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Tea Time Antiques, the old
Aitken & Fullerton building dating from
1893
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Rutherglen
Important
wine growing district in northern Victoria.
Although Rutherglen is a former goldmining town it
is best known as the centre of Victoria's long-established and most
important wine-producing district. Fortified wines and dry reds are a
specialty of this region. Rutherglen's charming atmosphere is conjured
by the main street - an historic precinct with old timber buildings,
verandah-fronted pubs, antique and bric-a-brac shops and tearooms. It
is located in the easterly corner of the Murray River valley plains,
275 km north-east of Melbourne via the Hume Freeway and just 10 km from
the Murray River, which forms the state border. Aside from wine
production, tourism, wheat-production, wool, dairy products and stock
further buttress the local economy. The current population is about 2500.
The land around Rutherglen was once occupied by the
Whroo people, a subgroup of the Bangerang tribe who lived a life based
around the Murray River. It was estimated that there were 1200
Bangerang in 1841. Initially friendly to Europeans, they soon found
their food sources destroyed or driven out by clearing and the
introduction of European stock. When, of necessity, they turned to that
stock for food they found themselves subject to punitive raids by white
landowners. Reduced to dependency on handouts and plagued with European
diseases, dislocation and alcoholism, their communities were devastated
and, by 1860, there were thought to be only 60 Aborigines remaining in
the north-east of the state.
European incursions began when the explorers Hume and
Hovell crossed the Murray in November 1824. Charles Sturt explored the
Murray River area in 1829-30 and the first squatter took up land on the
river in 1835 at the future site of Albury. His beach-head encouraged others who
began spreading through the area from 1836. In 1838 the party of John
Foord set off from Yass with 1000 head of cattle, in search of fresh
grazing land. With his business partners, he established the
'Wahgunyah' run on what is now known as the Rutherglen district. By
1845 the whole area was taken up by squatters' runs.
Gold fever hit Australia in 1851 and local pastoralists soon
found a ready market for their meat at the Beechworth goldfields. From 1858, land
on the Wahgunyah plains was opened up for sale and farmers began to
take up land. That same year gold was discovered at Indigo, 11 km
south-east of present-day Rutherglen. In November 1858 Indigo had eight
hotels and 41 stores. By early 1859, 13 000 people were thought to be
in the district.
Then, in September 1860, the Wahgunyah rush, one of the last
in Victoria, started when a deep lead was found underground on the
present townsite of Rutherglen. The township of Barkly sprang up to the
west of the claim and it was soon followed by another 500 metres to the
east. The latter was named Rutherglen in October after the Scottish
birthplace of John Wallace, who set up the Star Hotel (the first major
establishment in the town)on the new townsite (Barkly is now part of
Rutherglen).
However, Wallace was but one of many traders who were quick
off the mark as there were forty stores and innumerable grog shops in
operation within a month. Argyle St (now Main St) and Elizabeth St (now
High St) soon became the major commercial thoroughfares of the
goldfield. The first newspaper was issued and the first postmaster
appointed in October. By November three schools were in operation and a
police camp was established.
By December 1860 there were 12 095 people in the
Indigo Division (comprising Rutherglen, Indigo and Chiltern). 1925 of these were Chinese.
A court of petty sessions was established at Rutherglen in
April 1861 and a Presbyterian church opened the same month. A survey of
the township was conducted a few months later and sites were reserved
for churches, a national school, public buildings, post and telegraph
offices and a cemetery. Rutherglen was declared a municipality in
September 1862. A brick post office was built in 1863 and St Stephen's
Anglican church was erected in 1864-65.
Despite this dizzying rate of development, it became
apparent early in 1861 that the gold was not going to come easily.
Production fell from 28 kg a week in mid-1861 to 21 kg by the end of
the year. The number of miners working on the Indigo Division fell from
6411 in January 1861 to 5070 in August, 3235 in July 1862, 1815 in
January 1863, 763 in March 1864, about 200 in March 1865 and 46 by
March 1867. The total population of the Rutherglen district declined
from 6600 in December 1861 to about 3000 one year later. The dry leads
were exhausted in 1866 and both people and equipment began to disappear
rapidly. Thus, in the June quarter of 1867, only 1.4 kg of gold were
produced.
This decline left Rutherglen without an economic base to
support the town's businesses. However, many of the miners stayed on to
take up rural industries, cultivating grains, vegetables, orchards and
wines which ultimately ensured the survival of Rutherglen. The houses
of these early settlers were mostly of split slabs and bark. Ploughing
was done with a single-furrow plough, sowing and threshing was by hand
and reaping by sickle with the grain shovelled into four-bushel bags
which were sewn up by hand.
Rutherglen was declared a shire in 1871 and, despite the
post-goldrush struggle, the town proved viable. Signs of some
confidence were evident in the opening of a National School in 1872, a
Bank of Victoria branch in 1874, a Catholic Church in 1875 and, in
1877, Congregational and Wesleyan churches.
The goldfields of the north-east were the main
market for local producers until the arrival of the railway in 1879
which dramatically changed local production by providing access to the
Melbourne market. This proved a considerable stimulus to the local
economy, contributing to a boom period in the last 20 years of the
century.
The boom was greatly enhanced by a substantial revival of
goldmining at Rutherglen which was sparked in the mid-1880s when the
Great Northern Mine was sold by its owners, who had given up after
finding nothing to a depth of 216 feet. The new owners, after digging a
mere two metres further, found a lead which was a metre thick and 15
metres wide. This became one of the state's richest mines, producing
107,000 ounces of gold. Returns (and the population) began to decline
again after 1900 although the industry struggled on until about 1919,
by which time the Rutherglen goldfield had produced a total of 24 156
kg or 1.58% of Victoria's total.
Another reason for the decline was the virtual
destruction of the wine industry by the insect known as phylloxera at
the outset of the 20th century. The first vines had been planted in the
Rutherglen district in the 1850s and a wine industry was under way by
1865. It had greatly improved by the end of the 1870s, by which time
wine was being exported to Europe, winning a gold medal at the Paris
Exhibition of 1878.
As with agriculture the enhanced market access provided by
the railway proved crucial to the wine industry which greatly expanded
in the early 1880s and flourished until 1899 when phylloxera was first
noted in the local vines. However, the reputation of local wines had
already been damaged in the 1890s as a result of action by the
Victorian government which tried to increase exports by offering a
financial bonus for every acre of vines planted. This led to the
cultivation of an extra 12 000 acres which was often poorly prepared.
The result was a huge quantity of inferior wine which reduced the
overall price.
Nonetheless, the industry did not disappear, thanks
largely to the Viticultural College which was established in the 1890s.
The college began providing American vine stock resistant to the
incursions of the American mite. Thus the industry struggled on and
began flourishing again after the first wine festival in 1967.
At the turn of the century agriculture was still of
small consequence to the local economy but with the help of the
Viticultural College (now the Research Institute) it too flourished to
become a major sector.
The Rutherglen and District Art Show is held at
Rutherglen Memorial Hall in March, Easter in Rutherglen in April and
the Agricultural Show in October. Events relating to the wineries are
listed under Things to See.
Things to see:
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The wine bottle water tower,
Tower Hill, Rutherglen
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Tourist Information
Rutherglen Visitor Information Centre is located
in the Jolimont Centre at 13-27 Drummond St, tel: (02) 6032 9166, or
free-call (1800) 622 871. It is situated in a building which was built
in 1886 as a winery and extended in 1946 and 1970. Tours of the
wineries, by bus or chauffeur-driven service, can be organised here and
there are mountain bikes are for hire. Over the road is a cairn
denoting the discovery of gold near this point in 1860.
Historic Walk
Walk south along Drummond St, through Rutherglen Park
and the Memorial Gardens where there is a war cenotaph, to Lake King
which was constructed in 1877 as a water supply for the town. A
swimming pool and jetty were built and the local rowing club practiced
here. Today there is a walking path around the circumference of the
lake which contains long-necked tortoises and plenty of waterbirds.
Walk through the parkland to the corner of High St
and Church St where you will find the town's original courthouse (1864
with 1905 extensions). Hearings were previously held in a leaky tent.
Over the road is St Stephen's Anglican Church which was
built in 1864-65. The turret is topped by a belfry with an open-work
bell cage. Extensions were made in the 20th century and, in 1984, all
the wooden parts of the spiral were replaced and exactly reproduced in
stainless steel.
Walk along High St to the Murray St corner where you
will see a 22-metre Moreton Bay fig tree planted in 1877.
Historical Museum
Turn right into Murray St. On the right-hand side is
the Common School. The first two rooms were erected in 1872 and the
school opened to students in 1873. Growing attendance saw a wooden
extension added in 1897 but, as numbers continued to climb, the present
primary school (adjacent) was opened in 1909 and the Common School was
remodelled for science and cookery classes. When Rutherglen High School
opened in 1962 the building was threatened with demolition but was
preserved owing to the efforts of the local historical society which
set up a local history museum display in the front room with a
Victorian schoolroom recreated in another. It is open Sundays from
10.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m. between October and June.
Historic Walk Continued
Continue along Murray St and turn left into Murphy
St. At the roundabout turn right into Howlong Road (the Murray Valley
Highway) and walk across the railway line. The railway complex was
opened in 1879 but is now used only for grain trains. The grain silos
were built in 1941. Walk along Howlong Rd a short distance. To the
right is the former Methodist Church, built in 1896 and closed in 1974.
It is now a private residence.
Continue along to the Hunter St corner. A cairn
here honours Lindsay Brown who took up the Gooramadda run in 1839 and
planted the district's first vineyard in the 1850s.
Turn left into Hunter St and walk along to the 65
000-gallon water tower which was built in 1899-1900 to serve as the
town's water supply until a new reservoir was built in 1945. Water was
pumped from the Murray. The steel mesh wine bottle was added to the top
in 1969.
Cross Hunter St then walk west along Culbertson St to
the High St intersection where you will see Mt Carmel convent, erected
in 1927 to replace the 1901 timber original. Over the road is St Mary's
School where a new complex surrounds and blends with the original
building which was constructed in 1900 as the church hall.
Walk along High St back towards the town centre. To the
left is the former Congregational Church built in 1877 and now the
Scout hall. Continue south along High St. To the left, just past the
Douglas St intersection, is a private residence built in 1891 which
once served as a bank.
At the corner of High St and Main St is the Star Hotel,
established at the very outset of the Rutherglen goldrush in October
1860. Its owner, John Wallace, named the new townsite after his
birthplace in Scotland (legend has it he was assured he had the right
to name the site if he shouted the first round of drinks). The present
building dates from 1902.
Turn left into Main St. To the left is Gollings Square,
named after the one-time owner of the Victoria Hotel. The post office
(1910) incorporates two rooms from the 1863 post office. Over the road
is the ANZ Bank, built in 1899-1900 as the Bank of Australasia.
Adjacent is the Victoria Hotel. The original was erected in Main
Street, Barkly (now Drummond St), in 1860, at the outset of the
goldrush. The building was moved to its present site c.1863 and became
one of the most popular hotels on the goldfield. It was rebuilt in its
present form in 1893-94 with brick additions in 1897. A two-storey
brick structure with rear wings and a large stable block, it has a
decorative rendered facade, a two-storey cast-iron verandah and an
ornate parapet.
Walk west along Main St, over High St. To the left is
the National Bank, built in 1896 as the Bank of Victoria. The plaque on
the building marks the spot of the first town survey.
Just past it is the Poachers Paradise Hotel, built in
1860 as the Golden Ball. It was renamed the Rutherglen in 1863 and
acted as the booking office for coaches bound for Melbourne and other
towns. The two-storey section at the front was added in 1924.
Slightly further along is the Shamrock Restaurant, built
in the late 19th century as the Cumberland Hotel.
Other Historic Structures
Winery Ruins
In Barkley St, just west of the High St intersection,
are the ruins of Vidal's Cellars and Brandy Distillery. Built in 1897
it distilled 78 000 gallons of wine into brandy. The company folded in
1925. There is an information board at the site.
Further west along Barkley St are the ruins of Netherby
Cellars, established in 1859 and the home of the first steam plough
imported into Victoria. These cellars were capable of holding 200,000
gallons of wine. The remnants of both cellars are on private property
but they can be seen from the roadside.
Gold Battery
At the corner of High St and Barkley St is a
roundabout. Turn into Hopetoun Rd which veers off the roundabout in a
north-westerly direction then take the immediate right turn into
Battery Rd which will take you to a 27-ton gold battery, built in 1908
and originally powered by steam. There is an explanatory information
board and it is still in operating condition.
Rose of Sharon Museum
If you continue along Hopetoun Rd a short distance,
you will pass the Rose of Sharon Goldmining Museum which is based on
the remnants of the old Rose of Sharon mine, established in the 1860s.
A guide will explain the history of the area, lead you through the
walk-in underground mine, and demonstrate gold panning, dolly pot
crushing, cradling and battery operation. A collection of old
newspapers, photographs, records, mining leases and memorabilia is
housed in a replica miner's cottage of corrugated iron with a bark
interior.There is also a self-guided goldfield walk (with information
boards) taking in a puddling machine, bark hut, crushing battery and
other mining displays. Other features are an iris garden, a restaurant,
barbecue facilities, a pit pony and even an ostrich. The museum is open
from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily (closed Christmas Day). The entry
charge, at December 1, 1999, is $4 for adults, $2 for children and $10
for families, tel: (02) 6032 8428.
Great Northern Mine
The Great Northern Road heads south off the Murray
Valley Highway opposite Sutherland Smith Wines, 5 km east of
Rutherglen. It leads by some mullock heaps (on the western side of the
road) associated with the Great Northern Gold Mine which was the first
deep alluvial mine in the district. Information boards on-site provide
historical details.
Olive Hills
Opposite Fairfield Vineyard, 11 km east of Rutherglen
on the Murray Valley Highway, is the grand old Olive Hills homestead,
completed in 1886 for Hugh Fraser who had been producing wine since the
1860s. This single-storey building was constructed of Flemish bonded
brick with oregon timbers, ornamental ceilings, marble mantelpieces,
large windows, wide verandahs and oak doors. A brick tower rises from
the centre of the building and there is an extensive four-room basement
which was used as a summer refuge. Fraser was ruined by the financial
crash of the 1890s and sold up in 1897. There is an information board
at the site.
Mount Ophir Estate
Mount Ophir is an extensive brick winery complex which was
built between 1891 and 1903 by absentee English landlords, the
Burgoynes. It is classified by the National Trust. The restored
homestead features very unusual curved gables and arched openings.
There is also a three-storey tower with a conical roof, a gatehouse, a
building where the yeasts were once fermented for winemaking and a
two-storey brick cellar which was excavated into the side of a hill.
From 1891 until 1957, when the winery closed, the estate exported 600
000 gallons of wine to England. Today the estate is a 140-acre organic
farm with emus and elks. It offers bed-and-breakfast accommodation in
the homestead, gatehouse, tower and yeast house. There is an
information board at the site. The estate is located in Stillards Lane
which runs off the Rutherglen-Chiltern Rd 6 km south-east of
Rutherglen, tel: (02) 6032 8920.
The Muscat Trail
The Muscat Trail is a cycling tour of the district
which takes in historic points of interest such as Netherby Cellars,
Campbells Winery (established 1870), Buller's Bird Park, Lake
Moodemere, Carlyle Cemetery (established 1865), the Pioneer Cemetery
(established 1859), the Mass Tree, the John Foord Bridge (1892), All
Saints Winery (established in 1864), Carlyle Community Hall, Vidal's
Cellars and Brandy Distillery, the Gold Battery and the Rose Of Sharon
goldmining site (1860s).
Wineries - General Remarks, Events and Tours
Robust fortified wines and dry reds matured in oak
casks are a specialty of the region. Many of the grape varieties are
low-yielding and high quality. The vineyards are sited on well-drained
river flats and rely on natural rainfall rather than irrigation. Some
of the wineries date back to the 19th century and so have historic
features. Some are still run by the descendants of the original owners.
The Tastes of Rutherglen Gourmet Getaway unfolds over
ten days at the district's wineries in March, the Winery Walkabout is
held on the Queen's Birthday weekend in June at the local wineries and
in Rutherglen's main street. The Rutherglen Wine Show occurs in
September and the Rutherglen Tour de Muscat cycling weekend is held in
November.
Several companies offer different ways of exploring the more
than twenty vineyards in the area, via stretch limousine (ring 02 6032
9588 or 6032 9572), twin-seater Moto Guzzi trike (02 6032 9390) or
air-conditioned coach (02 6032 9224).
Wineries
Chambers Rosewood Winery
Chambers Winery is located in Barkley St on the
northern side of town. This is a fifth-generation family business
started by William Chambers who planted his first vines in 1859 and is
open Monday to Saturday from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. and on Sundays from
10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. (closed Christmas Day, Anzac Day and Good
Friday). There are picnic and playground facilities and a barbecue can
be arranged, tel: (02) 6032 8641.
West of Town
Campbells Winery
Campbells is a fourth-generation family affair
established in 1870 by John Campbell. There is a self-guided tour of
the winery (the cellars date from 1885), displays of antique equipment
and museum memorabilia. They are open daily from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
except on Sundays and Anzac Day when they open at 10.00 a.m. (closed
Christmas Day and Good Friday). Campbells Wine & Food Celebration is
held at the winery at the end of October. It is located 3 km west of
the town centre on the Murray Valley Highway. There is a picnic area
with playground and barbecue facilities, tel: (02) 6032 9458.
Stanton and Killeen Wines
Stanton and Killeen Wines is a sixth-generation
business. Timothy Stanton planted his first vines in 1875 although the
business eventually folded in the 1930s. The family retained the
property and the vineyard was re-established in 1968 by Norman Killeen
who married into the Stanton family. They are open daily from 9.00 a.m.
to 5.00 p.m. except on Sundays and Anzac Day when they open at 10.00
a.m. (closed Christmas Day and Good Friday). To get there head west
along the Murray Valley Highway for 2 km and turn right into Jacks
Road. There are picnic and barbecue facilities, tel: (02) 6032 9457.
Bullers Calliope Vineyard and Bird Park
Bullers, established in 1921, is a dry-land vineyard
which produces a wide range of full-bodied table and dessert wines,
sherries and muscats. The cellar door is open daily from 9.00 a.m. to
5.00 p.m. except on Sundays and Anzac Day when they open at 10.00 a.m.
(closed Christmas Day and Good Friday).
Also on the grounds is Buller's Bird Park, which contains
over 100 native and exotic species, and a fine garden which has evolved
over 40 years. There are picnic and barbecue facilities. To get there
head west of the Murray Valley Highway for 5 km then turn right into
Three Chain Rd (towards Wangaratta)
and it is 1 km along here to the left, tel: (02) 6032 9660.
Lake Moodemere Vineyards
Located on the banks of Lake Moodemere this
vineyard offers gourmet barbecue packs (with prior notice) and
90-minute walks around the lake. Buses are welcome by prior
arrangement. They are open weekends and public holidays from 10.00 a.m.
to 5.00 p.m. and, on Mondays and Fridays from 10.00 a.m. to 3.30 p.m.
(closed Christmas Day, Boxing Day and Good Friday). The vineyard is on
McDonalds Rd, tel: (02) 6032 9449.
Warrabilla Wines
Warrabilla, established in 1990, has an
air-conditioned central building with a wood stove. There are also
picnic, barbecue and playground facilities. It is open from 10.00 a.m.
to 5.00 p.m. daily and is located on the Murray Valley Highway 18 km
west of Rutherglen, tel: (02) 6035 7242.
Eastern Side of Town
Jones Winery
This is the smallest winery in the district, utilising
traditional techniques, including fermentation in the original open
wooden vats installed in the 19th century. The winery was built in 1860
by Fritz Ruhe (the property was purchased by the Jones family in 1927)
and the original bark roof is intact. This was the first winery in the
district to be hit by phylloxera.
The cellar door is open Thursday to Sunday and
public holidays from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. It is located in Jones Rd
which heads south off the Murray Valley Highway at the eastern edge of
town, tel: (02) 6032 8496.
Anderson Winery
Anderson Winery is a small family winery specialising
in premium methode champenoise and still table wines produced entirely
on the premises. The winery has used unique 'above-ground' cellar
construction and traditional equipment imported from France. It is open
daily from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. (closed Christmas Day, Boxing Day
and Good Friday) and is located on Chiltern Rd about 2 km south-east of
town, tel: (02) 6032 8111.
Sutherland Smith Wines
Sutherland Smith Wines, established in 1864 and
reopened in 1993, is run by George S. Smith of the fourth-generation
winemaking family who operated All Saints Winery from 1864 to 1988. The
cellar door is open on weekends and public holidays from 10.00 a.m. to
5.00 p.m. It opens at 11.00 a.m. every Friday and on weekdays during
Victorian school holidays and is located in Falkiners Rd, just off the
Murray Valley Highway 7 km east of town, tel: (02) 6032 8177.
Mount Prior Vineyard
The Mount Prior vineyards were established in 1860.
They closed just before the First World War and were re-established in
the mid-1970s. The cellar door is open from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
every day but Sunday when it opens at 10.00 a.m. From the tasting area
you can view the underground cellars.
Accommodation is available at 'The House' (1880) and the
award-winning restaurant offers dinner on seven nights a week and
lunches on weekends. There are also barbecue and picnic facilities and
a petanque court. To get there follow High St north to the roundabout
and turn right into Barkley St then veer left into Gooramadda Rd which
heads north-east to Howlong Rd (aka River Rd). The vineyard is on
Howlong Rd 14 km from Rutherglen, tel: (02) 6026 5591.
Fairfield Vineyard
Fairfield Vineyard was established by George Morris
in 1859. In 1894 it was the largest vineyard in the Southern Hemisphere
with 700 acres under vines, a storage capacity of 1 million gallons and
120 Chinese employees. The vineyard was re-established in 1973 and
produces wines made in the traditional manner with original equipment.
Fairfield House is an historic 21-room Italianate
mansion with ballroom built in 1889 and restored in 1975. It isn open
to the public on the Sunday of the Queen's Birthday weekend from 11.00
a.m. to 4.00 p.m. There are other historic buildings.
The cellar door is open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from
from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m., Saturdays from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
and sometimes on Sundays. It is located on the Murray Valley Highway 13
km east of Rutherglen, tel: (02) 6032 9381. There are picnic and
barbecue facilities and an information board on-site.
Morris Wines
Morris Wines have a glass-walled, air-conditioned
tasting pavilion within the 19th-century cellars. The vineyard was
established in 1859 and replanted from 1918 after the phylloxera
invasion. Morris's has a reputation for fortified wines and
full-flavoured reds. There are picnic and barbecue facilities.
The cellar door is open daily from 9.00 a.m. to
5.00 p.m. except on Sundays when they open at 10.00 a.m. (closed
Christmas Day and Good Friday). To get there head east along the Murray
Valley Highway for 16 km then turn left into Mia Mia Rd, tel: (02) 6026 7303.
Gehrig Estate
Gehrig's, established in 1858, is Victoria's oldest
continuously-operating winery. Being located near the river they
utilised the paddlesteamer trade to supply Melbourne and Sydney. There
is a gourmet courtyard restaurant, along with picnic, barbecue and
playground facilities.
Barnawatha House, completed in 1870 and built of clay bricks
formed and fired on the property, features a three-storey belltower
which overlooks a citrus and walnut grove where there is a display of
historical farming implements.
The cellar door is open daily from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
except on Sundays when they open at 10.00 a.m. There is a display of
winemaking equipment. The restaurant is open Thursday to Sunday and
every day in the Victorian school holidays from midday (both are closed
on Christmas Day and Good Friday). Gehrig's is located at the corner of
the Murray Valley Highway and Howlong Rd, 21 km east of Rutherglen,
tel: 02 6026 7296.
Lake Moodemere
Lake Moodemere is a former Aboriginal camp. One of their
leaders, Tommy McCrae, was a noted artist who camped on its shores and
recorded its beauty for posterity. He died in 1901 and was buried on
the lake shore.
The lake's windless qualities have given rise to the
state's oldest continuously operating rowing regatta (on New Year's
Day) which started in 1866. Although a natural lake it is connected by
a pipe and valve system to the Murray River for the occasional top-up.
Moodemere has many waterbirds, particularly black
swans and pelicans. There are picnic, barbecue and toilet facilities
and plenty of fishing, boating, waterskiing, rowing and swimming
opportunities. To get there head west along the Murray Valley Highway
for 6 km and take the signposted turnoff on the right.
Camel Treks
Linbrae Camel Farm Wine and River Treks undertake
explorations of the district by camel, tel: (02) 6026 3452.
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Tourist Information
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Rutherglen Visitor Information Centre
13-27 Drummond St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9166, 1800 622 871
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Motels
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Motel Woongarra
Cnr Drummond & Main Sts
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9588
Facsimile: (02) 6032 9951
Email: woongarra@iinet.net.au
Rating: ***1/2
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Poachers Paradise Hotel
97 Murray Rd
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 7373
Facsimile: (02) 6032 7374
Email: motel@poachersparadise.com.au
Rating: ****
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Rutherglen Motor Inn
10 Moodemere St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9776
Rating: ***
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Star Motel Rutherglen
Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9625
Rating: ***
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Walkabout Motel
15 Moodemere St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9572
Facsimile: (02) 6032 8187
Email: walkaboutmotel@netc.net.au
Rating: ****
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Wine Village Motor Inn
217 Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9900
Rating: ****
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Hotels
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Poachers Paradise Hotel & Wine Bar
120 Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9502
Facsimile: (02) 6032 7374
Email: poachersparadise@bigpond.com
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Star Hotel Rutherglen
Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9625
Rating: *
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Victoria Hotel
90 Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8610
Rating: **
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Bank Inn
80 Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 7231
Facsimile: (02) 6032 7133
Email: bankinn@visitrutherglen.com.au
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Cannobie Country House
Jacks Rd
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9524
Facsimile: (02) 6032 9524
Email: elliott@netc.com.au
Rating: ****
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Greenmount Bed & Breakfast
Mia Mia Rd
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6026 7237
Rating: ***
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Holroyd Bed & Breakfast
28 Church St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8218
Email: holroyd@netc.net.au
Rating: ***
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Lake Moodemere Homestead Lakeside Bed & Breakfast
Cnr Murray Valley Hwy & Moodemere Rd
P.O. Box 17
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8650
Rating: ****
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Mount Ophir Bed & Breakfast
Mount Ophir Stillards Lane
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8920 or 015 480 477
Rating: ***
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Renaissance Farm
RMB 1740 Boorhaman East Rd
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6035 7216 or (0438) 357 216
Email: funnos@albury.net.au
Rating: ***
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Caravan Parks
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Rutherglen Caravan Park
72 Murray St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8577 or (0407) 334 038
Facsimile: (02) 6032 8533
Email: caravans@grapevinegetaways.com.au
Rating: **
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Restaurants
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Cafe Shamrock, Restaurant & Wine Bar
121 Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8439
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Cottages & Cabins
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Cuddle Doon Cottages
9-13 Hunter St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 7107
Email: accommodation@netc.net.au
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Madeira Cottage
2 Murphy St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (0411) 085 135 or (0429) 809 584
Facsimile: (03) 9387 8860
Email: neilstaylor@ozemail.com.au
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Restaurants
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"Mount Ophir Estate" Restaurant
Stillards Lane
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8920
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Rendezvous Courtyard Restaurant
Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9114
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Rutherglen Eastern Palace Restaurant
Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9522
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Star Motel/Hotel Rutherglen
Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9625
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Cottages & Cabins
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Syrah Cottage
1A Murphy St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (0411) 085 135 or (0429) 809 584
Facsimile: (03) 9387 8860
Email: neilstaylor@ozemail.com.au
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Restaurants
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The House at Mount Prior
Howlong Rd
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6026 5256
Facsimile: (02) 6026 5601
Email: clique@cliquerendezvous.com
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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The House at Mount Prior
Howlong Rd
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6026 5256
Facsimile: (02) 6026 5601
Email: clique@cliquerendezvous.com
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Restaurants
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Tuileries Restaurant Rutherglen
Drummond St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9033
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Victoria Hotel
90 Main St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 8610
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Cottages & Cabins
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Walkabout Motel Self-Contained Cottages
15 Moodemere St
Rutherglen
VIC
3685
Telephone: (02) 6032 9572
Email: walkaboutmotel@netc.net.au
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