Great North Walk
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Great North Walk | |
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![]() The Great North Walk at Pennant Hills |
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Length | 250 km |
Trailheads | Macquarie Place, Sydney / Bicentennial Park, Newcastle |
Use | Hiking |
Trail Difficulty | Medium |
Season | All |
![The Great North Walk at 34km from Macquarie Place, Sydney. The trail here follows the creek along the Berowra Valley.](../../../upload/shared/thumb/9/9f/GNWalk34km.jpg/180px-GNWalk34km.jpg)
The Great North Walk is a walking track which runs from Sydney to Newcastle in New South Wales, Australia. The main track, 250km in length, runs between the Obelisk in Macquarie Place in Sydney to Bicentennial Park in Newcastle and well sign-posted. There are many "side tracks" which conveniently link the track to populated areas along the length of the walk. The walk includes a huge variety of wildlife and scenery.
A 25km section at the northern, Newcastle end, is also known as the Yuelarbah Track. This section runs from the Teralba railway station through to the Queens Wharf on Newcastle Harbour. At Kahibah Station, the Great North Walk crosses The Fernleigh Track.
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[edit] History
The Great North Walk was initiated by Gary McDougall and Leigh Shearer-Heriot. They both planned and marked the original route from Sydney to Newcastle, with access to many linking tracks. Todays Great North Walk is quite true to the original trail.
The original name for the Great North Walk was the 'Sydney to Hunter Project'. The name 'the Great North Walk' was derived from the first road from the Hunter Valley to Sydney, called the 'Great North Road'.
[edit] Walking
The total walk from Sydney to Newcastle takes around 14 days to complete, with popular camp sites at designated spots along the way. Many of these sites are on ridge tops with no available water supply. Where natural standing water is available, it is not necessarily safe to drink and should be treated before use.
It is not necessary to do the walk in one go, individual sections can be completed easily as the track is often close to the railway line, so the train provides a convenient transport mechanism. Some early sections in Sydney are through local suburbs on sealed roads. The best time to take this walk is late autumn, winter and spring. Summer is extremely hot and should be avoided, particularly if bushfire risk is high.
[edit] References
- McDougall, Garry; Shearer-Heriot, Leigh (1988). The Great North Walk. Kenthurst, NSW: Kangaroo Press. ISBN 086417134X.
[edit] External links
- NSW Department of Lands - The Great North Walk Discovery Kit