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Looking eastward from the
Lookout which lies closest to the town of
Nullarbor
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Nullarbor
Tiny
township with access to the spectacular cliffs of the Great Australian Bight
The tiny settlement of Nullarbor (it is really nothing
more than a roadhouse, a caravan park and all the facilities for
travellers) is located 764 km west of Port Augusta and 1076 km from Adelaide.
It was the South Australian government surveyor E.
A. Delisser who, in 1867 while surveying the border between South
Australia and Western Australia, gave the area the name Nullarbor from
the Latin words 'nullus arbor' meaning 'no trees'. Since then the term
has become wonderfully imprecise and has come to refer to all the
flatlands lying to the north of the Great Australian Bight. It actually
defines a large area which is about 750 km from east to west and which
runs between the Great Australian Bight and the edges of the Great
Victoria Desert. Even the most undiscriminating of visitors will
realise that the definition is not accurate. There are trees on the
plain. The one area near the Eye Highway which is truly treeless is the
area which lies between the Yalata and Nullarbor roadhouses. Here there
is nothing other than dry stunted grasses and low lying hardy desert
bushes. The effect of this strange landscape is both monotonous and
mesmerising. The other major treeless area is much further to the north.
It is in the area around Nullarbor that the
much-photographed 'Beware of camels, wombats and kangaroos' signs begin
to appear on the Eye Highway.
Things to see:
The Cliffs of the Great Australian Bight
The most valuable information for any visitors to the
area is that the famed cliffs of the Great Australian Bight lie to the
west of Nullarbor. Between Nullarbor and Eucla there are a total of six
clearly marked lookout points. Each has its own special interest but
there are only two which are truly breathtaking.
A word of warning. None of the cliff lookout
points (except, maybe, for the last two) are for the faint-hearted or
for those people who can't stand heights. At this point the cliffs rise
sheer for about 100 metres from the sea which pounds on the rocks
below. There are no safety rails and therefore the visitor is obliged
to stand on the edge of the cliff and gaze up or down the coastline
with nothing to protect you from falling over. To this day my stomach
still drops when I recall the girl casually sitting on the edge of the
cliff at Lookout #2. She had a pair of binoculars and was craning out
into the void for a better view of seals on the rocks below.
From Nullarbor the lookouts go as follows:
Lookout #1
Lookout #1. It is here that the Eyre Highway Memorial (a
memorial to the actual construction of the road) is located. However
the view of the cliff face is difficult and unless the intrepid visitor
is prepared to dangle off the edge of the cliffs there is little to see.
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Looking to the east at
Lookout Point No. 2
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Lookout #2 and #3
Lookout #2 and Lookout #3 are the one which most commonly
appear in coffee table books and on postcards. Both lookouts are
located on cliffs which jut out so that there are truly magnificent
views both to the east and the west. It is worth contemplating, as you
stand 100 m above the Southern Ocean, that the Great Australian Bight
is recognised as the largest indentation in the Australian coastline
and that these dramatic cliffs are reputed to be the longest cliff face
in the world. There is no doubt that the views from the cliffs have to
be one of the truly awe inspiring natural wonders of Australia. They
are a scenic highlight to match Uluru, the Blue Mountains, the
MacDonnell Ranges or the Kimberley. If you're lucky (and brave enough)
it is quite common to see seals on the rocks below and to hear their
distinctive barking muffled by the faint sound of the waves breaking on
the rocks.
Lookout #4
Lookout #4 is another disappointment. The view of the
cliff face is difficult and unless the intrepid visitor is prepared to
dangle off the edge of the cliffs there is little to see.
Lookout #5 and #6
Lookouts #5 and #6 offer something totally different.
Here, beyond the line of the sheer cliff face, the cliffs drop to a
narrow coastal plain with sand dunes and scrub. It would be quite
possible, if you had half a day, to clamber down the cliff and make
your way across to the coast.
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Hotels
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Nullarbor Hotel/Motel
Eyre Hwy
Nullarbor
SA
5690
Telephone: (08) 8625 6271
Rating: **
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Caravan Parks
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Nullarbor Homestead Caravan Park
Eyre Hwy
Nullarbor
SA
5690
Telephone: (08) 8625 6271
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Restaurants
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Nullarbor Hotel/Motel
Eyre Hwy
Nullarbor
SA
5690
Telephone: (08) 8625 6271
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