In Search of Furmston's Tree
Hidden away in the Yarra Ranges, unknown to the general public is
Harold Furmston's Tree, which at 19.5m circumference is believed to
be the largest gum tree in the world. So how do you hide the world's
largest gum tree? Well unfortunately it lies a short distance inside
the Maroondah Catchment and as such access is restricted to the
general public so it isn't the sort of thing you put on a tourist
brochure.
The public access to the Maroondah catchment was totally
restricted in the 1930s by the Board of Works shortly after the
death of an experienced bushwalker in the area. Bah humbug, we're
talking the world's largest gum tree here, and so, accompanied by a
couple of friends whom I will refer to as Paula and Julie to reveal
their true identities, I set out for a day trip to find this tree.
Finding the tree should have been relatively easy. The picture in
the book showed it next to a road. We had a grid reference and a
map. This narrowed it down to two tracks 'just' inside the Maroondah
Catchment near the intersection of five tracks. It should've been
possible to drive nearly all the way and I chose the shortest track
that didn't have a gate on it. It all seemed a little too easy on
paper until.....
After
turning off from the main road we got about 300m before we came
across the first of many large trees blown across the road. I'd left
the axe at home but that wasn't going to help us anyway so this was
the beginning of the walk. At least we can say that we have walked
part of the Bicentennial National Trail.
We came to the second fork in the road at which point we should
have gone left up a track that looked pretty overgrown like one of
those tracks that doesn't often appear on the map. We kept going....
Oops.
Rather than back tracking we decided to cut through the bush up to
the other track which was only a couple of hundred metres away. The
undergrowth was relatively thin thanks to the lyre birds in the area
although I suspect that it was on this short stretch that I had
"acquired" a leech on my shin. We made the
"track" for want of a better word, which was
distinguishable only by the fact that it had been cut into the
hillside and enough people had walked along it to create a path
through the trees.
This
"path" gradually became more indistinct until it
eventually disappeared altogether after crossing a large fallen
tree. This is what happens when it all seems just a little too easy
at the start. We were near the saddle at this point so it was no
real problem taking the clearest route through the trees towards one
of the other five tracks that met at the top.
I was somewhat amazed when we reached the next "track"
on the border of the catchment area for there was not only a track
but a 50m wide clearing running along the boundary. Why the boundary
would be cleared like this is anyone's guess as it certainly
wouldn't stop a bush fire going through. I had visions of helicopter
patrols looking for rogue hikers crossing the boundary
We walked down to the intersection of several tracks near which
was Furmston's tree. The forest was reasonably open and given that
we were so close, we wondered why we couldn't see it and so we
wandered off along the next track...
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