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A natural map of
Australia in the rocks at the mouth of Narooma's
Harbour |
Narooma (including Montague Island)
Popular seaside holiday destination
Narooma (the official spelling was 'Noorooma' until 1972) is
a popular seaside fishing resort with a population of 3443
which is located at the mouth of the Wagonga Inlet 348 km
south of Sydney via the Princes Highway.
Thought to have been occupied by the Wandandian
Aborigines before white settlement, the area became a cattle
run in the 1840s. The 'Noorooma' run covered the area from
Wagonga to Bermagui. Francis Hunt was probably the first
European settler. After the 1861 Land Act opened the area to
selectors the run was reduced in size.
Gold was discovered in the area in 1880 at the Montreal
site and finds soon followed at Cape Dromedary, Mt
Dromedary, Wallaga Lake, Wagonga Heads, Corunna and Kianga.
A post office called 'Noorooma' was established in 1880
at the site of present-day Corunna but changed its name to
Corunna two years later. In 1883 a township was surveyed and
Narooma was declared a port the following year. Development
was slow. Timber rose in importance around this time and a
sawmill opened at South Head Wagonga, soon followed by a
hotel, store and wharf and a few cottages and, in 1888, a
school. A new Narooma post office was opened in 1889. As a
sign of the town's growing importance the court moved from
Eurobodalla to Narooma in 1895.
In 1906 the Mitchell Bros moved their sawmill operation
from Port Stephens to Narooma. Railway sleepers were soon
being cut from the timber in the Wagonga forests and the
timber industry remains an important part of the local
economy. Shipbuilding and oyster farming were also
established early in the century and the latter too has
retained its local importance.
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The moorings at Narooma
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With passengers arriving on the steamship service of the
south coast many began to explore the fishing in the area as
a form of recreation and tourism became a feature of the
local economy as the town established a reputation as a
holiday resort for boating, aquatic sports and big-game
fishing: a reputation it has retained to this day.
Commercial fishing commenced in the 1930s and a fish cannery
opened on the banks of the Wagonga River in 1940. A bridge
was first built across the river in 1931.
Things to see:
Historic Buildings in the town
Of some architectural interest in the town are the Uniting
Church (formerly Methodist Church - 1914) and parsonage
(1935), located at the top of the main street (Wagonga St)
on the right-hand side if you are heading south, past Canty
St. These two structures, conventional of design, have a
simple strength and dignity. They are considered amongst the
finest Australian timber churches of the early twentieth
century. The decorative gable truss structures at the end of
the nave and the small porch are of note. The gothic revival
bell tower was erected in 1934. The parsonage, with its
charming picket fence is of an unusual design which
complements the main structure without dominating it. There
is a huge bay window at the front with lead-light windows,
sunburst timber decoration on the central gable and a
fanlight over the door.
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The Lighthouse on
Montague Island |
Montague Island
Montague Island is a wildlife and marine-life sanctuary and
flora reserve 10 km offshore just south of Narooma. This
1.4-km island (its maximum width is 800 m) was named after
the British statesman, George Montagu Dunk, by Captain Cook
when he sighted it from the Endeavour in 1770. The
Aborigines of the Wallaga and Djiringanj tribes who
frequented it in search of food (birds, eggs, penguins and
seals) called it 'Barunguba'. The island was once a
promontory of the mainland but was separated during the last
ice age. The waters teem with fish because they are in the
east coast current and are channeled through a narrow
section of the Continental Shelf. It is the only remaining
site in New South Wales on which Australian fur seals are
known. There are thousands of fairy penguins, plus
shearwaters, hawks, silver gulls, sea eagles, harriers,
crested terns and peregrine falcons. The National Parks and
Wildlife Service have established a base on the island and
are currently attempting to restore the vegetation to its
native state - a closed ecosystem of remnant coastal
vegetation - as a succession of European animals and
lighthouse keepers have disrupted the flora with introduced
weeds. Goats and rabbits were transported to the island to
supply meat for shipwrecked sailors.
The lighthouse has been operating since 1881. It was
built from the granite which forms massive outcrops and
rounded boulders on the island and which was once quarried
and used in the construction of Sydney buildings such as the
GPO in Martin Place.
There were originally three lighthouse-keepers and their
families on the island and their attractive houses remain,
one of which is being restored to its original state and
there are plans to turn it into a museum. The light,
originally kerosene-powered, was converted to electricity in
1969 and then to automatic solar power in 1986, eliminating
the need for the keepers.
Access to the island is only possible through organised
charter-boat tours from Narooma which can be arranged
through the Narooma Visitors Information Office (02 4476
2881). NPWS staff conduct guided tours of the lighthouse
buildings and environs and tell tales of the island's past.
The cost is currently $60, ten of which goes to the NPWS for
maintenance costs. For more information on the site phone
the NPWS district office at Narooma (02 4476 2888). The trip
to the island incorporates whale-watching from mid-September
to mid-November.
Attractions in the area
12 km south of Narooma is Tilba Valley Wines and Vineyard
(02 4473 7308). Take the signposted turn to the right off
the highway. A family business it was the first winery on
the south coast. They offer a lunch each day and are open 10
to 5 weekdays and 11 to 5 on Sundays. Continue along the
gravel road and follow the deer signs for another 7 km to
Brooklands Deer Farm (02 4473 7330), an unusual sanctuary
with a rustic feel located at a scenic site. The farm
possesses picnic and barbecue facilities and the barn is the
venue for barn dances throughout the year. The opening hours
are 10 to 5 seven days a week.
Boating, waterskiing and fishing can be pursued in the
wide, open waters of Corunna Lake to the south and Wagonga
Inlet. The former, with its coloured sands and strange rock
formations, is popular with rock collectors while the latter
is rich in bream which congregate around the oyster leases.
The headlands, beaches and lakes south of Narooma are also
fine spots for fishing, and prawning can also be pursued in
season at some of the lakes of The Dromedary Conservation
Area. Tilba Tilba Lake is a good Beach fishing can be
enjoyed at Brou Beach and rock fishing off Dalmeny to the
north, where there is also a boat-launching ramp. Contact
the Narooma Visitors Information Service on the Princes
Highway (200 metres past the bridge on your left if you are
coming from the north) to organise tours, cruises on Wagonga
Inlet, boat-hire or to obtain the names of local service
providers.
Scenic Drives
The trip north across the bridge, east out to the coast,
north to Dalmeny and back to the highway is pleasant. The
more adventurous may wish to head north from here and turn
west off the highway on to Mitchells Ridge Road (unsealed)
just north of Lawlers Creek. After about 4 km another road
heads off to the south back across Lawlers Creek and will
take you past Kianga Road on your left, to Grants Lookout.
From here the road continues south across Bilba Bilba Creek
to Burrimbidgee Creek at the western end of the Wagonga
Inlet, where there is a picnic spot. From here it continues
south for a while then loops back in to the highway just
south of Narooma (approx. 35 km). Both are signposted
tourist drives.
Some fine local lookouts include Harold Buckeridge
Lookout off Kianga Rd at Makins Hill, Wagonga Head Lookout
on Bar Rock Road at Wagonga Head near the mouth of the
river, where you can examine Australia Rock (which features
a naturally-occurring hole with an uncanny resemblance to
the map of Australia), the lookout off Ballingalla St near
Narooma Beach and the golf course, and another further south
along the beach, past the cemetery, at the end of Glasshouse
Rocks Road where Montague Island can be seen in the
distance.
Surfing beaches abound though Bar Beach which runs north
from the river mouth on the northern side of the river has a
very good reputation. It also has an enclosed swimming area
for children. The beaches to the south in the Conservation
Area are especially good.
The golf course in Ballingalla St is scenically situated
atop a cliff. Take the first left after the bridge if coming
from the north, into Fuller Parade. This route takes you
past the swimming pool and jetty, bends to the left becoming
Noorooma Crescent, to the right becoming Pilot St, then
takes a sharp right to become Ballingalla. The golf club is
to your left as you turn the last corner.
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Eric Naylor, a Yuin
Elder, at the top of Gulaga |
Umbarra Cultural tours
A most interesting way to see Mt Dromedary, the mountain
(known by the Yuin people as Gulaga), Mystery Bay, Camel
Rock, Mumbulla Mountain and Fairhaven Point is to take a
guided four-hour, four-wheel drive tour with the Yuin people
of Wallaga Lake at the Umbarra Cultural Centre. There are
also cruises of the lake, its birdlife and midden sites with
a full commentary on their cultural significance. The centre
will furnish information unavailable in written and most
other sources about Aboriginal culture in the area. There
are Dreamtime stories, a chance to indulge in ochre
painting, bark-hut building, spear and boomerang throwing,
bush medicine and bush-tucker. The centre can be found by
driving south beyond the Central Tilba turnoff and
continuing on to the Bermagui Road. It is located on the
Bermagui Road a few kilometres south of the highway, tel:
(02) 4473 7232
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The Penis Rock at the top
of Gulaga (Mt Dromedary) near Narooma
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Narooma