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Wurruma Swamp near Mt Garnet
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Mount Garnet
Sleepy town on the southern edge of the Atherton Tablelands.
Located approximately 165 km, 185 km or 205 km
(it depends which route you want to take - the time is about the same)
from Cairns, Mount Garnet is one of those towns that is easy to pass
through without stopping. To the traveller it looks like nothing more
than a couple of pubs and service stations and a few shops and houses
in the middle of nowhere. Why slow down? There's nothing to see.
In fact the miners who first settled the town hardly
slowed down as they moved through the area. It is said that when, in
about 1904, a rumour went round that the original copper mine was going
to close down half the men didn't wait for their notice to quit. They
simply packed up their few belongings and were gone by lunchtime.
Mount Garnet was first settled around the turn of
the century when copper was found in the area. Within months the Mount
Garnet Freehold Copper and Silver Mining Company Ltd had built a
smelter and was busy hiring men to dig the valuable mineral out of the ground.
At first the smelted copper was shipped out by camel
(there are some interesting photographs of the camel teams on the walls
of the Norwestgate Cafe) but by 1902 a branch line connecting the town
to the line from Mareeba to Chillagoe had been built and the copper was
being railed out to Lappa Junction and then to the coast.
At the time it looked as though the town had a future.
Then, quite suddenly, the price of copper dropped and the company,
eager to cut its losses, closed the mine.
A few remnants of the mine are still in evidence. Take
the road opposite Norwestgate Motel and follow it south on a dirt road
which leads past the old Assay House (which is currently being
restored). Little is left but there is enough to show the scale of the
operation at the turn of the century.
The town did not die. After 1904 the miners turned
their attention to the excavation of tin. Today Mount Garnet has a
reputation as a good starting place for gold prospectors and gem
collectors.
Things to see:
Bill Brotherton and His Rocks
The best collection of rocks and gems in town belongs
to Bill Brotherton. A real outback character with a flowing white beard
and a compulsively interesting line of conversation, Brotherton has
spent over 20 years collecting every kind of rock from the local area
as well as working some of the local woods and collecting some
fascinating specimens - including the foetus of a two-headed guinea pig
which he claims to be the result of Agent Orange. He is an avowed
conservationist. Having grown up in the area he can remember the tall
stands of trees which were once part of the Atherton Tablelands
rainforests. Now at least 80 he has no desire to be inundated with
visitors but you can have a look at the rock collection on the verandah
of his house in Opal St. Bill does not object if you wish to leave a
coin as a donation.
Wurruma Swamp
Just before entering the town from the north there is a
dirt road which heads east to Wurruma Swamp. Although little known,
this is one of the wonders of the Mount Garnet area. The swamp retains
water long after other local wetlands have dried up. Consequently it
draws an amazing range of birdlife from the surrounding region. Edged
by lilies and with dozens of varieties of birds the swamp is something
special. At certain times of the year there are literally thousands of
black swans present.
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Motels
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Norwestgate Travellers Rest Resort
Kennedy Hwy
Mount Garnet
QLD
4872
Telephone: (07) 4097 9249
Rating: **
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Hotels
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Luceyıs Hotel
Kennedy Hwy
Mount Garnet
QLD
4872
Telephone: (07) 4097 9210
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Caravan Parks
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Norwestgate Travellers Rest Van Park
Kennedy Hwy
Mount Garnet
QLD
4872
Telephone: (07) 4097 9249
Rating: *
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