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Welcome
to new travel horizons in north west
Tasmania.
From
the city of Burnie with its industrial
heritage and busy port, the Bass Highway
follows the coast westward, almost always
within sight of Bass Strait.
Massive
bluffs nudge out into the sea Table
Cape, just beyond Wynyard, flat-topped
and fertile, with flowering tulips carpeting
its fields in spring; Rocky Cape, with
its native orchids, bushwalks and sea
cliffs; and Circular Head, where the
historic village of Stanley snuggles
up against the steep-sided Nut. Along
the way, you’ll drive through rich farmland,
where dairy cattle graze, crops flourish,
and the freshly-ploughed chocolate soil
looks good enough to eat.
At
Boat Harbour and Sisters Beach, green
fields sweep down to the water. Beyond
Rocky Cape, the view west is dominated
by The Nut. Stanley was established
in the early days of the colony as the
base for the Van Diemen’s Land Company’s
grazing operations in the far north
west. Its fishing and farming history
is echoed in the village’s sturdy stone
cottages, and in the graceful facade
of Highfield, built in 1832 for the
company’s Governor and agents.
Continue
west to Smithton, centre for the region’s
productive agricultural and thriving
forestry operations. From here, a southern
loop takes you through the rich dairy
lands of Edith Creek and deep into the
tall forests of the north west, before
returning to the coast.
Now
the highway begins its last leap westward
to Marrawah. In this all-but empty country,
the last Tasmanian tiger was captured
in the wild — it happened long ago,
but over the years, there have been
many intriguing reports of sightings
in the same area.
On
the far north west tip is the historic
property of Woolnorth. Land’s end is
Cape Grim, where sea air, tested as
the world’s cleanest, sweeps in from
the Roaring Forties.
At
Marrawah, swells from the Southern Ocean
crash endlessly on West Coast sand.
To the south on unsealed roads is the
entrance of Arthur River, where a river
cruise takes you to see a sea eagle.
At
fishing settlements of Couta Rocks and
Temma the sea can rage — fishermen winch
their boats out of the water on slips
rather than risk them on moorings. Adventurous
travellers with 4WDs can explore further
south on wet, sandy tracks to the beginning
of Sandy Cape Beach. The Western Explorer
route through the Arthur - Pieman Protected
Area penetrates forest wilderness and
crosses the lower reaches of the Pieman
by vehicular barge on its way to the
West Coast. MAP
OF TASMANIA |