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South Lawson Waterfall Circuit

Coordinates: 33°43′35″S 150°26′15″E / 33.72651°S 150.43741°E / -33.72651; 150.43741
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South Lawson Waterfall Circuit
Left: A map of the walk, marked in red
Right: Adelina Falls, Junction Falls and a wattle along the track.
South Lawson Waterfall Circuit
Length2.6 km (1.6 mi)
LocationSouth Lawson Park, New South Wales, Australia
Established1878
Usehiking, recreation
Highest pointNorthern Carpark
Lowest pointLeslie Falls
DifficultyEasy–medium
SeasonAutumn
SightsFederal Falls, Cataract Falls
Surfacenatural
Maintained byBlue Mountains City Council

The South Lawson Waterfall Circuit, officially the South Lawson Circular Waterfall Track or colloquially the Five Waterfall Walk, is a walk in Lawson, New South Wales, Australia.[1] It is a 2.6 kilometres (1.6 mi) track that bypasses five waterfalls and an optional sixth one, off track.[2] The landscape and biome changes a lot in the walk, ranging from wet, temperate forest, to dry forest with blue gums and wildflowers around the track.[3] The track follows the banks of Lawson and Cataract Creek, and crosses Ridge Creek once. The track is rated as easy to medium.[4][2] It has an elevation gain of 117 metres (384 ft) along the track.[4]

Overview

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A video showing a brief walk of the circuit, with an Eastern Whipbird calling at the end.

Just south of the town of Lawson in the Blue Mountains, The South Lawson Waterfall Circuit is a popular walk in the town.[4][2] The whole walk is in a temperate biome, and has a large diversity of fauna and flora, including the Musky Rat-Kangaroo, Eastern Whipbird, rarely the Superb Lyrebird, Golden Wattle, Fern, and the Blue and Red Gums.[2] The walk is dog-friendly, because it is owned by the local council, not NPWS, and therefore is not a national park.[1][4]

History

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A sign showing a map and a brief history recount in the Northern Entrance of the walk.

In the late 1800s, early European settlers recognised the area as a great wonder, and started cutting the track in 1878. Earlier, in 1876, the settlers established the first reserves around the area of the falls, for public viewing. During the construction of the trail, they initially built bridges across the streams, but they were destroyed in floods or wildfires. Today, bolts and remnants of wood of the bridges can still be found in the creek crossings. Construction of the track finished in 1900.[2]

Description

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One half of the track follows the banks of Lawson Creek, while the other half has a steep ascent at first, and then follows Cataract Creek. There are two carparks to the north and south, each one of these on Honour Avenue, the main road in Lawson. The walk is directly south-west from the southern residential area of Lawson, the two areas only being separated by Honour Ave.[2][1]

Location

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The circuit is located due south-west of Hazelbrook, and a track leading east after Cataract Falls links the South Lawson Waterfall Circuit with the South Hazelbrook Waterfall Circuit, which consists of Terrace Falls, Bedford Pool and Victor Falls.[2][5] Three small waterways run along the circuit, the Lawson, Cataract and Ridge Creeks.[2][5]

Access

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The walk can be accessed from the centre of Lawson via Honour Avenue. The Great Western Highway also provides access to the track from Sydney or Katoomba. The Blue Mountains Line also provides public transport to the trail.[2][5]

Waterfall list

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Service, NSW Department of Customer (2023-02-23). "South Lawson Waterfall Circuit | NSW Government". www.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 2024-09-16.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Chapman, John (2011). Day Walks Sydney (1st ed.). Australia. ISBN 9781920995089.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Chapman, John (2011). Day Walks Sydney (1st ed.). p. 76. ISBN 9781920995089.
  4. ^ a b c d "South Lawson Waterfall Circuit". alltrails.com. Retrieved 18 September 2024.
  5. ^ a b c UBD, Gregory's (2023). Sydney & Blue Mountains Street Directory 2024 (60th ed.). Australia: Hardie Grant Publishing. ISBN 9780731933167.

33°43′35″S 150°26′15″E / 33.72651°S 150.43741°E / -33.72651; 150.43741