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Kondalilla National Park

1945 establishments in AustraliaFree-content attributionHiking and bushwalking tracks in QueenslandIUCN Category IINational Parks on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland
Protected areas established in 1945Use Australian English from September 2014
Sunshine Coast, Queensland Kondalilla falls
Sunshine Coast, Queensland Kondalilla falls

Kondalilla is a national park in the Blackall Range of South East Queensland, Australia, 91 km north of Brisbane. William Skene founded this area on his property while searching for lost cattle. He named it Bon Accord before giving it to the Queensland Government who, during the fifties, renamed it Kondalilla which is an Aboriginal word for running water. The area was first officially protected in 1906 as a recreational area, becoming a national park in 1945.Access is easiest by road from Flaxton, east of the park. There is a large picnic area where there are toilet facilities (non potable water). There are two tracks which lead to the upper falls swimming hole. A longer circuit track will take you to the bottom pool which is not suitable for swimming. Allow at least two hours for the circuit trip, which in some places is close to the cliff edge and is not fenced. Camping in the park is not permitted.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kondalilla National Park (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kondalilla National Park
Sunshine Coast Hinterland Great Walk, Sunshine Coast Regional

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Wikipedia: Kondalilla National ParkContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N -26.668055555556 ° E 152.85833333333 °
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Sunshine Coast Hinterland Great Walk

Sunshine Coast Hinterland Great Walk
Sunshine Coast Regional (Flaxton)
Queensland, Australia
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Sunshine Coast, Queensland Kondalilla falls
Sunshine Coast, Queensland Kondalilla falls
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Blackall Range
Blackall Range

The Blackall Range is a mountain range in South East Queensland, Australia. The first European explorer in the area was Ludwig Leichhardt. It was named after Samuel Blackall, the second Governor of Queensland. The Blackall Range dominates the hinterland area of the Sunshine Coast, west of Nambour. Maleny, Mapleton, Montville and Flaxton are the main settlements located on the range. The Stanley River rises from the southern slopes. Baroon Pocket Dam is a reservoir on Obi Obi Creek which drains the north west slopes of the range. Mary Cairncross Reserve marks the site of the first settler's house on the Blackall Range. Curramore Sanctuary, Mapleton Falls National Park and Kondalilla National Park are also located on the range. A number of lookouts on the range provide views towards the coast. One of these is located at Howells Knob, a mountain which rises 561 m above sea level.Timber resources in the area attracted timber-cutters in 1860s. The last logging on the range occurred in 1939. The Blackall and Bunya Mountains ranges are the only two locations where the bunya pine species of tree is found naturally.Activities by community groups with the support of the Queensland Government succeeded in recognising the range with iconic status, meaning the area is given greater environmental protection. In mid-2008, iconic status was confirmed, making the Blackall Range the third such declaration in Queensland after Noosa and Port Douglas.