|
|
Tweed Heads Bowls Club
|
Tweed Heads
Major retirement centre on the border between New
South Wales and Queensland.
Although it is in New South Wales Tweed Heads
forms a twin town with Coolangatta
and together they sprawl across the NSW-Queensland border. Both towns
developed independently but by the 1960s, as the Gold Coast began to
expand, the line between the two centres began to blur. However,
whether visitors realise it or not, they are, in the summer, stepping
backwards in time when they pass from Tweed Heads to Coolangatta. This
anomaly arises from the fact that NSW adopts daylight savings in summer
while Queensland does not.
Located 862 km north of Sydney and 5 metres above sea-level,
Tweed Heads denotes the southern end of the Gold Coast proper - an area
noted for its surf beaches, night life and leisured lifestyle. The
combined population of Tweed Heads, Tweed Heads South and Tweed Heads
West was 22730 in 1996.
The Tweed Shire occupies an entire river valley bounded
by the ocean to the east, the McPherson Range to the north, the Tweed
Range to the west, the Burringbar Range to the south and the Nightcap
Range to the south-east. These formations represent the remnant of an
extinct shield volcano and its lava flow. The Tweed River meanders
through the valley before it winds its way up behind Fingal Head and
discharges into the Pacific Ocean at Tweed Heads. On the northern side
of the estuary is a high headland known as Point Danger and the
southern head is formed by the northern tip of Fingal Head. To
complicate the picture Terranora Creek, a wide body of water full of
islands, branches off from the river just inside the estuary and winds
its way through the settlement, dividing Tweed Heads from Tweed Heads
South. In all, the shire incorporates 34 km of coastline featuring
wide, sandy beaches punctuated by low headlands. Flagstaff Beach is on
the northern side of the river mouth and Fingal Beach on the southern
side (click here for more information on Fingal Head). Doppys Beach is just
inside the river mouth. To the north is Coolangatta Beach and to the south are
Kingscliff, Cabarita, Hastings Point
(which has a tidal lagoon for safe swimming), Pottsville and Wooyung.
There are plenty of good opportunities for recreational fishing.
Retirement is a considerable source of Tweed Heads'
notable population growth while tourism is the primary source of
income. There is also much commercial fishing in the estuary and the
hinterland produces bananas, sugar, avocados, tomatoes and vegetables.
Tweed Heads can claim to be one of the first resorts on the
Gold Coast and consequently its age shows in some of the buildings and
amenities. Unlike Surfers
Paradise (which also predates the postwar boom) it has not been
radically modernised.
The traditional inhabitants of the area were the Minjungbal
people who lived a fairly sedentary life owing to the plentiful supply
of food and water. They met with other tribes on an annual basis at
Bunya Mountain (north of what is now Brisbane) to hold corroborees.
Captain James Cook sailed up the Gold Coast in 1770. He was
nearly shipwrecked on Cudgen Headland and thus chose the expressive
names of Mount Warning and Point Danger for two local landmarks.
John Oxley encountered the estuary in 1823 while scouting out
a suitable spot for a penal colony. His party took shelter during a
storm in the lea of the 10-acre islet off Fingal Head. He called it
Turtle Island and named the river, in which he rowed, after a waterway
in northern England. In 1828 Captain Rous surveyed the river,
travelling about 36 km upstream. His charts describe the islet as Cook
Island, by which name it is still known.
A military post existed briefly (1828-29) at Point Danger (on
the northern side of the Tweed River estuary) to intercept escapees
from the new penal settlement at Moreton Bay.
Timbergetters worked the riverbanks for cedar from about
1844. Logs were floated along the creeks and the river to the estuary
although the bar rendered shipping hazardous until a breakwater was
built in 1902.
The cedar-cutters initially encountered hostility from the
indigenous inhabitants but the gun proved mightier than the spear and
by the end of the 19th century the Minjungbal had almost ceased to
exist .
25 men and three women were recorded as living on the Tweed
in 1846. The first permanent settlement emerged near the estuary in
what is now Tweed Heads South. Here the cedar-getters rendezvoused with
the schooners that brought supplies and took the logs off to Sydney.
The first European birth occurred in 1851. A shipyard was established,
a small store and an inn were built and a policeman appointed, although
there was very little growth until the 1880s. After much debate the
state border was fixed in 1859 with the creation of Queensland.
Shipping activity on the river led to the
establishment of a pilot station in 1870, a customs house in 1871, a
telegraph station in 1875 and the lighthouse at Fingal Head in 1878. A
provisional school, catering for six families, opened in 1876 on the
northern side of the estuary. Tweed Heads was originally called
'Cooloon' by European officials but popular usage won out and Tweed
Heads was the name by which the settlement was gazetted after an 1886
survey of the townsite. Land sales commenced in 1887 and, by 1892,
there were about 100 residents at Tweed Heads.
For many years timbergetting was the only economic
activity on the river but by the end of the century much of the cedar
was gone and the industry declined. However, agriculture and
cattle-raising had begun to develop on the river c.1866 when Michael
Guilfoyle took up 600 acres for the cultivation of sugarcane. He was
joined in 1869 by an MP from Kiama. A
basic sugar mill was built, succeeded by a proper mill in 1874 near
Tumbulgum. The arrival of the Colonial Sugar Refining Co. in the 1870s
proved a crucial moment. They bought up much land and subdivided it
into farms for cultivation of the cane. The industry expanded through
the 1880s and 1890s but a drop in the price of sugar, severe winters
and competition from larger mills caused a decline.
However, other industries emerged in the valley,
including poppy-growing, the manufacture of clothes lines and baskets
from lawyer vines and the making of rope from wild kurrajong. More
crucially dairying developed in the 1890s and banana cultivation from
1909. By the 1880s the beauty of the area had been recognised and
people started moving into holiday cottages. Some, of course, decided
to stay. The extension of the railway to Murwillumbah in 1894 confirmed it as
the centre of the district although it also provided a fillip to Tweed
Heads when it arrived in 1903. However, it was really postwar mobility
and the desire of people from New South Wales and Victoria to head to
the sun that made both Coolangatta and Tweed Heads popular resorts.
Neville Bonner, the first Aborigine to hold a seat in the
Federal parliament, was born on Ukerebagh Island, just inside the mouth
of the Tweed River, in 1922. A self-taught individual he worked as a
bush labourer, stockman, carpenter and settlement overseer. He joined
the Liberal party in 1967, was selected to fill a casual Senate vacancy
in 1971, resigned from the party in 1983 and became, for eight years, a
director of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. He died in recent years.
Annual festivals include the Wintersun Festival in June
and the Tweed Heads Harbour Town Festival in October. Markets are held
on the third Sunday of the month at the Police Citizens Youth Club in
Florence St.
Things to see:
Tourist Information
The Tweed Heads Visitor Information Centre is
located in the Tweed Mall, Wharf Street, at the northern end of Tweed
Heads. It is open Monday to Saturday from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. and
Sundays during School Holidays from 10am to 4pm, tel: 1800 674 414.
Gemstones have been found in the river gravels and throughout the
valley and the centre can furnish a gem fossicking guide. They can also
provide information about cruises along the Tweed River and Terranora
Inlet, local fishing and deep-sea fishing charters, boat-hire services
and houseboats. Accommodation and tour bookings can be made by calling
toll-free on (1800) 674 414.
Foreshore Areas and Boat Ramps
Despite its notoriety as a coastal holiday spot, Tweed
Heads' only contact with the ocean occurs along a 1-km stretch of
Duranbah Beach, which is popular with surfers. Thankfully, however,
state and suburban borders are entirely porous so there are many more
coastal recreation areas to the north (see entry on Coolangatta) and south (see entry on Fingal Head).
The area behind the coastline is also full of aquatic
recreational potential as it is shot through with serpentine waterways.
Just inside the mouth of the Tweed River, on the northern shore, is
Jack Evans Boat Harbour which is backed by Chris Cunningham Park.
From here the river swerves southwards between Fingal Head to
the east and, to the west, Ukerebagh Island (sandwiched between the
river, Terranora Inlet and Ukerebagh Passage), Ukerebagh Nature Reserve
and the Coolangatta Tweed Heads Golf Course, with an inlet known as
Shallow Bay forming the golf course's southern border. Access to the
course is via Soorley Rd, tel: (07) 5524 5545.
Terranora Inlet branches west off the Tweed River about
2 km inside the river mouth and Ukerebagh Passage, in turn, branches
off this inlet, wending its way down around Ukerebagh Island to rejoin
the Tweed River to the east. There is parkland on the northern shore of
Terranora Inlet and the southern shore of the Passage is also lined
with a thin strip of greenery.
Terranora Inlet passes under Boyds Bay Bridge into Terranora
Creek which flows past a series of islets and under the Pacific Highway
bridge before bending south into the capacious borders of Terranora
Broadwater. On the western shore of the Broadwater is Bingham Bay which
is lined with a walking/cycling track accessible off both Scenic Drive
and Peninsula Drive.
Cobaki Creek extends off Terranora Inlet in a
northerly direction. It passes under the Kennedy Drive bridge past
Lions Pioneer Park to the east and The Boyd Family Park to the west,
before continuing north into Cobaki Broadwater.
At the southern edge of Tweed Heads South is an
isolated lagoon known as Lake Kimberley, which is surrounded by a
cycling track.
There is a boat ramp and a jetty tucked up inside the
convoluted northern end of Terranora Inlet (off River Terrace) and a
boat ramp at Ray Pascoe Park, on the northern shore of Terranora Creek
(adjacent Kennedy Drive), with toilets, picnic and barbecue facilities
and a pubic telephone. Terranora Creek also has a ramp on its southern
shore (adjacent Dry Dock Rd) and another near the Broadwater (off The
Lakes Drive).
Woodlands Lakeside Golf Course is located at 399
Piggabeen Rd, Tweed Heads West, tel: (07) 5590 7194.
Captain Cook Memorial and Lighthouse
The Captain Cook Memorial and Lighthouse are
located at Point Danger at the end of Boundary St which denotes the
state border. The 18-metre memorial takes the form of a capstan moulded
from cast-iron ballast jettisoned from the Endeavour and recovered in
the 1960s. There are four supports that lie exactly on the compass
points. The lighthouse was the first to experiment with laser
technology but the experiment, which was carried out in 1971, was not
successful. There are picnic spots and a walk along the cliff-edge.
Dolphins can sometimes be seen out to sea. There are views of the
coastline from Surfers Paradise
to Byron Bay.
The Minjungbal Aboriginal Cultural Centre
The Minjungbal Aboriginal Cultural Centre is located
at the corner of Duffy St and Kirkwood Rd in Tweed Heads South,
adjacent Ukerebagh Nature Reserve. The museum, the art gallery, and
videos offer an insight into the traditional existence of the area's
indigenous occupants. The Minjungbal Dance Troup perform in an
amphitheatre for groups by prior arrangement.
A wheelchair-access nature walk passes through sections of
mangrove wetland before returning to a well-preserved Aboriginal
ceremonial bora ring whch was once used for the ritual initiation of
young boys into manhood and which was used ceremonially until 1910. The
ring and other localised relics formed the basis for the declaration of
Ukerebagh Nature Reserve in 1961, which has allowed the Minjungbal
people to rediscover and stay in contact with their traditional culture
and to maintain a spiritual link with their lands. The tourist and
education centre was established in 1988.
There are also picnic-barbecue facilities, a souvenir
shop selling Aboriginal artefacts and a kiosk. The Centre is usually
open on a daily basis. Ring for opening hours: tel: (07) 5524 2109.
The Tweed Maritime Museum
The Tweed Maritime Museum and Historical Resource
Centre is located in Pioneer Park, on Kennedy Drive, at West Tweed
Heads. The complex contains four buildings: the old Tweed Heads
Courthouse (containing historical records and a collection of
historical photographs); the Old Soldiers Hall (containing local
historical and mostly maritime artifacts and dioramas, as well as a
tribute to locals who died while fighting in war); the fishing shed of
local pioneers the Boyds (containing artifacts and memorabilia relating
to the family), and a refurbished deckhouse dating from the 1870s - a
portable form of accommodation hoisted upon the decks of ships..
Admission is 50 cents for children and $4 for adults, with
special arrangements for groups and schools. There are disabled,
picnicking and barbecue facilities, off-street parking, public toilets
and swimming in Terranora Inlet. It is open from 11.00 a.m. to 4.00
p.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays (excluding public holidays) and
1.00 p.m. to 4.00 p.m. on Sundays, tel: (07) 5536 8625.
Pioneer Country
Located on the southern shore of Terranora Creek,
Pioneer Country is a 300-acre privately owned beef cattle property that
has been in the present family's hands since 1892. It offers
horseriding opportunities and lessons, half or full-day farm tours
which include a tour through an underground opal mine, the family
museum, a mustering demonstration, boomerang-throwing, whip-cracking, a
bushwalk, a baby animal farm tour (with opportunities for petting and
feeding), an optional Aussie cooking lesson or non-riders, and a meal.
Group accommodation is available and the property is available as a
venue for weddings. Bookings must be made by 8.00 p.m. on the day prior
to any proposed visit, tel: (07) 5524 2632.
Parks
Chris Cunningham Park is
located on Wharf St. On its eastern side is Jack Evans Boat Harbour
near the river mouth. Ebenezer Park is located on Keith Compton Drive,
facing the inlet to Terranora Creek. Both have childrens' play
facilities. Ray Pascoe Park is on the northern shore of Terranora Creek
opposite Boyds Island (Kennedy Drive). It has barbecue facilities, a
playground and a boat ramp. On the southern bank of the creek is Dry
Dock Road Park. It too has a boat ramp and playground.
Razorback Lookout
Razorback Lookout is located at the end of Razorback
Road at the northern edge of Tweed Heads. It offers excellent views of
the entire district, including, to the west, Mt Warning which is the
remnant magma chamber of a volcano. There are picnic-barbecue
facilities and walks through the gardens and bushland.
Kingscliff
There are several tourist
attractions in the area which are located to the south and west of Kingscliff.
Fishing Charters
Tweed River Boat Hire is located on the Pacific
Highway at South Tweed Heads, adjacent Boyds Bay Bridge, tel: (07) 5524
3507. Cruises are available from Tweed Endeavour Cruises at River
Terrace, tel: (07) 5536 8800. Fishing charter operators are Sea Master
Fishing Charters (tel: 07 5536 5891) and Down Under Fishing Charters,
tel: (0408) 753 647.
Catch-a-Crab Australia operate half-day tours that include
pelican feeding, crab-trapping, yabbie pumping (tides permitting),
fishing, morning tea and lunch. They depart daily at 9.00 a.m. from
Terranora Wharf on Dry Dock Road. Bookings are essentail, tel: (07)
5524 2422 or (0418) 708 049.
| |
Tourist Information
|
| |
| |
Tweed Heads Visitors Centre
Tweed Mall, Wharf St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: 1800 674 414
Facsimile: (07) 5536 6151
|
| |
| |
Motels
|
| |
| |
Bayswater Motor Inn
129-131 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5599 4111
|
| |
| |
| |
Blue Pelican Motel
115 Wharf St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 1777
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Calico Court Motel
29 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 3333
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
City Lights Motel
35 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 3004
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Cooks Endeavour Motor Inn
26 Frances St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 5399
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Fairlight Motor Inn
91 Pacific St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 2633
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
Homestead Tweed Motel
58 Boyd St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 1544
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
Jack Hi Motel
Brett St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 1788
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Kennedy Drive Motor Inn
203 Kennedy Dve
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 9288
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Las Vegas Motor Inn
123 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 3144
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Matilda Motel
108 Kennedy Dve
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 7211
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
South Tweed Motor Inn
9 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 3111
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
The Dolphins Motel/Hotel
Wharf St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 1011
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
Tweed Fairways Motel
Cnr Pacific Hwy & Soorley St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 2111
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Tweed Harbour Motor Inn
Cnr Pacific Hwy & Brett St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 6066
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Tweed Pacific Motel
Cnr Agnes St & Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 3405
Rating: **
|
| |
| |
| |
Twin Towns Motel
21 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 3108
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
Hotels
|
| |
| |
South Tweed Tavern
53 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 3409
|
| |
| |
Apartments
|
| |
| |
Carolina Holiday Apartments
42 Boundary St
Rainbow Bay
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 8855
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Haven Holiday Apartments
40 Boundary St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 5112
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Panorama Apartments
24 Lakes Dve
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5599 8120
|
| |
| |
| |
Sea Drift Holiday Apartments
32 Boundary St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 8855
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Seascape Luxury Apartments
53 Bay St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 0300
|
| |
| |
Caravan Parks
|
| |
| |
Boyds Bay Caravan Park
Cnr Pacific Hwy & Dry Dock Rd
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 3306
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Colonial Tweed Caravan Park
158 Dry Dock Rd
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 2999
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Pyramid Caravan Park
145 Kennedy Dve
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 3666
Rating: ****
|
| |
| |
| |
River Retreat Caravan Park
8 Philp Pde
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 2700
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
The Palms Tweed Heads
112 Dry Dock Rd
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 2682
Rating: ***
|
| |
| |
| |
Tweed Billabong Caravan Park
Holden St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 2444
Rating: ****
|
| |
| |
Restaurants
|
| |
| |
Desmonds Restaurant and Function Centre
20 Frances St
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 7151
|
| |
| |
| |
Lucky Dragon Malaysian Chinese Restaurant
Panorama Plaza
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5599 8838
|
| |
| |
| |
Nicholsons Restaurant
129-131 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5599 4111
|
| |
| |
| |
Ocean Sky Chinese Restaurant
203 Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 4614
|
| |
| |
| |
Smokehouse Restaurant
Fraser Dve
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5524 2632
|
| |
| |
| |
Twin Towns Services Club Dining
Pacific Hwy
Tweed Heads
NSW
2485
Telephone: (07) 5536 2277
|
| |