Posts in south coast nsw
Bombo Quarry Kiama - A Unique Photo Stop

The Bombo Headland Quarry is located north of Blowhole Point at Kiama.

It is an annoying place to get to by car if you are at the blowhole as there is no coastal road to it. A short trip on and off the Princes Highway is required.

The quarry can be accessed by a short walk from either Boneyards Beach or the car park at the north end of Bombo Beach.

Hopefully the wind direction is favourable as you may encounter an experience you wish to avoid - sweet odours emanating from the very nearby Bombo Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Anyway lets move on!

As you walk through Bombo quarry clumps of rock are scattered in a number of areas with the larger clumps closer to the ocean.

The rocks are hexagonal basalt columns created approximately 270 million years ago when lava cooled, contracted and fractured. It is thought that the hexagon shape is formed in response to stress as the solidified lava cracks.

The unusual name of ‘Bombo’ originated from an aboriginal word of the Wodi Wodi people for thunder. However it was not adopted completely as the indigenous word for thunder was in fact ‘Bumbo’.

A local religious minister was of the opinion that the name was too risque and it was subsequently modified to Bombo.

The Bombo Quarry was mined for its blue metal from 1880 to mid 1920s, and then off and on again (stopped during the depression) until 1944.

It is difficult to ascertain how much quarrying went on at Bombo but the answer is likely to be ‘a lot’. It was the major source of blue metal for the colony and subsequent state of New South Wales.

A significant number of hexagonal basalt columns do however remain.

Walking around the former quarry, which is now a heritage listed, provides access to the tall columns of basalt.

The basalt columns are of varying heights, some as high as five or six metres.

There are a few places where incisions in the rock platform create wonderful opportunities for the waves to form and break with great force.

If the swell is up, the bay in front of the quarry is a cauldron of moving sea water. In large swell conditions it is a sight to be seen.

The basalt columns of the quarry and nearby surging ocean make for an interesting visit, and form part of Sydney Nimble’s South Coast tour.

Who knows you might even spot a bird of prey whilst there.

Eastern Osprey surveying the scene

finely balanced

look behind you!

surging seas

never know what will turn up at Bombo

basalt column holding its ground

Belmore and Carrington Falls, NSW

As part of the plan to add to our range Sydney Nimble Tours visited Belmore and Carrington Falls.

These two waterfalls are located in the Southern Highlands and the drive time from the Sydney CBD is around 2 hours, or slightly more depending on traffic.

First stop was Carrington Falls which is located in the Budderoo National Park.

Carrington Falls is a two pronged waterfall. Water cascades from two separate points. Another smaller waterfall and pretty pool is also located nearby at Nellie’s Glen.

After Carrington Falls we visited Robertson which is a town near Belmore Falls.

Robertson has amongst other things, a good pub, a highly popular pie shop and a gimmicky big potato, which we refused to photograph!

Belmore Falls is exceptional in that first waterfall drops into a pool (midway pool), and water from that pool then flows down to another cliff face where a second waterfall starts.

The surrounding sandstone cliffs and Eucalypt forest add to the brilliance of two waterfall spectacle.

Belmore Falls can be seen from two main vantage points.

One is accessed by parking on the roadside after driving across a small portion of road which dissects the Barrengarry Creek. It had a few centimetres of water running across it during our visit.

From this point you are at the start of the falls and the midway pool is almost directly underneath the lookout. It is a long drop down to the pool.

Focus on the gentleman in red, who posed for us in the fourth photo, to gain a perspective of the distance down to the pool.

The other vantage point, has several lookouts.

It is a short drive away and allows you to photograph the Kangaroo Valley and the falls from the distance (last photo).

We enjoyed our day in the Southern Highlands and will be adding it to a new tour.

Carrington Falls

Nellie’s Glen

top of Belmore Falls

a decent drop but not one to drink

Belmore Falls is magnificent