Saturday, February 11, 2006

Sydney Walks: Harbour Bridge to Taronga Zoo

It's less than two months until we will be off on our overseas adventure, and its really time for some serious training and preparation. We've got a six week long pilgrimage to do, walking up to 25km a day. So I'm aiming at doing as many walks as possible before we go, building up in kms. Since I don't drive, I'm depending on public transport to get me to the walks, and luckily there are loads of walks around Sydney Harbour. For this walk I used the map in the Sydney Harbour to Spit walks brochure.


Two's Company
Originally uploaded by haruspex.


After getting the train to Circular Quay, I took the glass elevator up to the Cahill Expressway. The pedestrian walkway will then take you over the Harbour Bridge. I'd never really taken notice of this elevator before and I don't think many people know about the excellent views you can get from the Expressway. There was no one up there, except for a couple of joggers - and so I started my walk with iPod on, singing along loudly and out of tune without embarrassing myself. Passing views of the CBD skyscrapers on the left and The Rocks and Circular Quay on the right I made my way to the Bridge. I'd cycled over the bridge before, but never walked.


The Rocks
Originally uploaded by haruspex.


The walk over the Bridge is a bit dissapointing because of the high security fences and barbed wire. Once over the bridge I walked around Kirribilli and had a gawk at the Prime Minister's house, but didn't see him, just a very bored looking policeman on guard outside.

Most of the walk in this leg is down residential streets, with the occasional view of the harbour when you hit parks like Milson Park and Anderson Park. When I got to Neutral Bay I started seeing signs pointing towards Nutcote (May Gibbs house), so headed that way.

Nutcote was the house which was specially designed for May Gibbs by the well-known architect BJ Waterhouse and she lived there for 45 years. From her lovely studio overlooking the harbour at Neutral Bay she wrote and illustrated most of her wonderful books and the long-running cartoon strip Bib and Bub.


Nutcote
Originally uploaded by haruspex.


The next loop walk is around Cremorne Point. There is a 3km foreshore walkway that goes right around, through bush and past enormous Federation Arts & Crafts style houses.

I found a great heritage leaflet on Cremorne. And here’s an extract:

In c1832, 86 acres of Cremorne Point were granted to a Scottish watchmaker, James Robertson. Prior to European occupation this foreshore land was inhabited by the Cammeraygal People and they called it Wulworra-Jeung. After the land was sold in 1853 it was turned it into an amusement park called Cremorne Gardens, after a similar pleasure garden in London. The first subdivision came in 1903 and most of the buildings in Cremorne Point date from the Federation housing period through to the 1920s and 1930s.

The walk continutes around Mosman Bay, past ‘The Barn’, the last remaining structure from the original Whaling Station built by Archibald Mosman in 1831. From 1925 until recently it has been used as a scout hall for the 1st Mosman 1908 Scout Troop.

There is then a steep climb up stairs and roads over the point to Little Sirius Cove and the end in nearly in sight. I’m getting quite exhausted by this stage, but determined to get to my end point. It takes my last reserves to walk the last half hour along the side of Taronga Zoo, past Whiting Beach, till I reach the Taronga Zoo Wharf, for the ferry ride back to the city.

Final result: 10km, 4 hours, one blister, slight exhaustion,
sense of achievement

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