Back to the Australian Museum
Continue to Sydney Cove
In a sudden, irrational fit
of wanting to get out of the city, we decided we would take a day to
visit the Blue Mountains.
The Blue Mountains are mainly a large, scenically eroded sandstone
plateau which forms a natural western barrier to the Sydney
area.
We discovered that a train could take us from Sydney
to the tourist center of the Blue Mountains, the town of Katoomba,
for a round-trip cost under $20 apiece.
We got an early start and battled the flood of commuters on the subway to go south a couple of
stops to the Central Station, and then west about 65 miles to Katoomba (this took nearly
two hours because of many stops, giving us plenty of time to finish the Hungry
Jack’s breakfast we’d picked up at the Central Station).
Nella on Train
|
Connie and Bob on Train
|
Katoomba is situated near
the edge of a plateau, at an altitude of approximately 3000 feet.
In the winter it is markedly cooler in
Katoomba than it is in Sydney,
a fact which didn’t escape our notice on exiting the train.
A map posted near the train station showed
the actual edge of the plateau, where the local viewpoints could be found, to
be maybe a kilometer from the station.
Buses were available for a fee, but we decided we could
walk this distance without much difficulty.
This also gave us a chance to window-shop in the business district near the
train station.
But once we got past the shops,
we seemed to enter a residential area, and the directions became less certain,
and the distance seemed to stretch out farther than expected.
And the bellyaching began (“This is really
far! Why didn’t we
take the bus?? Are
you sure you know where we’re going?”).
Also, it was a little breezy, making the
temperature (probably in the low 40’s Fahrenheit) more uncomfortable
(“It’s
COLD!! I can’t feel
my fingers! I’ll
bet the bus is heated!”).
Nonetheless, we eventually
arrived, cold and not on the best of terms, at Echo Point.
At Echo Point there is a fine view of the Jamison
Valley,
and particularly of en eroded rock formation called the Three Sisters, which is
probably the best-known landmark in the Blue Mountains.
There was a plaque marking a spot where Queen Elizabeth (the second one, from
the UK)
had taken in the view in 1954. She must
have enjoyed it, as it stretches from the Three Sisters on the left to sheer rock
walls on the right, with the vast Jamison Valley
in between.
The Three Sisters from Echo Point
|
Plateau Across Jamison Valley
|
Scenery from Echo Point (WMV Video, 3.0 MB)
|
Queen Elizabeth Plaque
|
The next promontory to the
right appeared to have a cable car going down into the valley.
We discovered there was an attraction near
that promontory called Scenic World which offered a few ways to experience the
valley, and this sounded interesting to us.
Cliff and Scenic World
|
Scenic Railway Being Hauled Upward (WMV Video, 2.8 MB)
|
Walking apparently was not going to be an option, so we purchased
tickets to a trolley bus which makes a circuit of the area that includes Echo
Point and Scenic World, and which would eventually take us back to the train
station.
And it was heated too, as it turned out.
Scenic World offers a couple of ways to reach the valley floor – the Scenic
Railway and the Scenic Cableway.
The Scenic Cableway was the cable car we’d seen from echo point, and is a large
gondola which dangles from a steep cable and travels up and down.
The Scenic Railway is a caged-in train with
bench seats which is billed as “the steepest incline passenger railway in the
world”.
This is certainly possible, as the incline
exceeds 50 degrees at one point.
We decided to take the Scenic Railway down and the Scenic Cableway back up.
Scenic World Map
The Scenic Railway is something of a thrill ride, as it’s so steep.
It gets you down
to the bottom very quickly, passing through a tunnel on the way.
But being in a tunnel much of the way, the
view isn’t so great.
Nella and Connie Boarding Scenic Railway
|
Riding the Scenic Railway (WMV Video, 27.8 MB)
|
Valley Station, Scenic Railway
|
Replica, Original Scenic Railway
|
At the bottom is a
boardwalk through a rainforest called the Scenic Walkway. The rainforest wasn’t
quite what we’d expected.
There wasn’t any rain (not
that we’re complaining about this), and it wasn’t anywhere near as warm
as the tropical rainforests we’d heard so much about.
Apparently it’s a “temperate rainforest”, which seems to mean a cold
one, at least in the winter.
The boardwalk was fun, though, with lots of nature and some exhibits on the
coal mining which went on in the area at one time.
Coal Mining Exhibit (WMV Video, 6.9 MB)
|
Katoomba Coal Mine Tunnel Entrance
|
Nella on Boardwalk
|
Connie and Nella on Boardwalk (WMV Video, 17.3 MB)
|
Eventually we got to the valley station of
the Scenic Cableway and had ourselves (along with a lot of other tourists)
hauled back up to the top.
The view from the Scenic Cableway was quite nice, with a swell vista of the valley
and a brief look at Katoomba Falls.
Descent of Scenic Cableway (WMV Video, 9.4 MB)
|
Katoomba Falls from Cableway
|
Rock Wall from Cableway
|
Riding the Scenic Cableway (WMV Video, 15.4 MB)
|
At the top we reunited with our trolley and
returned to the train station.
Sign at Katoomba Train Station
|
Connie and Nella Aboard Train
|
A train returned us to Sydney
in time for the evening rush hour, where we found dinner and thawed out for the
rest of the evening.
More Photos:
Alexandra Hotel, Leura
|
The Three Sisters
|
Viewing Area at Echo Point
|
Connie and Koala Near Echo Point
|
The Three Sisters from Valley
|
Connie on Horseback
|
Bob and Cabin
|
Scenic Cableway on Descent
|
Valley and Plateau from Cableway
|
Large Rock from Cableway
|
Continue to Sydney Cove
Back to the Australian Museum