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Home arrow Parks & Recreation arrow Key Attractions arrow Lane-Poole Reserve arrow Trails Wednesday, 14 May 2008 largerspacer1smallerspacer2reset
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Trails in Lane Poole Print
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Trails in Lane Poole
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a walker relaxing in a hut on the Bibbulmun Track

Walktrails:

Walking through any piece of natural bushland is as close as you'll get to being at one with nature. To be surrounded by the sounds, colours, smells and different types of life forms with which you share this planet is both enlightening and exhilarating. (See our feature on Bushwalking in Western Australia.)

Bibbulmun Track (Dwellingup section)

Western Australia's longest walking trail, the 963-kilometre Bibbulmun Track, passes through Lane Poole Reserve as it winds from Kalamunda, on the outskirts of Perth, to Albany.

The Dwellingup section is 140 kilometres from north of Albany Highway to Dwellingup itself and on to the Harvey Quindanning Road. It takes in some spectacular views along the way, from the rocky outcrops of the White Horse Hills in the north, to the Murray River in the south.

Just north of Dwellingup, the track follows the largely disused Dwellingup to Boddington rail line. The rail line from the Etmilyn Siding to Dwellingup is used occasionally by the Hotham Valley Tourist Railway, and it's possible to to make a day's outing from Dwellingup by taking the train one way and walking the other.

There are timber huts spaced by a day's walk, each with its own facilities - barbecue, toilets, table, tent sites and water. Designated vehicle drop-off zones have been nominated along the trail to enable people to enjoy shorter one, two and three day walks. The track is named after an Aboriginal language group known as the Bibbulmun, who inhabited some of the areas through which the track passes, and is marked by a stylised image of the Waugal, or rainbow serpent, an Aboriginal spirit. Detailed maps and books are available at all CALM offices.



Red hiker symbol on yellow triangle.Icon of

Chuditch Walktrail

A picturesque walk along Nanga Brook, through the old Nanga Mill and Townsite areas.
Where: Starts at either Nanga Mill or the southern end of Nanga Townsite and returns walkers back to their start point along the same route..
Distance: 3.8 km
Time to complete: 2 hours
Markers: Red hiker symbol on yellow triangle.