When we first got to Wangi Falls we couldn't believe how many people were here. I guess we had been spoilt with previous national parks we had visited as being only amoungst a few at most times. It was sort of like rocking up to one of those theme parks in QLD, perhaps a little like wet and wild? It was something we couldn't quite apprehend at first with a carpark full of buses, a kiosk and what looks like the beginning of a restaurant being built. We had heard so much about visiting Litchfield and our first impression was not the best, only due to the crowds. However we soon found that if you are up for a swim later in the day or first thing in the morning, Wangi Falls is a serene, beautiful picturesqe place. The water was as clear as glass, a great temperature and the falls a must to swim under to have your head beaten against the force of the falling water.
There is quite alot to do at Litchfield, many of it being visiting different spots to view beautiful waterfalls, rock pools and rainforest. So we took every opportunity to explore as much as we could in the next couple of days.
The Lost City is a complex of freestanding sandstone block and pillar formations that suggest the ruins of a long forgotten civilisation.
| armless man? |
Bamboo Creek there is an abondoned small scale mining operation that operated between 1906 to 1955 with tin being the mineral mined. There is an old building where the miners used as living quarters. The old tin mill where even the old engine remains. Very hard lifestyle.
| miner's living quarters ruins |
| tin mill |
| interesting ferns nearby |
Next we headed off to Walker Creek, which provides campgrounds for tents/camper trailers but also a great little spot to have a dip in clear prestine water. Our first dip of the day.
| clear prestine water |
| too irrisistable not to take a dip |
| love this shot, one butterfly is about to land |
Pethericks rainforest reserve lead us to another beautiful little spot where after about 1km walk you came across a pool with water cascading down, then lead you up to another pool and stream. Another dip was a must.
Magnetic Termite Mounds is another attraction. Imagine thousands of termite mounds standing up to two metres high. The mounds' thin edges point north-south while their broad backs and fronts face east-west. It's really a built-in temperature control mechanism, allowing only the smallest possible area to ever be exposed to the sun. There was also the cathedral termite mounds which one of them was over 5 metres tall and estimated at about 50 years old.
| magnetic termite mounds |
| cathedral termite mound |
Buley Rockhole is a series of pretty waterfalls and rockholes, where you can find your own spot to swim and relax.
Florence Falls, which is just past Buley Rockhole is a spectacular double waterfall set amid the monsoon forest cascading into a swimming hole. 135 steps leads down to the crystal clear pool at the base of Florence Falls. Absolutely gorgeous spot.
The last on the list of spectacular falls, Tolmer Falls, which cascades over two high escarpments into a distant deep, plunge pool. This long narrow waterfall is at its best at the height of the wet season but still interesting to see though the gorge is closed due to the ecology of the area home to the rare ghost bats and orange horseshoe bats.
Back at camp at Wangi Falls we decided to have one last swim for the day, as waterlogged as we were, but it was just too beautiful to refuse especially that there was no one else around. We really enjoyed Litchfield National Park afterall.