The world's first National Park
VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Sat 20 Dec 2014 14:03
Somewhat surprisingly, this honour can be claimed by Australia – the Royal
National Park just south of Sydney. Established in 1879 it beat Yellowstone in
the USA by two years (it’s not clear who was copying who), although it wasn’t
actually termed a National Park until a bit later. It now offers a green lung
just outside the city, and a lovely two day coast walk which the crew of the VS
could not resist.
Here is your correspondent, failing to resist the urge to relax after a
hard day’s slog with a backpack. This is proper trailwalking, not like the soft
NZ style – the campsite has no facilities at all other than a composting toilet,
so everything has to be carried in and out, even water. The sand dune in the
background is actually an aboriginal midden testifying to thousands of years of
hunter-gathering along this coast:
Paramedics removing three young men who had been stupid enough to walk out
onto the tidal rocks with a huge sea running. They were lucky to escape with
severe contusions:
And a typical stretch of coast backed by untouched native forest:
A lovely walk.
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