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Turtle Rock
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Wudinna
(including Mount Wudinna)
Typical wheatbelt town on the Eyre Peninsula
Located 569 km from Adelaide and 257 km from Port
Augusta on the Eyre Highway, Wudinna is a larger-than-average Eyre
Peninsula wheatbelt town which is inevitably dominated by the grain
silos and the railway. The town centre actually lies just to the north
of the highway and visitors arriving from the east drive into the town
past an old trough and pump (opposite the Bowling Club) which stands as
a monument which 'perpetuates the courage, foresight and determination
of the pioneers and early settlers from the year 1860.'
The Wudinna area was first settled by Europeans in 1861
when Robert George Standley lodged a claim for 10 sq. miles of land
surrounding Weedna Hill ('weedna' later became changed to Wudinna which
may be an Aboriginal word meaning 'the granite hill').
In 1896 W. A. Barns and A. J. Inkster acquired the
Wudinna Hill lease and it was transferred to W. A. Barns in 1905. The
property was sub-divided for agricultural development in 1912 and Barns
retained the area adjacent to Mount Wudinna. In 1922 the South
Australian government built a wall, drains, silt trap and tank on Mount
Wudinna to conserve runoff water for use on nearby farms.
Wudinna township, which is larger than most of the
wheatbelt towns in the area, was surveyed in 1915 and gazetted the
following year. The General Store and Post Office were built in 1917.
School was held in the local hall from 1919 until the local school was
opened in 1927. Today it is a thriving centre servicing the surrounding
wheat and sheep farmers.
Things to see:
Mount Wudinna Tourist Drive
If the visitor keeps driving along Naylor Terrace, past
the town's swimming pool and the local hospital, they will head
straight out towards the granite outcrops which are the most
interesting feature in the area. The drive, known as the Mount Wudinna
Tourist Drive, goes to a number of interesting granite outcrops
including the Polda Rocks which are 7 km outside of town, the Pygery
Rocks which are 8 km, Little Mount Wudinna (9 km), Turtle Rock (12 km),
Mount Wudinna (12 km), Peella Rock (30 km), and Corrobinnie Hill (32
km). These are not just a pile of rocks in the middle of a rural
landscape. They are strange and impressive granite outcrops which were
probably formed over 1500 million years ago at the same time as the
Gawler Ranges.
Mount Wudinna, for example, is 260 m high and covers
an area of about 112 ha. and Turtle Rock, even to the untrained and
unimaginative eye, really does look like a huge turtle lying on the
plains. All the rocks are believed to be remnants of a much larger
granite mass which has undergone intense weathering over millions of
years. The notable and unusual geological features of the rocks include
rillen (eroded channels on the sides of the inselbergs) and tafoni
(caves found on the granite outcrops).
Mount Wudinna, which is by far the largest of the
granite outcrops, was first sighted by Europeans in 1844 when the
explorer John Charles Darke passed through the area looking for good
pastoral lands. He was fatally speared a short time later by Aborigines
at Waddikee, between the present day sites of Kyancutta and Kimba.
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Motels
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Gawler Ranges Motel
Eyre Hwy
P.O. Box 314
Wudinna
SA
5652
Telephone: (08) 8680 2090
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Wudinna Hotel/Motel
Burton Tce
P.O. Box 25
Wudinna
SA
5652
Telephone: (08) 8680 2019
Rating: **
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Caravan Parks
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Gawler Ranges Caravan Park
Eyre Hwy
P.O. Box 314
Wudinna
SA
5652
Telephone: (08) 8680 2090
Rating: **
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Restaurants
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Ampol Roadhouse
64 Eyre Hwy
Wudinna
SA
5652
Telephone: (08) 8680 2084
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Gawler Ranges Motel
Eyre Hwy
Wudinna
SA
5652
Telephone: (08) 8680 2090
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Wudinna Granite Country Roadhouse
Caltex Service Station
Eyre Hwy
Wudinna
SA
5652
Telephone: (08) 8680 2157
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Wudinna Hotel/Motel
Burton Tce
Wudinna
SA
5652
Telephone: (08) 8680 2019
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