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View across the town and
main beach from Crescent Head |
Crescent Head
Quiet holiday destination on a beautiful stretch of
coastline.
Located 446 km north of Sydney and 19 km south-east of
Kempsey, Crescent Head is one of the best kept secrets on
the northern New South Wales coast. A delightful sleepy
little coastal village it is characterised by beautiful
beaches and a headland which features one of the most
spectacular cliffs on the eastern coast of Australia. It is
also a well-respected surfing destination which offers good
fishing both from the beach and the rocks. The tiny township
is well-protected environmentally with the Goolawah Reserve
and Limeburners Creek Nature Reserve edging it to the north
and the south.
Although the district around Crescent Head had been
thoroughly explored by the 1830s no settlement was
established in the immediate vicinity. It is only in recent
times that this quiet stretch of coastline has been
recognised as an ideal and quiet holiday destination. A town
eventually emerged and it is presently characterised by
1950s style accommodation with many fibro holiday homes.
The peacefulness of the town is largely a result of its
unusual location. Travellers have to make a conscious
decision at Kempsey to depart from the main Pacific Highway
and head in a southerly direction. As most travellers are
heading north they are unwilling to go backwards down the
coast. This circumstance seems designed to ensure that
Crescent Head will never be inundated by large numbers of
tourists.
Of some historic interest is the fact that the S.S.
Wollongbar was torpedoed by the Japanese off Crescent Head
on 29 April, 1943 with a loss of 32 lives.
Today Crescent Head is noted as one of the finest surfing
locations on the New South Wales coast. The headland has
helped to produce almost unique surfing conditions which
have attracted such greats as Midge Farrelly and Nat Young.
Things to see:
Visitor Information
Visitor Information, which is nothing more than a map, is
located on the wall of the Shell Garage in the centre of
town.
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The headland at Crescent
Head |
Crescent Head
To reach the actual headland, turn at Baranghi Street beside
the Shell Service Station, turn into Korogora Street and
then into Skyline Crescent.
Crescent Head is a wonderfully deceptive craggy outcrop.
That fine Australian tradition of despoiling the landscape
has reached some kind of metaphorical highpoint with a huge,
ugly concrete water tower sullying the promontory.
Look south and far, far below is a beach with the
headland tumbling through thick tufts of banksia to a long,
pale arc of sand. And below, on a lower headland, is the
solitary grave of Herbert Arnold O'Dell who died on 1
September 1917 at the age of 26 years and 5 months while he
was fishing off the rocks at Crescent Head.
The views from Crescent Head are spectacular. It is a
sheer fall of nearly 100 metres.You can see as far south as
Point Plomer and as far north as Hat Head. The wind from the
south buffets the banksias which seem to cringe against its
force.
Goolawah Reserve
Goolawah Reserve occupies a peaceful 10-km coastal strip to
the immediate south of Crescent Head. Consisting of typical
seaside Australian bushland (lots of melaleucas and
banksias), it is ideal for bushwalking, surfing and
holidaying. There are two camping grounds - Delicate and
Racecourse - where it is possible to set up a tent or park a
caravan.
Limeburners Creek Nature Reserve and Point Plomer
10 km south of Crescent Head is Limeburners Creek Nature
Reserve which is 9123 hectares of coastal heathlands
characterised by banksias, blackbutt wetlands and small
pieces of rainforest. The area is ideal for birdwatching,
swimming, surfing, canoeing, bushwalking and fishing. There
is a primitive camping area at Melaleuca Rest Area (near Big
Hill) and there are picnic areas at Queens Head and Big
Hill. A loop walk commences at the latter site. It winds
about the summit of the headland, offering dramatic
perspectives down wave-formed chasms and over the coastline,
before descending into coastal rainforest.
The area between Big Hill and Point Plomer is of
historical significance to the local Aborigines who occupied
the area for five or six thousand years prior to European
colonisation. There is an ancient Aboriginal fish trap at
Barries Beach which is said to be one of only three now left
on the mid-north coast. There are also shell middens, burial
sites, open campsites, a large stone tool working site and a
quarry for stone tool production.
The reserve's name derives from the early days of
European settlement when oyster shells from the creek were
burned in prodigious numbers to produce lime for mortar.
Free settlers moved into the area in the 1830s when the
penal settlement at Port Macquarie was wound down. The area
adjacent the creek was declared the Orara Gold Field in 1881
though returns seem to have been insubstantial.
After their initial decimation, oysters returned and the
creek is now the region's principal source of the shellfish.
There is a camping area with showers and toilets at Point
Plomer which is little more than a few fibro houses, a
general store and a service station.
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responsibility for the accuracy of any information in the business
provided by vendors or their professional advisers and that they should
make their own enquiries as to the accuracy of this information,
including obtaining independent legal and/or accounting advice
Crescent Head