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Looking towards Mt Buffalo
from
Bright
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Buckland
Ghost
town in the Alps behind Mount Buffalo
Situated 309 km north-east of Melbourne on a road
running south from Porepunkah, Buckland was once a thriving gold
mining township.
Aborigines were once drawn to the area in summer by
the large numbers of bogong moths which were seeking relief from the
higher temperatures of the plains. After roasting them in strips of
bark they ate the bodies or ground them into a paste. It is said the
moths tasted like prawns.
The first European into the area was the squatter
Thomas Buckland (after whom the village was named) who settled in the
district in 1845. Gold was discovered in 1853 and miners rushed to the
area. Within twelve months there was a town of 6000 people but typhoid
spread through the diggings and it is estimated that over 1000 miners
died as a result of the disease.
The large community of Chinese (it was estimated to
number 3000 at its peak in 1857) led to an anti-Chinese riot. Chinese
fled from the area and Robert O'Hara Burke (of Burke and Wills fame),
who was working as a policeman at Beechworth, was sent to the diggings
to restore order.
As the easy gold disappeared the town moved firstly to
reef mining and later to dredging until by the early years of the
twentieth century it had outlived its usefulness. The village was
eventually removed.
Things to see:
Exploring the Mount Buffalo National Park
Details of the park's 400 plant species - eucalypt
woodland, scrubby heathlands and an array of springtime wildflowers -
its impressive array of birds and other fauna, including lyrebirds and
wombats, its waterfalls, escarpments, granite tors, high plains, deep
river valleys, exceptional views of the Alps and 90 km of
well-signposted walking tracks, as well as the dress and preparations
appropriate for lengthy walks, can be found in pamphlets available from
the park's information centre, tel: (03) 5755 1466.
For general enquiries about National Parks in Victoria ring
131963.