburton Motel
Donna Buang Rd
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 2059
Rating: ***1/2
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Hotels
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Alpine Retreat Hotel
Main St
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 2411
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Charwood Cottages at Warburton
2 Wellington Rd
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 2526
Facsimile: (03) 5966 2526
Rating: ****1/2
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Forget Me Not Cottages
18 Brett St
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 5805
Facsimile: (03) 5966 9177
Rating: ****1/2
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St Lawrence Bed & Breakfast
11 Richards Rd
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 5649
Facsimile: (03) 5966 5649
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Cottages & Cabins
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Forget Me Not Cottage
18 Brett Rd
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 5805
Rating: ****
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Hazelwood Cottage
Hazelwood Rd
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 9882 1760 or (03) 5966 9517
Rating: ***
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Yumbara Mountain Retreat Cottage
245 Hazelwood Rd
P.O. Box 167
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 5315
Rating: ****
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Lodges & Chalets
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Arrabri Lodge
Woods Point Rd
P.O. Box 21
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 2202
Rating: ****
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Caravan Parks
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Warburton Caravan & Camping Park
30 Woods Point Rd
Warburton
VIC
3799
Telephone: (03) 5966 2277
Rating: **
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