Rainforests cover only about 0.3 % of Australia yet shelter about half of all Australian plant families and about a third of the country’s mammal and bird species. Few rainforests are easier to reach than those within Barrington Tops National Park, an easy drive from Sydney.
The park – which also contains eucalypt forests, subalpine woodlands and wetlands – consists of a 25-kilometre-long plateau set among long-extinct volcanoes. It’s accessible even to those with limited mobility; criss-crossed with an excellent network of tracks offering short, easy walks, steep overnight treks, and much in between.
Villages in the area include charming Gloucester, home to both a school museum and a folk museum, nestled in a valley under a range of hills called The Bucketts. Another town, Stroud, was founded in 1826 in the green Karuah Valley. It still looks much as it did in the 1850s. Gold mining and cedar cutting history is preserved in small museums at Paterson, Dungog and Clarence Town.
Wildlife in Barrington Tops National Park includes the eastern grey kangaroo, red-necked and swamp wallabies, red-legged pademelon, platypus, northern brown bandicoot, yellow-bellied glider, sugar glider, mountain brushtail possum, koala, long-nosed potoroo, three-toed earless skink, stuttering frog, grey-headed flying-fox, short-beaked echidna and common wombat.
Birdlife is profuse, ranging from the magnificent wedge-tailed eagle to smaller species like the White-throated needletail, Rufous scrub-bird and wompoo fruit-dove.