Tag Archives: Mt William National Park

2018

February

Constable Creek wade and walk – St Helens.

A warm watery stroll up the creek, where many ferns were identified, and a variety of  other vegetation including dogwood, silver wattle, bulloak and native cherry. A Tasmanian water spider, Megadolomedesjohndouglasi, was also seen.

Constable Creek (PR)

March

Explore Scamander River

We looked at the river’s catchment characteristics, geomorphology and social history.

April

Dorset Dredge – Gladstone

A walk through the bush to this relic of mining history. Historians and Geologists told the story.

Click here for an article from the NE Advertiser in 1950

Field Nats at the Dorset Dredge (PR)

May

Scott Bell’s devil enclosure

Scott told us how the project has progressed. Steve Cronin shared some information on many different habitat types in the area. A bonus was the chance to see a carbonised piece of pine between 20 and 23 million years old revealed by an excavator whilst digging a dam.

Acacia suaveolens

June

Brid River Reserve at Duncraggen Hill

A walk through a narrow Crown river reserve extending along the Brid River for 3.5 Kms. It is surrounded by State forest, and is a dry-to damp sclerophyll forest dominated by stringy bark and black perppermint,  with a scattering of fine old whitegums.

Leafy flat sedge (Cyperus lucidus)

September

Fern Foray, Little Chook bike trail, Weldborough

The Little Chook mountain bike trail, arguably one of the most beautiful trails in the Blue Derby network. The easy grade 6 km circuit walk, wending through a myrtle forest, is a hotspot for ferns.

Blue Tier - Little Chook bike trail

October

Mt William National Park – Boulder Point

Mt William rises above a plain which is near the coast and contains heathland vegetation, grass trees (Xanthorrhoea) and black peppermint (Eucalyptus amygdalina). Three plants of special interest were observed on this walk. Dockrillia striolata (streaked rock orchid), Hibbertia aspera (rough guinea flower) and Pterostylis dubia (blue tongued orchid).  A family of five or six fledgling dusky woodswallows (Artamus cyanopterus) was also seen.

November

A walk up Mount Maurice

Climbing to an altitude of 1100 metres, we saw three main types of forest: wet sclerophyll (mainly Eucalyptus delegatensis, or whitetop), mixed forest (whitetops with a predominantly myrtle understorey), and rainforest. At the summit, with it’s 360 degree view, was more flora, including Richea scoparia, a prickly plant endemic to Tasmania.

Nothofagus cunninghamii
Ancient myrtle (Nothofagus cunninghamii)

December

Diddleum Plains

The track, which started at East Diddleum, followed the route which the Camden irrigation pipeline now takes, and we were disappointed to realise that soon many beautiful manfern glades, myrtles and sassafras will have to be cleared to make way for the pipeline. The shady manfern gullies give way to the radiata pine forest, then the track meanders through mature native forest,  An interesting discovery was a largeforest land snail, Anoglypta launcestonensis.

Anaglypta launcestonensis (Granulated Tasmanian snail)
Anoglypta launcestonensis.

2015

March

Salt marsh exploration – Little Musselroe Bay

This often forgotten and undervalued habitat has been the subject of recent studies. NRM North and UTAS have identified and mapped Tasmanian Saltmarshes and published their findings. A walk-and-talk in the morning, then some shoreline monitoring after lunch.

Little Musselroe

April

Sunflats Road to Platts Lookout – Blue Tier

A downhill walk, of 5–6 km on a 4WD track, looking for native berries. Noted were Snowberry (Gaultheria hispida), Native pepperberry (Tasmannia lanceolota), Climbing blueberry (Billardiera longiflora) and Heart berry (Aristotelia penduncularis)

May

Blackboy Plains overhangs – Mt Victoria area

A fascinating day exploring these overhangs which were used for shelter 1600 years BPE. Some of the caves are 10 metres high and extending 10-15 metres into the cliff.

June 

Waterhouse Conservation Area

A tour of the country inland from Blizzard’s Landing.The coastal heath on the dunes is dominated by windpruned dwarf oaks (Allocasuarina monilifera), silver banksia (Banksia marginata), sweet-scented wattle (Acacia suaveolens) and various guinea flowers, particularly the silky guinea flower, Hibbertia sericea.

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Acacia suaveolens
Acacia suaveolens with field naturalists above (PR)

September

Rail trail from Scottsdale to Ling Siding

The trail meanders through farming countryside to the east of Scottsdale. Across wet gullies dotted with tree ferns; through numerous cuttings, and a wet area with buttongrass and Melaleuca gibbosa.

October

Mossing around at Paradise Plains

A sub-alpine area behind Ringarooma. Sean Blake led us on three short walks—to a
stand of Eucalyptus delegatensis (white-topped stringybark); into an open grassland area that was used for cattle grazing a century or so ago and is now undergoing
rapid transition; and through a rainforest that is also undergoing transition, albeit at a much slower rate.

November

Threatened plants

We joined some members of the Threatened Plants Tasmania group who were visiting the Bridport area to survey threatened species. Among the species surveyed were Hibbertia virgata, Pultenaea sericea and Xanthorrhoea bracteata.

Hibbertia virgata

December

Blue Derby Field Nats style

Revel Munro showed us the historical and natural elements of some of the new trails – the “Blue Derby” Mountain Bike Trails.