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The 'real' entrance from
Tuggerah Lake to the Pacific Ocean, The Entrance
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The Entrance (including Tuggerah Lake, Bateau Bay,
Shelly Beach, Toowoon Bay, Long Jetty and Wyrrabalong
National Park)
Popular holiday destination on the Central Coast
The Entrance derives its name from the narrow channel that
divides the mainland and connects Tuggerah Lake to the ocean
on the Central Coast of NSW. It is located 99 km north of
Sydney via The Newcastle Freeway.
The Entrance is a popular holiday resort and retirement
centre offering visitors surfing beaches, an enormous lake
and a central area which has attractive foreshore parkland
(Memorial Park), a Boardwalk (a pathway from Memorial Park
around to the surf lifesaving club), and the development of
a child-friendly open-air mall called The Waterfront which
is full of fountains, cafes and eateries. In 1998 this
public usage area will be greatly extended and four-star,
high-rise accommodation will go up next to The Entrance
Hotel.
In 1796 shipwrecked fishermen landed on the coast. They
were fed by the local Aborigines who guided them most of the
way home. When they returned to Sydney they told of a white
woman living amongst the indigenous peoples and this
resulted in an excursion to find the woman. The search party
became the first Europeans to discover Tuggerah Lake.
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Looking towards Tuggerah
Lake from The Entrance |
The first European settler was Henry Holden who, in 1828,
selected 260 ha at Picnic Point. Thomas Batley took up land
in 1836. Chinese fishermen established a base in the late
1820s at what is now Toowoon Bay (still known to some as
Chinamans Bay). There they cured and smoked their fish and
sent them to Queensland, back to China and, later, to the
goldfields. They settled at Picnic Point after the
goldrushes were over. This area was also a loading point for
locally cut timber.
The last Aborigine to frequent Tuggerah Lake on his bark
canoe was Billy Fawkner who died in 1875. He was known as
'the last of the Brisbane Water blackfellows', the remainder
of his tribe killed by disease and dispossessed of their
land.
Known by a number of names over the years - Toowoon Bay,
Tuggerah Beach, Karagi (the Aboriginal name for the channel)
- the settlement around the channel became The Entrance when
the post office opened under that name in 1911.
Tourism got under way in the late 19th century with a new
emphasis on health and leisure in the culture and the
completion of the rail line from Sydney to Newcastle in
1889. Sydneysiders began to travel by launch from the train
station at Wyong or from Sydney direct by seaboat, to fish,
bath and walk in the area. A holiday camp was established at
Toowoon Bay in the early 1890s and the first guesthouse in
the area opened at North Entrance in 1895.
The first school opened in 1915 and the first church was
built in 1926. Growth remained slow until the 1920s but, in
that decade, The Entrance became a popular tourist spot for
people drawn by the fishing and beaches. The first bridge
linking the two sides of the channel was erected in 1934.
The Entrance has been a particularly popular tourist
destination since the freeway was built in the 1960s.
Anglers will find the area good for flathead, whiting,
bream, blackfish and prawns. The sea-wall adjoining the
boatshed near the bridge is a good spot for blackfish. Surf
fishing from November to April yields jewfish, whiting and
tailor.
The lake is the principal coastal lagoon of an
interconnected 80 sq km lake system. At its northern tip a
narrow channel separates it from Budgewoi Lake which is
joined, at its north-eastern corner, to Lake Munmorah.
Tuggerah Lake is about 12 x 8 km in diameter. The three
lagoons are separated from the Pacific Ocean by long, narrow
peninsulas but share common access to the ocean at The
Entrance. Less than 2 m deep on average, shark-free and fed
by small streams such as Wyong Creek the lakes are ideal for
waterskiing, canoeing, sailing, rowing and sailboarding. The
lakes and foreshores were cleaned up and restored in the
late 1980s. Tuggerah Lake is also ideal for anglers.
Blackfish, whiting, mullet, snapper, bream, flounder,
tailor, flathead, jewfish, tarwhine and crabs can all be
caught from the foreshores. Prawns are usually plentiful in
mid-summer and can be snared at night with a lamp and net by
wading into the shallows.
Things to see:
Koolewong Coastal Ecotours
If you want to experience the local area accompanied by an
expert local guide and are interested in the ecology, fauna
and flora of the district then double click here and check
out Koolewong
Coastal Ecotours. Details of their tours are provided.
Koolewong Coastal Ecotours are conducted within the
Brisbane Water and Bouddi National Parks on the NSW Central
Coast. The trained Ecotour Guides have extensive local
knowledge of the flora and fauna of the native bushland.
Travellers are picked up from their Hotel from 8.30am and
and are returned by around 5.30pm. Optional starting and
return times can be booked where required.
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The fun park for children
at Memorial Park |
Memorial Park
The local visitors' information centre is located in a large
white building in Memorial Park. There is a large carpark
adjacent. The Boardwalk is a walkway which follows the
channel eastwards from Memorial Park around to the surf
lifesaving club. It starts adjacent The Waterfront, a sunny,
al fresco mall with cafes, eateries and fountains designed
for the amusement of children. There are rides at The
Waterfront in the school holidays which run into the evening
when the mall is brightly lit and frequented by visitors.
The atmosphere is pleasant and safe. One of the pleasant
daily rituals at The Entrance is the pelican feeding which
occurs in the park at 3.30 p.m. There is also an
arts-and-crafts market just outside the visitors' centre on
Sundays.
Picnic Point
At the north-western corner of the southern peninsula, off
Tuggerah Parade, is Picnic Point where there is a pleasant
park and a boat ramp. To the north, beyond Budgewoi Lake the
large stacks of Munmorah Power Station can be clearly seen
with those of Vales Point Power Station, on the southern
shore of Lake Macquarie, in the distance. Pelican Island, a
breeding site for migratory wading birds, lies just
offshore.
War Museum
The Entrance War Library Museum is located at 313 The
Entrance Rd adjacent Tuggerah Lakes Memorial Club. They
possess memorabilia dating back to the Crimean War and are
open Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10.00 a.m. - 12.00 and 2.00
p.m. - 4.00 p.m. or by appointment, contact (02) 4333 1823.
Long Jetty
Nearby, on the south-western side of the southern peninsula
is Long Jetty the base of sailing on Tuggerah Lake. The Long
Jetty Sailing Club is at the northern end of Tuggerah
Parade. For information on sailing activities and major
races ring the club on weekends, contact (02) 4332 8861.
Swadling Park
Heading south along the southern peninsula there are a
number of bays and rocky headlands. There is Blue Bay,
Toowoon Bay, Little Bay, Shelly Beach (a major surf beach)
and Bateau Bay. There is a very pleasant park (Swadling
Park) at Toowoon Point which divides, and provides
perspectives down over, Little Bay and Toowoon Bay.
Wyrrabalong National Park
The park covers 597 ha but is divided into two quite
distinct and physically separate sections. Wyrrabalong,
meaning 'headland looking over the sea' is a word of the
Darkinjung people who once occupied the narrow strip of
coastline between Bateau Bay and Forresters Beach, which now
constitutes the southern section of the park (140 ha).
The southern section is characterised by high, exposed
coastal cliffs of sandstone and shale which have extensive
rock platforms at either end that are ideal for fishing and
exploring at low tide. There are woodlands of blackbutt,
spotted gum and bloodwood along the plateau, with shrubs and
heath (mostly coastal banksia and she-oak) on the gentler
slopes to the west. There is plenty of marine and bird life
and mangrove stands at the southern end of Bateau Bay. Fauna
includes goannas, bandicoots, fantails and the tawny
frogmouth.
Reserve Drive runs alongside a strip of parkland that
overlooks the small and rather beautiful Bateau Bay. At the
southern end of Reserve Drive turn right into Yaruga St then
left into Hilltop St which will take you to Crackneck
Lookout (274 m high) where there is a large clearing and
carpark with information boards and a picnic-barbecue area.
The views are quite spectacular.
Wyrrabalong Lookout is further south on Cromarty Hill.
There is a carpark and an adjacent concrete platform with
views to the south and west. A short path leads to
Wyrrabalong Lookout on the cliff's edge, 132 m above
sea-level, from where there are panoramic views south to The
Skillion at Terrigal.
A 3.8 km walking track starts on the eastern side of
Bateau Bay Rd at Blue Lagoon, finishing at Wyrrabalong
Lookout. If you prefer a shorter walk the 1.6-km track
between the two lookouts leads through attractive woodland
along the cliffline. For further information contact (02)
4324 4911.
The park's northern section covers most of the North
Entrance Peninsula. It starts at the tip of North Entrance
and ends at Pelican Point south of Noraville. Wilfred
Barrett Drive runs through the park. There is a considerable
diversity of fauna and flora, including the lace monitor,
flying fox, bandicoot, squirrel glider, diamond python,
possum, New Holland Mouse, antechinus and many birds.
The ocean side is mostly coastal dunes with beach access
via Pelican Beach Rd (at the northern end) and the Tuggerah
Beach Walking Track (700 m) which leads to a popular but
unpatrolled surfing and fishing area.
On the western side of the road there is a lovely strip
of red gum forest though there are also remnants of littoral
rainforest and some open scrubland and wetlands. All can be
explored by means of colour-coded walking tracks, accessed
from two carparks on the western side of Barrett Drive. The
carparks contain information boards outlining the lengths of
the different tracks which intersect with each other so that
it is possible to explore them all from one starting point.
The wetlands trail extends northwards to the rim of the main
sand dune where there are viewing platforms.
Wyrrabalong National Park also includes Pelican Island
and Terilbah Island in Tuggerah Lake, which are breeding
sites for migratory wading birds. For further information
contact (02) 4324 4911.
Tours, Cruises and Other Services
There are boats, canoes and bikes for hire, as well as bait
and tackle, from The Entrance Boat House on The Entrance Rd
(under the bridge), contact (02) 4332 2652. On the
south-eastern shore of the lake (the south-western side of
the southern peninsula), is Long Jetty where you will find
Long Jetty Catamaran and Boat Hire (cnr Tuggerah Parade and
Pacific St), contact (02) 4332 9362. Divers should consult
Pro Dive Central Coast who can show you the best spots. They
also offer lessons, contact (02) 4334 1559. Wandering the
Lake Cruises are due to commence operations at the end of
1997. There is currently no such service.
A number of operators will pick up clients from their
homes, though this may depend upon whether there are
sufficient numbers. Central Coast Kayak Tours will pick
people up from most Central Coast train stations (there is
also a daily coach service from Sydney), contact (02) 4381
0342. Meals are provided and no experience is necessary.
Aeroflite offer scenic flights over the Central Coast for up
to seven passengers, as well as charter flights. They depart
from Warnervale aerodrome, just north of Wyong, contact (02)
4392 4199.
Alcheringa Tours at 20 Sierra Crescent, East Gosford,
offer tours for small groups of varying duration into the
local caves and national parks, contact (02) 4325 5966. It's
Easy Tours organise luxury coach holidays with day tours of
the Central Coast and out to Wisemans Ferry, contact (02)
4340 1037. Fresh Tracks Safaris specialise in 4WD tours of
the Central Coast, the Hunter Vineyards and Aboriginal
sites, contact (02) 4385 3024. Blunsdon Day Tours and
Charters run mini-coach day tours around the Central Coast
and other areas.
Broadwalk
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Broadwalk Business
Brokers specialise in General Businesses for Sale, Caravan Parks for
Sale, Motels for Sale, Management Rights & Resorts for Sale, Farms for
Sale, Hotels for sale,Commercial & Industrial Properties for Sale.
Phone:
1300 136 559
Email:
enquiries@broadwalkbusinessbrokers.com.au
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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
The Entrance