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The Big Bowl of Fruit
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Bilpin
(including Mt Tomah and Warawaralong)
Small town in the heart of a famous apple
growing area.
Bilpin, the name is synonymous with apples in the mind
of most residents of New South Wales, is a small town on Bell's Line of
Road 93 km west of Sydney. For most travellers Bilpin is the place
where, having driven from Richmond up to Kurrajong, gazed over the vast
Sydney basin, they stop at the Fruit Bowl and buy some apples or some
apple juice.
Although it may not sound like it, Bilpin is another place
named after Archibald Bell, Jr. who also gave his name to Mount Bell,
Bell Range, the town of Bell, Bell's Line of Road and Bilpin which was
originally named 'Belpin'. The reason for this enthusiastic desire to
enshrine Bell's name in just about everything is because, in 1823,
Archibald Bell, Jr, when he was only nineteen, crossed the mountains
along what was to become Bell's Line of Road. This was not a solitary
achievement. Sensibly he used the knowledge of the local Aborigines who
had been crossing the mountains for tens of thousands of years.
Although the mountains has been crossed at Katoomba a decade earlier,
there was still no satisfactory route through the mountains from
Richmond at this time. Bell reached Mount Tomah on his first attempt
but could not find a way across the mountains. On his second attempt he
followed the ridge across to the present site of Bell and from there
made his way down into Hartley Vale where he joined up with Cox's road.
In his diary Archibald Bell recalls that, upon his
return to Sydney, he reported the richness of the soil in the Bilpin
area (which inevitably led to the arrival of settlers eager to grow
fruit trees in the area) and the rainforest and huge tree ferns around
Mount Tomah.
It is no accident that the two major attractions on the
Bells Line of Road in the Bilpin district are gardens which capitalise
on the cool climate and the good soil of the area. Both gardens are the
work of passionate gardeners who gave their work to the nation.
Things to see:
Waratah Native Garden
The Waratah Native Garden, located 5 kilometres west
of Warawaralong (follow the signs off Bells Line of Road), is the
result of the work of Frank Stone who, apart from planting numerous
native shrubs, was particularly interested in growing waratahs from
seed. In 1967 he gave his garden to the Blue Mountains National Park
authority. When the native plants are in bloom the garden offers a rare
opportunity to experience the beauty of the Australian bush. It also
has a delightful bush walk through gullies to a waterfall and
waterhole.
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Spring rhododendrons in the
gardens at Mt Tomah
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Mount Tomah
Botanic Garden
The Mount Tomah Botanic Garden (now a Blue Mountains
section of Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens) is based on a geological
platform of 15-million-year-old basaltic lava. The first European to
tread upon the mountain, which was then Daruk land, was George Caley in
1804. The first land grant was issued in 1830 and the land was
purchased in 1934 by the French horticulturist Alfred Brunet. Brunet
developed the area as a cut flower farm then offered it to the Royal
Botanic Gardens in the 1970s.
In 1988, as part of the Bicentennial year, considerable work
was undertaken. The result is a beautiful 28-hectare site which
features an excellent collection of cool climate plants from around the
world, notably rhododendrons and conifers.
The Rock Garden features plants from rocky communities in a
setting which includes ponds and waterfalls. The traditional,
European-style Formal Garden is laid out in three terraces with herbs
and rose gardens. The 17th-century style Lawn Terrace is characterised
by manicured lawns and hedges and the Pergola Terrace is based on
19th-century herbaceous borders. The Residence Garden highlights
modern, domestic-scale landscaping while the Brunet Garden has
developed from the Brunets own personal formal garden with a
grassypark-like glade which is ideal for a picnic and mature trees and
shrubs. There is a superb residence and a visitors' centre which offers
information, displays, a theatrette, a shop, toilets, books, gifts,
souvenirs and wheelchair access.
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The view from Mount Tomah
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The balcony of the
visitors' centre affords one of the most spectacular views in New South
Wales. It would be easy to spend a day at these gardens. There are
picnic and barbecue facilities and the gardens are open daily from
10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m., with hours extended to 5.00 p.m. during the
daylight savings of summer, which is the best time to visit. It is
located 105 km west of Sydney and 12 km from Bilpin. To book guided
ecotours or to make arrangements for school or university visits,
contact (02) 4567 2154.
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Motels
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Bilpin Leisure Resort Motel
68 Powells Rd
Bilpin
NSW
2758
Telephone: (02) 4567 2117
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Cottages & Cabins
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Cut Rock Cottage
(Dog Friendly)
1516 Bells Line of Road
Bilpin
NSW
2758
Telephone: (02) 4567 8224
Facsimile: (02) 4567 8224
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Restaurants
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Mt Tomah Botanic Gardens Restaurant
Bells Line of Rd
Mt Tomah
Bilpin
NSW
2758
Telephone: (02) 4567 2060
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