Tuesday 14 February 2017

Black Andrew Nature Reserve

Location, access and how to get there

The Black Andrew Nature Reserve is located immediately south of Burrinjuck Dam and is 10 kilometers northwest of Wee Jasper. Trails enter the Reserve on the west, south and east sides, but all pass through private land and require landowner permission to use. Private vehicles are not permitted on management trails within the Reserve. The nearest points of vehicular access are about 100 kilometers or a two-hour drive from Canberra GPO via Mountain Creek Road and Wee Jasper.

http://maps.six.nsw.gov.au/

Bushwalking opportunities

Walking is permitted in the Reserve, though no facilities have been or seem likely to be put in place to encourage it. There are no formed walking tracks, and as noted above, access is problematic. Three management trails run through the Reserve, but they do not interconnect within the Reserve boundary and their total combined length within the Reserve is only around 12-13 kilometers.

Camping and other facilities

Camping and solid fuel fires are not permitted, and there are no visitor facilities in the Reserve.

Features

Size
1559 hectares.
Natural features
The highest peak is Black Andrew Mountain at 935 meters. MacPhersons Swamp Creek and its tributaries flow through the Reserve. There are seven distinct forest ecosystems within the Reserve and surveys undertaken in 2004 found six vulnerable species of fauna.
Heritage features
There are a number of Aboriginal heritage sites in the Reserve and an abandoned mine in the southwest.

References

Black Andrew Nature Reserve Plan of Management (2006) - link
National Parks and Wildlife Service - Black Andrew Nature Reserve website - link
Wikipedia - link


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