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The Annual Wee Jasper Pilgrimage
About 30 years ago members of the Paddington 1st floor ITMC and Engineering branch started an annual caving pilgrimage to Wee Jasper on the October long weekend.
This tradition has continued uninterrupted and this year is no exception. The participants have changed little, but now includes families.
People start arriving on the Thursday or Friday for relaxation, but the official dates are Saturday to Monday of the long weekend
Who goes to these things? Any ex OTC person, their friends and family.
Fire Bans are usually not an issue and the mega-camp fires of the past are only milestones to be exceeded each year. The area we camp in is by a stream and there are amenities with running water. Hot showers are close by and they even threated to upgrade the cold showers at our site to the steaming variety. There is also a swimming hole for the hardy. A general store in the town supplies all sorts of goods and even hot food.
There is of course the odd caving trip. You will need to bring overalls, helmet and lamps.
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When:
Saturday 4th through to Monday 6th October 2003 Inclusive
Saturday 2nd through to Monday 4th October 2004 Inclusive
etc
If you need more info email me at the address below or call me at a reasonable hour.
email: rb@rbrand.com
Phone : 02 9564 5331
Mobile: 04 1868 7047
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Want to see pictures from previous years - click here
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Map of Wee Jasper and Our Camp Site. Taken from 1:100,000 map
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To Join: Please use xxx@yyy.zzz, your name (use a comma after the email address followed by a space and then your name)
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Small village surrounded by great sheep
grazing country.
Wee Jasper is a small village of about 100 people in a pretty valley at the foot of the Brindabella Ranges, on the backwaters of Burrinjuck Dam. It is located 336 km south-west of Sydney and 54 km south-west of Yass along a partially unsealed road.
Explorers Hamilton Hume and William Hovell passed through the valley on their 1824 expedition to Port Phillip, which was of crucial importance to the opening up of the country. They left their carts here as they were proving too cumbersome on mountain terrain.
Soon afterwards W.H. Dutton took up 2560 acres at the confluence of the Murrumbidgee and Goodradigbee Rivers.
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When gold was discovered in 1859 at Kiandra the track from Yass passed through the village site. A school was built at the village in 1899.
One of Australia's best-known poets, A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson, who grew up near Binalong, was part of a syndicate which purchased the 40 000-acre 'Goodravale' property on the east bank of the Murrumbidgee at Wee Jasper. Paterson used it as an occasional country home in the valley so that his children could experience country life. His experiences there are commemorated in 'The Road to Hogan's Gap' and 'The Mountain Squatter'. He abandoned his interest in the property in 1911.
Interest in the fine limestone caves of Wee Jasper peaked in 1957 when the spine of a large extinct wombat was found and the caves were explored and opened up by members of the Canberra Speleological Society. They were officially opened to tourists in 1968.
Today Wee Jasper, with its reserves and caves, is a popular weekend destination.
Things to see:
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Wee Jasper Reserves
Wee Jasper Reserves are available for camping and
recreation. There are five reserves occupying 40 acres. They have no
electricity but all have barbecues and toilets and there are hot and
cold showers at Billy Grace Reserve. No bookings are required but there
is a $5 fee for adults (the ranger will come and get it from you or you
can pay at the ranger's office which is located adjacent Billy Grace
Reserve).
Walking, canoeing, swimming, fishing and caving can all be enjoyed. Trout fishing is best from October to February. For further information ring the Yass Visitors' Centre on (02) 6226 2557 or the local ranger on (02) 6227 9626.
Store
The road from Yass enters Wee
Jasper from the east. It crosses the bridge over the Goodradigbee and
the general store (tel: 02 6227 9640) is to the immediate left on the
other side of the bridge. It has tearooms, sells goods, petrol and
fishing gear, and can furnish some information on local fishing spots.
Opposite the store is The Stables Restaurant and Tavern (with
accommodation), tel: 02 6227 9619.
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Carey's Reserve
The road then continues on to a T-intersection with
the school on one side and the tennis courts and community hall on the
other.
The road on the right (Caves Rd) heads north past Carey's Reserve adjacent the south-western tip of Lake Burrinjuck. There are boat-launching facilities when the dam is 60% full, as well as fishing, camping, picnic tables and toilets, tel: (02) 6227 9626.
A little further along the road are self-contained cottages associated with 'Cooradigbee' station, tel: (02) 6227 9628.
Carey's Cave
As the road continues it soon reaches a Y-intersection.
The branch on the right leads to the shearer's quarters of the
aforementioned 'Coodradigbee' station, where more accommodation is
available.
The branch on the left leads to a carpark from whence it is 45 m to Carey's Cave (6 km north-west of the village) which feature some striking and very colourful limestone formations within its seven principal chambers. There are stalagmites, stalactites, columns, flowstone and helictites. The cave is well-illuminated and guided tours are available on weekends and public holidays, tel: (02) 6227 9622. Picnic-barbecue facilities and a kiosk are on-site.
The limestone derives from ancient compacted corals from the days when the area was beneath the sea (400 million years ago). Their existence has been known to Europeans since the earliest days of exploration. Interest was heightened when the spine of a large extinct wombat was found in 1957 and the caves were explored and opened up by members of the Canberra Speleological Society. Official tourism activities commenced here in 1968.
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Billy Grace Reserve
If, at the T-intersection near the general store, you
turn left onto the Yass-Tumut Rd, it leads past Wee Jasper Station
which offers accommodation in the shearer's quarters and a
self-contained cottage (c/o the General Store on 02 62279640) to another
T-intersection.
If you take the road on the left (Nottingham Rd) you will see, to the immediate left, Billy Grace Reserve and Sarah's Playground which are situated adjacent the Goodradigbee River. There are camping facilities, barbecues, hot and cold showers, toilets, swimming and fishing. The ranger's residence is also located here, tel: (02) 6227 9626.
Swinging Bridge Reserve
The road then continues on past Swinging Bridge
Reserve, also on the riverside. It offers camping, fishing, picnic
tables, swimming and toilets, tel: (02) 6227 9626.
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Micalong Creek Reserve
A little further south , on Micalong Creek, is
Micalong Creek Reserve which offers camping, fishing, swimming,
walking, picnic tables a shower and toilets, tel: (02) 6227 9626.
If you follow Nottingham Rd across the bridge, a side-road appears almost immediately on the left. It leads to Wattle Cottage and Micalong Creek Cottage for further accommodation, tel: 02 6227 9622.
Fitzpatrick Trackhead
If, instead of turning left into Nottingham Rd, you
turn right onto the Tumut Td, Fitzpatrick Trackhead is to the immediate
left. There is a campsite with picnic-barbecue facilities, disabled
access and toilets. It is situated on a portion of the fully-signposted
370-km Hume and Hovell Walking Track which retraces a portion of the
explorers' steps during their vital ground-breaking 1824 expedition to
Port Phillip. The pair carefully hid their carts at Wee Jasper as they
were proving too difficult to haul over the terrain.
From the trackhead you can walk to Mt Wee Jasper (15 km return) or shorten the journey to the waterfall and back (10 km).
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Wee Jasper Camping Reserve
Wee Jasper
NSW
2582
Telephone: (02) 6227 9626