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Sidetrip 5 - Climbing Gulaga

At 807 m high, the mountain that we call Dromedary dominates the landscape like no other landmark on the South Coast. It is no wonder that it is a place of great spiritual significance to the Yuin people, the original inhabitants of this region; walking along the beaches and headlands its presence has been tangible. To the Yuin people, this mountain is Gulaga and, just as a trip to Rome would be incomplete without visiting St Peter's Cathedral, this walk would seem incomplete without climbing Gulaga.




Pam's Store - Tilba Tilba

It was a clear sunny day when Liz dropped us off at the head of the track, Pam's Store in Tilba Tilba. We set off along a dirt road through the green paddocks of Tilba on the 5.5 km long 750 m climb to the top of Gulaga, passing by weatherboard farm buildings and grazing cows, the forest clad slopes of Gulaga beckoning ahead of us. A pair of wedge-tailed eagles circled lazily in a thermal above us.

After 1 km we reached the start of Gulaga National Park and found ourselves in tall eucalypt forest; the path narrowed and steepened as it headed unrelentingly upwards.


The track leading to Gulaga


View back over Little Dromedary and Tilba Tilba

As we gained height, the forest became more humid and tree ferns started to appear along the route. Midway we passed a spot where park rangers were working on a track to some abandoned gold diggings. In the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries, a gold rush turned Gulaga into a mini-industrial site and the consequent erosion and timber cutting left deep scars on the mountain. Fortunately, the gold ran out and the mountain healed itself, leaving some rusting equipment and ruins as the sole reminder of “progress”.


Drier forest on the lower slopes

mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

We reached a saddle at the head of a four wheel drive track coming in from the north – Umbarra, an aboriginal cultural centre brings tours up this way to explain the significance of sacred sites on the mountain. After the saddle the path narrowed and we continued our steady climb through a cool green corridor of ferns and mossy rocks; more and more rainforest plants appeared as the canopy closed in over us. Finally, the track turned steeply upward once more, taking us through a superb patch of cloud forest just below the summit; a low light filtered through a canopy of massive pinkwood and sassafras trees revealing their lichen-covered trunks and scattered ferns amongst the exposed moss-covered rocks on the forest floor.


Tree fern lined track on the middle slopes


Fungus covered trunk


In the cloud forest of the upper slopes

 


Moss-covered rocks on the forest floor


A massive pinkwood trunk


Giant sassafras


View over Tilba Tilba Lake from the top of Gulaga

Emerging at the top, the vegetation reverted to a thick scrub with pockets of distant coastline visible between the gaps. Thirty years earlier, I had been here and the summit was a boulder-strewn with a few trees giving unobscured views along 200 km of coastline from this point. Today, Gulaga chooses to hide them, perhaps to focus on the spirituality of the mountain rather than being a glorified viewing platform.

Descending to the saddle, we walked out along a spur topped with a series of incredibly shaped granite tors. This was one of the sacred sites and we were fortunate to meet Greg, a park ranger, who was explaining the significance of the site to a small group. The tors were used for the life education of boys and girls, their shapes illustrating different aspects of growth and development. Other tors represented animal totems of the Yuin and yet others were devoted to women's business, which obviously remained a secret to Greg. Thanks, Greg, your explanations have certainly given the mountain more significance for us.


Before commencing their instruction,
the Yuin would place their hand on this
rock to clear their minds in preparation

These massive granite tors are symbolic stones that were used for the life education of Yuin children

With a cold wind blowing and the weather changing behind us, we descended quickly to Tilba Tilba, where Liz picked us up and drove to nearby Central Tilba, a lovely heritage town with streets lined with delightful weatherboard buildings. Here we warmed up with a cappuccino and delicious cake at the Rose and Sparrow, a café run by a school friend of Nello and Liz, Anne, and her husband, Chris. As with Barunguba, we have looked at Gulaga as a travelling companion on this part of our trip; one that we now knew a lot better.


Pink weatherboard exterior of the Dromedary Hotel
Central Tilba


The changing mood of Gulaga
     
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