Duffys Forest Grinding Grooves
Eight axe grinding grooves around a small pothole along a creek bed in Duffys Forest.
NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) is part of Department of Planning, Industry and Environment. NPWS manages more than 870 NSW national parks and reserves, covering over 7 million hectares of land.
Eight axe grinding grooves around a small pothole along a creek bed in Duffys Forest.
A long shelter in Duffys Forest with Aboriginal rock art, including over ten hand stencils as well as charcoal drawings.
Three axe grinding grooves next to three water holes along a creek in Duffys Forest.
Originally established in 1931, the historic Bruces Walk was restored and re-opened in the 1980s. The trail has multiple ladders as it traverses multiple valleys, with an optional side-trip to a re-discovered waterfall.
Lawson Cave Falls was first documented in the early 1900s before being re-discovered in 2005. The picturesque and secluded waterfall drops about nine metres into a deep pool.
A less-travelled but mostly on-track walk to Venus Tor, a rock outcrop that offers 360-degree views over the Blue Mountains and Grose Valley. The route continues to Boorong Crags and makes a detour into Round Hill Gully.
An unusual and well-preserved Aboriginal rock art site above O’Hares Creek in Dhawaral National Park. It has multiple panels of charcoal motifs, many of them depicting human figures.
A small rock platform near Victoria Road Firetrail in Dhawaral National Park with three axe grinding grooves.
A rock shelter in Dhawaral National Park oith Aboriginal charcoal drawings which include a vertical motif and a sinuous figure resembling a snake.
O’Hares Creek Lookout offers scenic views over Dhawaral National Park from a fenced lookout platform, A very easy, level bushwalk on firetrails.