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Outback Info (Private Seiten) © seit 1999
Neerabup National Park
As you travel north from Perth to Yanchep National Park you pass a long, thin,
and seemingly ordinary, piece of Australian bush. But if you stop and venture
beyond the first few metres of banksias or tuarts, you will find a relatively
undisturbed example of coastal plain vegetation, preserved in Neerabup National
Park.
Neerabup National Park, about 27 kilometres north of Perth along the western
side of Wanneroo Road, is a long, narrow piece of bushland stretching only about
12 kilometres. But this small park is still able to provide a feeling of
tranquillity and isolation in an ever-expanding urban world.
The 1069-hectare park follows an old stock route, which in turn follows part
of an ancient Aboriginal migration route between Lake Joondalup, in the
Yellagonga Regional Park, and Loch McNess, in Yanchep National Park. The route
also forms the basis for the 28 kilometre Yaberoo Budjara Heritage Trail,
developed in 1988 as one of a network of heritage trails marking the Australian
Bicentenary.
The park has no prominent features, such as lakes, mountains or streams, and
no formal recreational areas, such as picnic sites, within its boundaries.
Access is by foot, as there are no roads or car parks. But despite its lack of
formal recreation facilities, there are plenty of opportunities for quiet
recreation. In spring, for example, the whole area comes alive with stunning
displays of wildflowers, accompanied by the clamorous songs of countless birds.
Plants and Animals
The limestone caprock that is prevalent throughout the park supports varied
vegetation, ranging from jarrah and tuart woodlands through to open banksia
woodlands and hakea and dryandra heathlands.
| North of Quinns Road, the vegetation is low
woodland and open woodland of sheoak, banksia, Western Australian Christmas
tree and pricklybark. |

Red and green kangaroo paws (right), native buttercups (above)
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There are a few patches of jarrah and one of tuart, and a diverse understorey
of hakea, kangaroo paws, scrub sheoak, one-sided bottlebrush, native buttercups,
native wisteria, dodder, old man's beard and prickly moses.
Most
of the heath is on an extensive area of limestone hills lying west of Wanneroo
Road, and comprises mainly wattle, cockie's tongues and balgas (grasstrees). A
wildfire that swept through part of this northern section in early 1994 produced
a beautiful display of wildflowers the following spring.
South of Quinns Road, the vegetation in the park is mainly woodland of jarrah,
associated with sheoak, candle banksia and firewood banksia. There is also some
open tuart woodland and a few pricklybark and marri trees. The narrow-leaved red
mallee (Eucalyptus foecunda), listed as a priority species and restricted to the
coast between Lancelin and Mandurah, is found along the western boundary of the
park.
Take a walk through the park in early morning or late afternoon and you will
almost certainly see western grey kangaroos and possibly emus. Endangered
Carnaby's black-cockatoos are frequently seen, and the park is also home to
other native animals such as echidnas, brushtail possums and brush wallabies.
Urban development close to areas of bushland almost always heralds the flight
of native animals; not so much because of the increased numbers of people, but
because of loss of habitat and predation by introduced species such as cats.
This has been happening all along the northern corridor as housing developments
have spread northwards from Perth. Unfortunately, feral cats, rabbits and foxes
are present in large numbers at Neerabup, making life difficult and hazardous
for native animals, particularly small mammals such as the quenda (southern
brown bandicoot), ash-grey mouse (noodji) and honey possum.
Neerabup National Park provides a narrow corridor to allow movement of
animals along the coastal plain and associated wetlands. By preserving the
habitat values of these areas and, with the assistance of some forward-thinking
developers who retain smaller arterial strips to and from the coast, a network
of adjoining corridors can be maintained and animals can move freely without the
risk of being 'cut off'.
Use by People
Neerabup National Park is valuable in providing gentle recreational
activities such as photography, walking, bird watching and nature study. Use of
the park for recreation is already increasing, as urban growth continues along
its western edge and local residents discover its secrets. The southernmost end
of the area now covered by Neerabup National Park has a long history of
disturbance - principally from the extraction of limestone in the 1900s for
building blocks and road making material. Old quarries in this southern section
have now largely been rehabilitated. All in all, Neerabup National Park has a
vital role in the preservation of the natural environment in Perth's northern
corridor. It provides an escape for people, a movement corridor for native
animals, a green belt between coastal housing and the string of wetlands running
north from Lake Joondalup, and an important remnant of coastal vegetation in a
fast-growing urban area.
The name Neerabup is thought to be derived from neerimba, the Aboriginal word
for the Australian pelican.
THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW
Where is it?
27 km north of Perth on Wanneroo Road.
Travelling time:
Approximately 45 minutes from central Perth.
What to do:
Bushwalking, wildlife observation.
- Walks:
- The Tenth Light Horse Heritage Trail is a pleasant walk that offers a
fascinating insight of the past.
- The Yaberoo-Budjara Heritage Trail, from Lake Joondalup to Yanchep
National Park, also runs through Neerabup.
Facilities:
No formal facilities within the park, but there is a barbecue at the start of
The Tenth Light Horse Heritage Trail, off Wanneroo Road.
Best season:
Spring for wildflowers. Good for walking Autumn to Spring.
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