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Kids walking off the jetty
after swimming at Tumby Bay
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Tumby Bay
(including Koppio and the Tod River Reservoir)
Typical attractive and pleasant Eyre
Peninsula holiday destination
The small and charming settlement of Tumby Bay is
located 301 km west of Adelaide via the Princes and Lincoln Highways.
Tumby Bay is a typical Eyre Peninsula holiday
resort. The township is dominated by the long, narrow arc of beach, the
two jetties which jut out into the bay, the large caravan park on the
beachfront, and the remarkable domination of corrugated iron which
assails the traveller who drives in off the Lincoln Highway. It seems
as though every second building and fence on the outskirts of town is
built out of corrugated iron.
Like so much of the coastline of Eyre Peninsula, Tumby
Bay was first explored by Matthew Flinders in 1802. Flinders named the
bay and a nearby island (somewhat incongruously) after the village of
Tumby in Lincolnshire, England. In 1984 the name was expanded from
Tumby to Tumby Bay.
The first settlers moved into the area in the 1840's. In 1854
a farmer named James Provis took up land around the bay. The area was
agricultural for nearly 50 years before the town came into existence.
There is a fascinating account of life in the area
at this time: 'People who came to Tumby Bay in 1858 were carried ashore
from sailing boats. Sandhills, scrub and black "wurlies" were the only
objects that met the eye...A jetty was built at Tumby Bay, which became
the shipping port of the Burrawing Mine. There was no regular services,
boats called only when there was cargo offering. The only building then
erected was a small office near the jetty.'
By 1874 the first jetty had been built but there was
no sign of a permanent settlement. One of the many interesting sights
in town is the old tram at the end of the jetty near the Seaview Hotel.
It was originally used to take bags of wheat from the drays to the
boats berthed at the end of the pier.
The low rainfall in the area meant that the European
population in the area grew very slowly. It wasn't until 1900 that the
town was gazetted and even then it was really only a port where
supplies could be landed and bags of grain could be shipped out.
It is a comment on the size of the town at this time that
'The new buildings were hidden by scrub and people had to clamber over
low sandhills to reach them...When the institute was erected in 1907,
it was thought the occasion warranted something extra in the way of
ceremony, so the Premier was invited to perform it. The ceremony took
place at night, and in case the Premier and his party should get lost
in the scrub before reaching the building, lanterns were hung in bushes
along the route.'
Today Tumby Bay is a popular seaside holiday town
which services the surrounding farming community.
Things to see:
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The old tram which once was
used to convey wheat onto the windjammers which loaded wheat at Tumby Bay
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Seaside Activities
As a holiday resort it offers the usual range of
seaside leisure activities - swimming in the beautiful clear water of
the bay, skin diving , fishing (there is an annual fishing tournament),
walking along the beach, admiring the museum and the monuments on the
beachfront. Tumby Bay is much more than a transitory holiday
destination. The Tumby Bay Yacht Club, the large number of permanent
dwellings, the sense of permanency created by the lawn and the pine
trees which lie between The Esplanade and the beach, all give Tumby Bay
a quality which is missing from many of the fishing haunts in the region.
Charter Trips to Sir Joseph Banks Islands
One of the town's special attractions is a charter
trip to the Sir Joseph Banks Islands (named by Flinders after Cook's
botanist) which lie 12 nautical miles off the coast. The islands were
originally used to graze sheep but today they are a conservation area
where Southern Ocean birds such as Cape Barren geese and albatrosses as
well as seals and porpoises can be seen.
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The monument to Robert
Bratton, overseer of works who originated the Brattonising system of
road making
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Memorial to
Robert Bratton
Over the road from the Sea Breeze Hotel and the
Police Station is an unusual monument (a miniature plough) to Robert
Bratton, Overseer of Works, Tumby Bay. Bratton used this plough (it was
invented by a local tractor driver named Ferguson) for road building in
the harsh mallee environment of the Eyre Peninsula and the method
became so successful and so widely used that it eventually became known
as the Brattonising system of road making. The technique was to plough
up the ground until a layer of clay was reached. Limestone rocks were
then laid with smaller material and the surface was then sealed.
C.L. Alexander Memorial Museum
The C.L. Alexander Memorial Museum, located at the
northern end of West Terrace only a couple blocks from Bratton Way (the
major entry road to the town) is open Fridays 2.30 p.m. - 4.30 p.m. and
Sunday 2.30 p.m. - 4.30 p.m. Originally a three room schoolhouse, it is
a typical, small rural folk museum piled high with interesting pieces
of memorabilia about the area. Three rooms are devoted to recreating
the kitchen, bedroom and parlour of a typical Eyre Peninsula rural
dwelling from the 1880's.
Koppio Smithy Museum
Inland from Tumby Bay, on an interesting road which
twists and turns through dry, gently rolling hills, is the village of
Koppio which is really nothing more than a few houses and huge, outdoor
museum. The Koppio Smithy Museum gets its name from the fact that it is
located on the site where a man named Tom Brennand built a cottage and
a blacksmith's shop in 1903. Today these two restored buildings are
just a small part of a huge complex of historical buildings and
machinery. There is the old Koppio school house (which has a range of
exhibits including some old firearms and some interesting photographs),
a magnificent old slab and daub hut called Glenleigh, a post, telephone
and telegraph office, and a vast collection of restored tractors which
is reputed to be the largest collection in South Australia.
The Koppio Smithy Museum announces itself as a
'tractor display, harvest machinery, blacksmithing, rural school and a
horse drawn vehicles and cottage' which is a rather simple and bald
description for a museum where an enthusiast could easily spend a day
inspecting the wide range of exhibitions. The Museum is open from 10.00
am - 5.00 pm from Tuesday to Sunday.
The hills around Koppio are the catchment for the
short, but vital, Tod River which runs only 40 km from its source to
the coast.
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The Tod Reservoir Museum with
pumping equipment in the foreground
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Tod River Reservoir
To the south of Koppio is the Tod River Reservoir.
It is worth visiting not only for the unusual EWS Heritage Display
(lots of pumping equipment and pieces of piping) which is open from
9.00 am - 4.00 pm seven days a week but also to see the reservoir which
feeds the pipelines which are such a common site on the peninsula.
The great breakthrough for the Eyre Peninsula as
far as water supplies are concerned came with the establishment of the
Tod Reservoir. It is remarkable that in an area of some 8 million
hectares (the approximate size of the peninsula) that the Tod is the
only river of any importance.
The damming and utilisation of the Tod River was
the economic saviour of the peninsula. In the years between 1918-22 the
South Australian Government built a dam on the river and in the 1920s
pipelines were built to Minnipa, Ceduna and Port Lincoln.
The Tod River Reservoir was completed in 1922. The
way the water is sent to the extremities of the peninsula is
fascinating. Water is pumped by the Tod River Pumping Station to Knots
Hill Reservoir from which it gravitates through the Tod Trunk Main to
Ceduna a distance of 386 km. Water may also be pumped to the summit
tanks to feed the east coast main as far as Cowell or a southern branch
main to Port Lincoln. The reservoir has a capacity of 11 300 ml.
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Motels
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Tumby Bay Motel
4 Berryman Cres.
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2311
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Seabreeze Hotel
Tumby Bay Tce
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2362
Rating: **
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Tumby Bay Hotel
1 North Tce
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2005
Rating: *
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Apartments
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Tumby Bayside Holiday Apts
Yaringa Ave
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2087
Rating: ****
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Caravan Parks
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Tumby Bay Caravan Park
Tumby Tce
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2208, 018 853 121
Rating: ***
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Restaurants
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Seabreeze Hotel
Tumby Bay Tce
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2362
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Tumberlina's Restaurant
15 Lipson Rd
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2407
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Tumby Bay Hotel
1 North Tce
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2005
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Tumby Bay Motel
4 Berryman St
Tumby Bay
SA
5605
Telephone: (08) 8688 2311
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