BELAIR : VALLEY TRACK

Time : 1 hour 30 minutes, Distance : 6 km

VALLEY


A warm morning, so we begin this walk in the Belair National Park at 8:00 am.  The idea is to park near the main entrance, follow the previously walked Lorikeet Track, and then do the Valley Loop (Frog) Track.

• 1 We find a free car park just inside the main gate, and discover this new entry building with a toll gate for cars wishing to drive further into the Park.  I am happy to walk, and quickly pick up the end of the Lorikeet Track (marked by a parrot sign), just south of the car park.

• 2  This track is not spectacular and I have walked it before, so what to record?  There are always the sweet peas!

• 3  In fact, making a photographic record opens my eyes to all sorts of beauty which would otherwise have been overlooked. Like these grass seed heads ...

• 4 ... and these.  Beautiful creations.

• 5  A scruffy cockatoo encourages us along our way with some raucous squawking.

• 6  Coming to the road, we leave the Lorikeet Track and branch off to the right along the Valley Loop (Frog) Track.

• 7  The track follows along above the road.  I am pleased to find a wood duck family.

• 8  These tall spikes of yellow flowers are spectacular.

• 9   I come to the giant sequoias, recorded on a previous walk.  Seen from the right angle, these are even more spectacular.

• 10  After 50 minutes and 3 kilometres, we reach the fork in the road which is marked Long Gully.  Here the Frog Track runs back along the northern side of the creek.  I find this to be one of the prettiest trails I have discovered in Belair: green, lush and closing in on the walker. 

• 11  It is strange to find these (wild?) roses along the way.

• 12  And what caused this?  The trees all still seem to be growing, but I can’t imagine a prevailing southerly which would cause this.  In fact there were a couple of trees across the track, but not just here.

• 13  While I’m doing a photographic study of grasses ... !

• 14  How lovely this trail is!

• 15  Now we come alongside the Railway Dam.

• 16  This was built in the 1800s to provide a water supply for the steam trains that passed through the Park.

• 17 After the steam engines were phased out, the lake and its surrounds were bought back for inclusion in the Park.

• 18 Ah!  There was a warning sign about this ... .  At great personal risk I tread warily around the edge.

• 19 Here is a tribute to a band of lady volunteers.  What good work volunteers do in our community.

Finally we rejoin the Lorikeet Trail and retrace our steps.   Looking at the map, I discover that today we have traversed almost exactly half the width of the Belair Park.


VALLEY