The
views of
Toolinna Cove from the spectacular 75 metre high Baxter Cliffs on the
Great Australian Bight make this trek a must do.
Toolinna Cove must be one of the most remote coves on the southern coast of WA and it’s one of the few breaks in the vast cliffs of the
Great Australian Bight. Nature lovers will find a wide variety of bird life, concentrated in the woodland forest that extends in a narrow belt along the vast
cliff system.
On this trek you will also visit;
- a 1906 well used by cameleers and other travellers coming via SA to the WA gold rushes,
- the vast open plains of the Nullarbor,
- then the dense woodland forest of the Nuytsland Nature Reserve,
- a number of sink holes; which depending on the weather will be sucking in or blowing out vast volumes of air,
- the ruins of a 1877 east west telegraph linesman’s camp,
- and Toolinna rockhole/tank; a stone lined well with a metal lid.
How to Use this Trek Note
- To download this information and the route file for offline use on a phone, tablet, headunit or laptop, go to the app store and purchase ExplorOz Traveller. This app enables offline navigation and mapping and will show where you are as you travel along the route. For more info see the ExplorOz Traveller webpage and the EOTopo webpage.
Environment
On the first half of this trek you will travel over the vast plains of the Nullarbor, which has only isolated pockets of trees and
limestone outcrops to break up the monotony. Once you reach the tree belt closer to the cliffs, the soil changes and tends to be sandy in patches, again with
limestone outcrops. Numerous sink holes are dotted along the track; travellers will easily spot them as they drive by. Take note, once you enter the tree belt, the track becomes windy and overgrown with long stretches of scratchy bushes along this section. Scratches on your vehicle are inevitable.
The cliffs themselves stretch out to the east and west as far as the eye can see, and the passage of time during the day changes the colours and the moods of what you see.
Toolinna Cove is undoubtedly the most spectacular scenery of the whole trek; it’s the only break in the cliffs between Eyre and
the beach to
Israelite Bay.
Toolinna Cove beach is now inaccessible, because the old steel ladder and rope system has been removed for safety reasons.
History
Edward
John Eyre first crossed from SA to WA in 1841; his epic journey still remains as one of Australia’s most arduous yet successful feats of exploration. Others to follow included
John and Alexander
Forrest in 1870 on their journey of exploration from west to east and the surveyors and builders of the east-west telegraph line which opened in 1877.
The Western Australian gold rushes of the late 1880s, attracted hordes of prospectors many of whom had little or no money, they could not afford the fare by ship to WA; so they walked, cycled or came by horse via the Nullarbor. Cameleers, carting equipment and materials to the WA goldfields, also used this route for their journey.
The water at
Five Ways Tank was critical to the safe passage of all of these travellers or ‘’overlanders as they were known. Few people are aware that during WWII
Toolinna Cove had a
lookout tower, manned by some six Australian soldiers. They were on the
lookout for enemy activity on the south coast.
In the 1980s and 1990s, people from stations to the north, came here for the annual salmon run. They installed ropes and a steel ladder so they could access the small beach below. Authorities have since considered the ropes and ladder dangerous and removed them. They also installed a pulley system, so they could lower their food and camping gear and retrieve fish from the bottom. Leaving their freezers and generators running at the top of the cliffs, they camped at the bottom of the cliffs in caves. An old bicycle frame (also removed) was concreted in place on top of the
cliff; the front wheel was used as a pulley. The operator would pedal like fury and the basket of goods would rise up the cable to the top; most ingenious.
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