THROUGH
THE MYALLS
Telegraph
-21/10/08
FROM
(By
J.G.L. )
From the collection of Colin Wear)
Shortly after
"What about the depth of the
water?" I ventured to ask. "Depth of water!
Great snakes," replied the engineer of our liner. "Why, we have
loaded the
"Then," said my friend quietly,
"you make yourself a mouth-piece for the neglected Port, and noise her
charms abroad."
I made a mental note of the fact there and
then, promising to see if some word of praise could not be given to what seems
to me to be a place full of the picturesque arid full of possibilities. The
seascape after one has turned into the main portion of the port is agrand one.
Nelson's Bay lies away to the right. Eastward towers the
great Tomeree Head, on the southern entrance. On the
north another half _mountain, with an island or two.on the horizon in between.
About here I made the acquaintance of Mr.
Waddingham, who has had more than 12 years about the port, and picked up some
useful information in regard to the timber and fish trades, the two industries
which are at present the mainstay of the place. Having no passengers for
Nelson's Bay, we headed north-east for the Tea Gardens, where the night r-'as
to be spent. On the run round one passes much low-lying foreshore, which seems
not to be of any great value. Through the "Duck-Hole" we passed into
"Windy-Whopper," the timber depot, where a flat-bottomed steam
sea-punt and the "clipper-like" Gleaner were loading. On through the
narrowing river the "Reliance" takes us, until we at last head in
towards the western shore, at what we thought was a little
"one-horse" waterside place very improperly named the 'Tea Gardens' .
But a veritable "Tea Gardens" the
village turned out to be. We were hungry and just a shade angry at having a
large appetite without being able to dull the feelings with something of soft
or "hard tack". Once ashore the feeling wor-e off
in the comfortable diningroom of the Tea Gardens Hotel. Tea over, a
stroll in the half-moonlight took us back to the water's edge, where we met one
of the Broughton Island lobster crews, and discussed the fish business and the
rabbit microbe. This latter person and his host, we heard, are flourishing on
the experimental station. Occasionally one falls to the gun of a fisherman and
is promptly potted, and eaten without fear or apparent injury to those who
rather welcome a change of diet. Off the island a lot of lobstering is now
being done. "Fish" are plentiful, and the catches large, but the
prices are low .and the losses by death (lobsters are not supposed to be safe
eating if they die before reaching the boiler) rather heavy. Still the life has
its charms.
A night at the Gardens, a 'very early
breakfast, and the third stage of the journey begins. Half-past 6 finds you
aboard a comfortable little motor launch, in charge of Captain Thurlow, one of
the brothers who have been doing pioneering work in opening up this capital
tourist trip. Up the lower reaches of the Myall River you pass very quickly,
and are soon on the river proper, running between two low-lying banks that are
heavily wooded with scrub and timber with here and there natural fern glades
full of bangalows, staghorns, and cabbage-tree palms. Mile after mile of this
sort of river is run over. Fish-steamers, sand dredge, stern-wheel log and
timber punts are the only signs of life which one sees on the run towards the
Broadwater, which comes before the main lakes. In several places on the bank,
where the land is a little sandy, acre patches of snow-white flannel flowers
are seen. These are not the low growers which we find struggling through our
own country, but are often 5ft.and 6ft. high, with masses of blossom that would
bring delight, and profit as well to many of those who make a living from
gathering native flowers.Out of the river the launch passes into the big broad
water to find the northern shore rising into three or four great mountains,
which one of my companions said were out at the back of Bullahdelah, one of the
several big timber-getting centres which lay around the lakes.
On we go, steaming quickly, putting mile after
mile behind us, passing through the lower Booloombayte, where the land (as is
most of the country around the lakes and rivers) is heavily timbered right down
to the water's edge, until we enter the big
.Across the lake we still travel, heading
for Bungwahl, another timber town, where the 43-mile motor-boat trip comes to
an end. There is very little here save sawdust, and rough, dry hillside. A few
houses lay about the lake shore, while the sound of the mill saws keeps the
place alive. A few minutes before 11' o'clock we stepped on the wharf, and
finished the third stage of the trip, having had a most enjoyable run in
Thurlow Brothers' little steamer. Like Port Stephens, the lakes had been a big surprise
packet. We have something there that is a big asset for the hard-worked city
man, who can enjoy a simple outdoor life in the midst of surroundings rather
unique. To those in search of peace and quite, the Myalls are a veritable
paradise and the men and women who wish to travel by sea the route is all one
could wish for.
THROUGH
THE MYALLS
Telegraph
-28/11/08
ON
FROM BUNGWAHL TO TUNCURRY
(By J.G.L.)
(From the collection of Colin Wear)
Ten minutes after we landed on the wharf at Bungwahl, Mr. J. A. Godwin
and his coach showed up -over the hill, and came leisurely towards us.
My
"They are good' cattle' mate " said he eyeing the horses over. "They'll do
the journey, rough an' all as it is."
Then off through the lakeside
Up the steep roadway and over the hill we
went, bumping and jolting on the bad pieces of road, much to the annoyance of
the "commercial," who thought it best to stand on the back step to
avoid occasional inconvenience.
"You'll soon need a new coach,
Godwin," he called on- one occasion, as we rose out of a big rut that had
rattled us fore-and-aft.
"No fear," replied the driver.
"This 'un will see me through. She only wants a new top, and a coat or two
of paint to see her through with many a good load. When the Government vote a few' quid' for the making of this road I'll do the
'caravan' up. It's no use me doing all the spending. If they don't soon get a
hustle on, and mend the bad bits, I'm thinking I'll have to keep the bullock
team handy to get me out of difficulties."
Just here the bushman made some remark about
the slow ways of "them as look after the roads. It's just the same up our
way," he continued. "You can't get a chain of metal down without
pulling a mile or two of red tape off the reel."
A few miles out of Bungwahl, the rough ruts
came to an end, and the road ran flat and straight, skirting mile after mile of
Smith's
An hour and a half in the coach carried us
over the seven or eight miles which separate the Myalls from
The first view of this
Of bird life there was a better variety.
Ducks were absent, but of swans, both black and white, of pelicans and other
big-winged things there was a goodly company. One thing I regretted leaving
behind -my field glasses. These would have brought the hills and mountains and
the birds very much nearer. I just longed for a closer look at some passing
pelican or a flying-fish hawk, or a stately white swan that lay like a short
alabaster column a few miles away on our port or starboard bow. Wild things in
their home ways are so full of interest that it seemed a pity to lose the
opportunity of seeing all they "had to show. The upper half of the Wallis
is quiet country. Little sign of anything there but bird and fish life. An
occasional fishing boat might be seen beating her way about as the crew keep a lookout for the "school" fish which
are a harvest to them. Beyond this everything is peaceful and full of charm.
There is much here that a tired man who can rough things requires for a perfect
holiday. One can retire into the bosom of these Myalls and forget the world.
You might even get lost, if you felt so inclined, and find yourself miles away
up the river at Fallford, or on some other arm which is tenanted only by an
occasional fisherman, dairyman, or logchopper. And what a life it would be!. And what a holiday!
By half-past 2 we had run to within half a
mile of Forster, and were skirting the pretty foreshores on' the way down to
the entrance of "The Hawke." Here the journey almost ended. A brief
stay at Bower's Hotel for lunch, and then across the river to Tuncurry, which
was to be my home for two or three days at least.
Tuncurry is a fisherman's paradise. Any man
who is fond of sport can take a big toll of the finny tribe here. The place
literally teems with fish of all c1asses. There is no sitting on the rail of
your "hooker" to wait for the black bream to grow. You cast your line
and get a nibble or a run before you have hawled in the slack, and if you be a
duffer or an expert the struggling sealy one is soon floundering at your feet.
You can fill either a basket or a boat. The only trouble is this: You might
tire before you make any appreciable difference in the quantity of fish which
make "The Hawke" their home.
Two very pleasant days were spent in and
about Tuncurry and Forster. Flowers were plentiful, and show interests were
keen. Never before had I seen so much work or so much enthusiasm in a good
cause. It seemed as if the whole village was bent in making the gathering a
success. Each day's performance was a triple affair, beginning with the exhibition,
and running into a concert, to end up with a bit of a "hop," which
ran into the small hours of the morning.
Great business was done in Tuncurry on the
show days, and although I flatter myself on having seen a "thing or
two" in flowers, I must confess to having added several items of interest
to my store.
The home journey was by sea. Of this little
need be said. I spent the long, weary hours "wedged" in a bunk on the
upper deck of the staunch little trader which Captain O'Beirne navigates
skilfully from port to port. We had run into a "snorting" southerly
gale, and the Tuncurry just bumped into everything she disliked. But she fought
her way to the southward, in spite of wind and sea, and landed me back home
early one Monday morning with "gills" that were either light green or
yellow, with a pain across the small of my back such as might have come from a
hard "rope's-ending," and a feeling of emptiness in my lower hold,
such as I had never known before. Still, it did not matter. Seasickness and
soreness and other discomforts soon wore away. But the lonely Myalls and the
kindness of the people at the other end of them will be remembered for quite a
long time. "