Dobroyd Head walk in Sydney Harbour

In this post: The scenic track from Balgowlah to Dobroyd Head, part of the Spit Bridge to Manly Walk. This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 40-year-old bookmark (give or ta…

Travelling Worm

Dobroyd Head walk in Sydney Harbour

In this post: The scenic track from Balgowlah to Dobroyd Head, part of the Spit Bridge to Manly Walk.

This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 40-year-old bookmark (give or take a few years) and I proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC).

Today’s travel notes

Me and the TC (bless her cotton socks) have often ambled down Forty Baskets Track in Balgowlah, braving the beach crossing to continue along Reef Beach Track and up the steep steps of Dobroyd Head Track. At the top of the head, near Tania Park, we do an about turn and take the welcome downhill track back to Balgowlah. This post shares some of the beauty of the area and a few bits of local interest.

The book I’m in

Shadow Captain by Alastair Reynolds. I’m chomping through this book at the speed of light. It’s a fast-paced space opera in the best tradition of the genre. Shadow Captain follows on directly from part one of the series, Revenger. This worm will be urging the TC to get hold of the next book in the series.

Travel tips

Put on your walking shoes (all six of them, in my case) and take a walk on the bright side.

The photos

Me and Peg finding a firm footing at Reef Beach, alongside the Dobroyd Head walking track on the shores of Sydney Harbour:

Like many of Sydney’s beaches, Reef Beach is often reshaped by the tides. The sand moves from one end of the beach to the other, covering and uncovering rocks, exposing channels, and generally changing the area’s appearance. Sometimes it’s quite a leap from the last step down onto the sand. At other times you scratch your head and think, “I could have sworn there were more steps going down to the beach”.

If the TC gets up early, as is her wont, we catch the sunrise over Forty Baskets Beach:

“Forty Baskets” is an odd name for a beach. The tale that this worm has heard most often is this: the name refers to 40 baskets of fish that the local fishermen collected way back in 1885. Their goal was to feed a large group of soldiers who’d returned from war in Sudan, only to be hustled into the nearby quarantine station to recover from various infectious diseases that they’d acquired while overseas.

However, that lovely tale of baskets, fish, and deserving troopers might not be true. The Daily Telegraph has conducted some in-depth research and discovered that the beach was referred to as Forty Basket Beach even before the fishermen’s generous collection. And yes, observant reader, it was Forty Basket (singular) not Forty Baskets. After further digging, the Daily Telegraph finds that the word “basket” was in those days used as a measurement (like the word bushel). We often use the singular when referring to a measurement. For example, a two metre pole or a ten tonne truck. The article is worth a read.

The harbour views on this walk are spectacular. This photo shows a passenger liner making its way into Sydney harbour through the gateway formed by North Head (on the left) and South Head (on the right):

Let’s take a closer look at the passenger ship. Behind it stands Hornby Lighthouse on South Head. The lighthouse opened in 1858, the third lighthouse to be built in New South Wales. A few of the ship’s inhabitants group together in the viewing platform on top of the ship’s tiers to experience the harbour entry:

Sydney city seen from Dobroyd Head, with the sun burning off the early morning mist:

The path is steep at times. Irregular steps provide good exercise for those quads and calves — for those of you with fewer than six legs, anyway:

If you need a breather, turn around and take in the view. You might see the Manly ferries passing as they make their way between Manly and the city. The two in this picture are the privately-run Manly Fast Ferries (as opposed to the slightly slower and more traditional yellow and green boats of the Manly Ferry public service):

After the steep climb, a more leisurely path awaits you, sometimes open to the views and at other times walled by bushes and flowers:

The viewing point just below Tania Park offers another stunning view of the harbour entrance. In the next picture, just North Head is showing in the background, with Dobroyd Head stretching out in the foreground. Down below, those with an eagle eye can spot the historic huts of Crater Cove:

Let’s take a closer look at some of the huts of Crater Cove:

Russ Grayson has published an intriguing account of his experiences with the huts over the years: Hidden paths: the lost settlement at Crater Cove. The first of the huts were built in the 1920s, and various groups of people have inhabited them over the decades. Now, however, the huts are boarded up. You can walk down and look through the windows, and stand on the rocks to gain a feeling for the place. The path down is somewhat hard to find, and the track disappears in places. But it’s well worth the scramble.

This worm won’t go into the ins and outs of the huts’ story. Russ Grayson does that very well. Suffice it to say that the cottages have a long and interesting history.

What else will you see on the Dobroyd Head Walk? Plenty of native vegetation, including this Grey Spider Flower (Grevillea buxifolia). This worm doesn’t see the spider reference. Rather, the flower looks to me like a cluster of tentacled aliens who’ve landed on Earth and are screaming in horror:

There’s a plethora of birds, like this Corella:

And this New Holland Honeyeater:

The TC, bless her clever grey cells, knows a lot about birds. Hence yours truly’s ability to name our feathered acquaintances so precisely. It goes without saying that yours truly stays well hidden during the bird-watching part of the expedition. Well away from all those scary beaks!

For the brave souls amongst you: If you’d like to see more of the birds of this area, take a look at the TC’s blog, Sydney Birder. In particular, check out her posts about the birds she’s spotted at Forty Baskets and Dobroyd Head.

Lizzie the Legless Lizard is much more my kind of person. We met her quite a few years back on Dobroyd Head. Although you might be tempted to yell snake, you’d be wrong. At some stage in the distant past, her kith and kin decided that legs were overrated. A close look reveals the stubs of legs that she’s left with:

The lucky walker will also see wallabies, water dragons, butterflies and beetles, the occasional falcon, parrots and many many more birds, and perhaps even a snake or two.

Have a good walk!

That’s all for today, folks

#australia #bookmark #bookworm #dobroydHead #leglessLizard #Peg #spitBridgeToManlyWalk #Sydney #travel #travellingWorm #travelog #travelogue
Bombo Headland Geological Site, south of Sydney: an imposing, slightly eery location: https://travellingworm.com/2025/06/08/bombo-headland-geological-site/ #travel #australia #travellingworm
Bombo Headland Geological Site

In this post: The crashing seas and imposing rock columns at Bombo Headland Geological Site, south of Sydney on Australia’s east coast This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm.…

Travelling Worm

Bombo Headland Geological Site

In this post: The crashing seas and imposing rock columns at Bombo Headland Geological Site, south of Sydney on Australia’s east coast

This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 40-year-old bookmark (give or take a few years) and I proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC).

Today’s travel notes

This worm has crawled past Bombo Headland several times, on past journeys heading south out of Sydney. Never before have I stopped to see what goes on in the area. A few days ago, me and the TC detoured off the beaten track (namely, the M1) to spend a couple of nights in Wollongong. During our stay, we took the small coastal roads down to Kiama, and on the way we stopped to see the headland.

The book I’m in

The Between by Tananarive Due. The TC has only recently discovered this amazing author. Already, we’re more than half way into our second book of hers, and the TC has bought four more. Count ’em, four! Tananarive Due writes beautifully-composed horror. Get into one of her books as soon as you can.

Travel tips

Take a detour from the highways whenever time allows.

The photos

Me at Bombo Beach:

A short walk from the beach, the waves churn and crash between the rock formations at Bombo Headland Geological Site:

https://youtu.be/pmp_CPcXDW4

A still photo of the same spot captures the watery turmoil:

The tall, squared-off columns of rock are imposing. The rocky ground beneath the rocks is quite bare, and glares in the hard sunlight. Combined with the churning seas, the effect is a little threatening. Definitely eery.

The columns are made of basalt and have a distinctive hexagonal shape, formed during volcanic eruptions 270 million years ago. Basalt is a hard igneous rock that’s produced when lava cools rapidly.

If you walk around behind the rock towers, the scene is more tranquil. A shallow pool lies quiet in the sunlight:

The occasional wave bounces high enough to breach the gap in the rocks and refresh the pool:

The TC, bless her slightly wet cotton socks, posed in front of another gap. She waited patiently for that Internet-favourite shot with the waves crashing behind her:

Here’s the same Internet-famous spot, without the TC this time:

That’s all for today, folks

#australia #BomboHeadlandGeologicalSite #bookmark #bookworm #Kiama #TananariveDue #travel #travellingWorm #travelog #travelogue #Wollongong

Sixteen Mile Jeep Track, Victorian High Country

In our recent travels around the Victorian High Country, me and Beetle the Jeep drove the Sixteen Mile Jeep Track (also called the Sixteen Mile Jeep Road). Although this track can be tricky in the wet, it’s not very challenging when dry. The forest and countryside are beautiful, well worth the drive.

Here’s a taste of the track:

https://youtu.be/2E0kW2Eci0g

Would you like to explore more of the Victorian High Country? I cordially invite you to crawl around a few of the tracks that we followed:

That’s all for today, folks

#16MileJeepTrack #4wd #australia #bookmark #bookworm #travel #travellingWorm #travelog #travelogue #Victoria #VictorianHighCountry

Sixteen Mile Jeep Track, Victorian High Country

YouTube
Join my bookmark on a crawl around the mountain huts of the Victorian High Country: https://travellingworm.com/2025/03/18/huts-of-the-victorian-high-country/ #travel #australia #4wd #travellingworm #travelaustralia
Huts of the Victorian High Country

In this post: Join me on a crawl around the mountain huts of the Victorian High Country in Australia. This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 40-year-old bookmark (give or ta…

Travelling Worm

Huts of the Victorian High Country

In this post: Join me on a crawl around the mountain huts of the Victorian High Country in Australia.

This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 40-year-old bookmark (give or take a few years) and I proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC).

Today’s travel notes

In our recent travels around the Victorian High Country, me and the TC visited several of the area’s well-known mountain huts. The huts vary from a basic four-walls-and-a-roof structure to quite a solid affair with furnishings. Most of them were built to offer shelter to walkers, cattle folk, and others who might be caught out by the unpredictable weather of the highlands. Some are named for the families who lived in them, like Lovick’s Hut.

I’ve written a separate blog post about the most famous hut of all: Craig’s Hut, from the movie, The Man from Snowy River.

The book I’m in

The Phenomenon of Man by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. I’m chewing my way through this momentous work, savouring it a piece at a time.

Travel tips

If at first you don’t spot the dunny (that’s Australian for toilet), take a walk and look again. Most campgrounds and picnic areas have a long-drop.

From the sublime to the ridiculous… a dunny on the Paradise Falls track:

Recommended accommodation

Camping is the best option for a trip around the Victorian High Country. It’s hard to predict where you’ll find yourself at the end of each day. Most likely, you won’t be anywhere near a hotel.

Luckily, the campgrounds are well laid out and most have a toilet, albeit a long-drop. Here are the campgrounds we stayed at.

Seven (count ‘em: 7) days camping in a row. That’s a record for yours truly:

  • Day 1 (18 February): The campground near Craig’s Hut. Elevation 1,450 metres. It was cold, even in the middle of the Australian summer. This worm recommends a thick book to cuddle up in.
  • Day 2 (19 February): A camping site on Mount Howitt. Elevation 1,600 metres. It was even colder that night, due to some wind and an early morning mist. The TC, bless her thick cotton socks, wore leggings, gloves, two T shirts, two soft jackets, and a large Dutch jacket, and huddled down into her sleeping bag.
  • Day 3 (20 February): Eaglevale campground near Dargo. Those who aren’t made of cardboard had a refreshing dip in the Wonangatta river.
  • Day 4 (21 February): Black Snake Creek campground, again on the banks of the Wonangatta River. The non-cardboard folks took another swim in the river.
  • Day 5 (22 February): Castleburn Creek campground on Dargo Road.
  • Day 6 (23 February): Hinnomunjie Bridge campground, on the far side of Omeo.
  • Day 7 (24 February): Taylor’s Crossing in the Nunniong area. The TC, bless her cotton socks, spotted her first Gang-gang Cockatoos here.

What about food? What about the pretty berries?

This worm recommends that you bring all your supplies when travelling the lesser-known roads of the high country. People in the know can snack off bush tucker, but beware: don’t eat anything unless you’re sure it’s good for humans. Some of our party were keen to try these Dianella berries. But not all Dianellas are edible!

The photos

Me at the Washington Winch on Nunniong Road near Moscow Villa Hut:

Yours truly is nicely in focus. That’s how I like it.

Ah, you want to know about the winch too?

The Washington Winch was powered by steam, and built in Seattle, USA, to haul timber up steep slopes.

Here’s the winch hook, which hangs above the track a few metres from the engine:

And now, on to those huts.

Craig’s Hut

If you’ve seen the movie, The Man from Snowy River, then you’ve had your breath taken away by the beauty of the mountain views from Craig’s Hut. Canny readers will spot yours truly on the window sill of the hut in the above photo. To find your breath again, read my separate blog post about Craig’s Hut and The Man from Snowy River.

Bindaree Hut

Pikes Flat Hut

Pike’s Flat Hut was one of the more dilapidated structures. It had horse feed inside, and thistles (an introduced weed in Australia) outside.

Bluff Hut

We stopped at Bluff Hut for lunch and a stroll. The hut was quite substantial, a place I could imagine myself sheltering in if the weather got bad.

Lovick’s Hut

Lovick’s Hut is another substantial, liveable structure.

Howitt Plains Hut

Wonangatta Hut near Bryce’s station

This hut had an attractive, sturdy sleeping platform.

Black Snake Creek Hut

This hut and the nearby camping area are on the banks of the Wonangatta River.

Moscow Villa Hut

That’s all for today, folks

#australia #bookmark #bookworm #mountainHuts #travel #travellingWorm #travelog #travelogue #Victoria #VictorianHighCountry

About me and my TC

Me with Peg and Sherbet, two members of my merry menagerie I am dubbed Mark Wordsworm. The TC is my Travelling Companion. She goes by the name of Sarah Maddox, and has her own blogs at ffeathers, a…

Travelling Worm
Drove a bucket-list track: the Blue Rag Range Track in the Victorian High Country: https://travellingworm.com/2025/03/15/blue-rag-range-track-vic/ #travel #australia #VictorianHighCountry #adventure #4wd #TravellingWorm
Blue Rag Range Track, VIC

In this post: Blue Rag Range Track near Dargo in Victoria, Australia: the track, the views, and our route to get there. This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 40-year-old bo…

Travelling Worm

Blue Rag Range Track, VIC

In this post: Blue Rag Range Track near Dargo in Victoria, Australia: the track, the views, and our route to get there.

This is the blog of Mark Wordsworm, the travelling worm. I’m a 40-year-old bookmark (give or take a few years) and I proudly boast my own Hallmark serial number, 95 HBM 80-1. You’ll probably want to read all about me and my Travelling Companion (the TC).

Today’s travel notes

Me and the TC recently spent a week and a half in the Victorian High Country, a landscape of mountains and valleys in the state of Victoria, Australia. On 23 February, we tackled a bucket-list four-wheel driving track in the area: Blue Rag Range Track.

The book I’m in

Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K Le Guin. Every time this worm gets into a book by this author, I’m astounded at the cleanness of her style and the smartness of her plots. This book is no exception.

Recommended accommodation

Hinnomunjie Bridge campground in Omeo Valley, Victoria. The site is well laid out on the banks of the Mitta Mitta river, with clean toilets and clear grassy areas to pitch your tent.

Recommended restaurant

Dargo Hotel in Dargo.

Travel tips

Try to avoid pitching your tent on a slope. The TC, bless her cotton socks, kept waking up with her feet hanging over the end of the bed and a big empty space at the top of the bed. She finally worked out that she was sliding down thanks to the slope.

The photos

Me at the trig point at the top of Blue Rag Range Track (elevation 1,700 metres / 5,580 feet):

Observant readers will notice the trophies stuck to the trig tower, by people who’re proud to make it to the top. We didn’t leave a trophy, but it is indeed a great feeling to have made this trip.

Observant readers will also notice that it was windy up there! This worm strikes a jaunty pose nonetheless, with my tassel horizontal and a firm grasp from a friendly hand.

Hyper-observant readers will notice Peg skulking in the book at bottom right. Peg makes occasional appearances in my posts, her firm grip on reality keeping me grounded. But even Peg wasn’t strong enough for the gale at the Blue Rag Range trig point.

The track

It took us three and a half hours (12:30pm to 4pm) to drive the track itself, with a one-hour lunch break and stops for photographs.

At the start of the track is a steep mound with a hole at its crest, ready to trap the unwary vehicle. Most people choose to go round:

https://youtu.be/1QTcw-_lkZk

Another video shows the approach to the trig point at the top of the track:

https://youtu.be/jVQ8oNtN2cg

Friendly locals in Dargo told us that it’s unwise to venture beyond the trig point. Those who do will almost certainly need help recovering their vehicles, and the Dargo police are inundated with calls for help from drivers who don’t realise the risks.

The views from the track are stunning, with mountain ranges all round:

Much of the track runs along the top of the ridge:

A sign post marks the track part-way along, surrounded by white tree skeletons and scrubby grass:

Our route

We started the day by fuelling up in Dargo. This is one of the cars in our convoy:

The Dargo Hotel offers a good feed. Here’s Beetle the Jeep, lined up and ready to go:

We left Dargo in mid-morning, following Lind Avenue along the banks of the Dargo River, then Dargo High Plains Road to the start of the track.

A sign post shows the start of the Blue Rag Range Track on Dargo High Plains Road:

After reaching the Blue Rag Range trig point, we turned round and went back to Dargo High Plains Road, continuing north to the B500.

We camped overnight at Hinnomunjie Bridge campground on the banks of the Mitta Mitta river in Omeo Valley. This beautiful fire barrel was made by one of our travelling companions:

That’s all for today, folks

#4wd #adventure #australia #BlueRagRangeTrack #bookmark #bookworm #Dargo #HinnomunjieBridge #travel #travellingWorm #travelog #travelogue #Victoria #VictorianHighCountry

About me and my TC

Me with Peg and Sherbet, two members of my merry menagerie I am dubbed Mark Wordsworm. The TC is my Travelling Companion. She goes by the name of Sarah Maddox, and has her own blogs at ffeathers, a…

Travelling Worm
Have you seen the movie "The Man from Snowy River"? We visited Craig's Hut, where the movie was set! https://travellingworm.com/2025/03/14/craigs-hut-the-man-from-snowy-river/ #travel #australia #ManFromSnowyRiver #VictorianHighCountry #CraigsHut #TravellingWorm
Craig’s Hut, The Man from Snowy River

In this post: Craig’s Hut in Mount Buller — the hut was first built as a temporary set for the movie, The Man from Snowy River, and is now a serene place to visit in the Victorian High Countr…

Travelling Worm