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The Finke River winds through
Glen Helen
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Glen Helen
(including Ormiston Gorge and Pound National Park)
One of the most beautiful gorges in Central Australia.
Glen Helen is located 133 km west of Alice Springs
at the end of the sealed section of road known as Namatjira Drive. No
one knows who named the region but it was one of the first pastoral
leases in Central Australia. The first owner, Alan Braeden, overlanded
stock over 2000 km and built a house, Munga Munga, on the bank of
Ormiston Creek. It is now nothing more than a pile of rubble.
Today the term Glen Helen is applied to the lodge, the
gorge near the lodge and the surrounding 368 hectare Nature Park
controlled by the Conservation Commission of the Northern Territory.
The Glen Helen Gorge is formed from quartzite.
Sandstone was deposited in the area some 500 million years ago when it
was a huge inland sea. It was subsequently tilted and uplifted. As this
uplift was occurring the Finke River slowly eroded its way through the
mountain range.
Glen Helen is known to local Aborigines as Yapalpe and
the Finke River is Larapinta which means 'serpent'. It was a favourite
meeting place for the Aboriginal people from the West and Central
MacDonnell Ranges.
The rocky slopes around the gorge are home to a colony
of black-footed rock wallabies which sometimes appear in the late
afternoon and early evening to feed on grass, herbs, leaves and fruits.
The Finke River, which was named by John McDouall
Stuart after the Adelaide financier William Finke, rises in the
MacDonnell Ranges and flows over 1000 km until it disappears into Lake
Eyre.
Over the years the Finke has acquired its own mythology.
Rumours about it abound. It is claimed, even in the Conservation
Commission literature, that the Finke is the oldest river in the world
- no one quite explains what such a claim actually means. It certainly
isn't recorded as such in the Guinness Book of Records. It is said that
the Finke only ever runs for the entire length of its course about
twice every century. Glen Helen is one of only six permanent waterholes
on the Finke River.
A tributary of the Finke, the Ormiston Creek, runs
through Ormiston Gorge and Pound National Park. The park consists of
the spectacular Pound and the narrow gorge which is regarded by many as
one of the most beautiful gorges in Central Australia. The subject of a
number of paintings by Albert Namatjira the gorge rises to over 300
metres at points and is characterised by the beautiful river red gums
and the euros and rock wallabies which abound in the park.
The area was explored by Peter Egerton Warburton on his
epic 1873-74 journey from Alice Springs to the Western Australian coast
which traversed the Great Sandy Desert. He named the Ormiston Creek
which runs through the area and joins the Finke River.
Things to see:
Glen Helen Nature Park
The Glen Helen Nature Park is located on the headwaters
of the Finke River and offers visitors spectacular views of the gorge
which has been cut by the river. Of particular note is the large
waterhole near the Glen Helen Lodge which can have a depth of over 30
metres. It is important to the Aboriginal mythology of the area as it
was from this waterhole that some of the creatures of the Dreamtime emerged.
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Ormiston Gorge
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Ormiston Gorge
and Pound National Park
The park has a number of signposted walks ranging from a
short, 100 metre blindfold sensory walk (a unique way of experiencing
the desert) near the Information Centre to a three day walk to Mount
Giles. Perhaps the most popular, and most practical, walk is the 1-2
hour Ghost Gum Walk (so named because of the single Ghost Gum which
stands like a sentinel above the gorge) which traverses the gorge and
passes the near-permanent waterhole at the southern end of Ormiston Gorge.
Accommodation at the 4655 hectare Ormiston Gorge and
Pound National Park is restricted to a small camping area. For those
wanting something a little more sophisticated it is necessary to travel
on to the Glen Helen Lodge.
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Lodges & Chalets
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Glen Helen Homestead Lodge
Namatjira Dve
Glen Helen
NT
0870
Telephone: (08) 8956 7489
Facsimile: (08) 8956 7495
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Restaurants
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Cloudy's Restaurant., Glen Helen Homestead Lodge
Namatjira Dve
Glen Helen
NT
0870
Telephone: (08) 8956 7489
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