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The steep roofs on the houses
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Cabramurra
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Cabramurra
Town
originally built for the people who built the Snowy Mountains
Hydro-Electricity Scheme in the 1950s.
At 1465 m above sea level (it's 503 km from Sydney via
Cooma and 102 km from Cooma), Cabramurra rejoices in the title 'the
highest settlement in Australia'. To call it a town is probably to
imbue it with qualities that the locals would like it to have but the
average visitor would be a little dubious about. It is actually a
construction camp which came into existence in 1951 and was known
variously as Ghent's Camp (after the SMA worker who surveyed it) and
Saddle Camp before Cabramurra (supposedly the name of an Aboriginal
camp on the Eucumbene River) was finally settled upon. The town is
owned and operated by Snowy Hydro Limited and houses Snowy Hydrošs
employees who work on the two underground power stations and large dams
that are in that area. Snowy Hydro is the National Electricity Marketšs
(NEM) third largest generator by capacity and is mainland Australiašs
largest renewable energy generator, accounting for more than 70% of
renewable energy production.
Cabramurra came into existence as a rough and
tumble construction town during the construction of the dams and power
stations. In those days the accommodation was simple and basic. Today
the town is a model construction settlement with new brick houses (all
of which boast an interesting roof design to ensure that the snow
doesn't settle), neat little streets, undercover shopping and amenities
designed to keep the workers happy.
Things to see:
Man From Snowy River Country
Cabramurra is said to be the highest village in
Australia and the township itself offers fine views.The area around
Cabramurra is typical of the image of the Snowy Mountains as created in
A.B. Paterson's The Man from Snowy River. The mountain sides are
impossibly steep, the gums reach for the sky, and the bottoms of the
valleys seem to be an eternity away. The descent to the spillway of
Tumut Ponds Dam, which lies below Cabramurra, is dramatic (access via
the Cabramurra/Khancoban Road).
Heading towards Khancoban from Cabramurra it is impossible
not to be struck by the vast stands of dead trees not only beside the
road but in the valleys and reaching to the horizon. It looks like some
horrendous environmental disaster. In fact the dead trees are the
result of a bushfire which raged through the area in the mid 1980s and
again in 2003.
Accommodation
There is no
accommodation in the town (nearest accommodation is at Adaminaby or
Talbingo) and the only eating facilities are those at the General Store
which does have a restaurant attached although the hours are somewhat restricted.