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A Long Walk on a Short Day.

June 22, 2001.

By Peter Andrews, © 2001.
Published: June 30, 2001
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For the shortest day of the year I decided to go on the longest walk I've had for years. The decision to do so was quite easy after a week sitting in front of a computer, dealing with a fifty page social research report. Living right at the foot of Mount Keira and the Illawarra Escarpment, was another incentive to get out of the house. Armed with a camera with only a few frames before the end of a film, I set off around noon for the start of the start of the Ken Ausburn Track.

The 1.57 km track that climbs 250 metres up to the Mt Keira Ring Track, commences at the western end of Northfields Avenue near the University of Wollongong.

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The first section of the track up to Flugelman's stainless steel memorial to Lawrence Hargreaves, is quite steep in places and some sections are covered with a timber boardwalk and stairs. Not only easier to climb, the boardwalk also prevents soil erosion around this steep area. The memorial is basically at the lower end of ridge that runs down from the top of Mt Keira. It is along this ridge the track continues up the mountain to connect with the Mt Keira Ring Track.
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The view from the memorial is quite good, but gets better the further up the track. After following the ridge for about five minutes, you arrive at a lookout with views up the coast towards the Royal National Park just south of Sydney. Up to this point, one can clearly see the results of work done by volunteers and National Parks and Wildlife Service staff to restore native vegetation and weed removal.
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After bushfires consumed much of the escarpment in 1968, areas with little or no canopy have been completely overrun with imported Lantana and other weeds. Work has focused on the clearing of the Lantana and weeds while native trees such as Red Cedar have been replanted. Red Cedar was almost completely wiped out during the early years of settlement in the Illawarra and despite an absence of old growth specimens, the species now has a chance to now make a healthy comeback.
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Where native vegetation has been cleared in some way, the area is quickly overrun with Lantana, as seen from the lookout above the memorial.
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Continuing past the lookout the track begins to climb and the vegetation tends to get a little thicker. Not far up is a junction with another track to the left that runs behind the end of a fence. As there were no signs, I thought I would check it out. After about 10 metres, this track comes out at a large clearing which is the now closed Kemira Colliery. What appears to be the entrance to the old mine is all securely locked.
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The blocked entrance of Kemira Colliery.
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Remnants of the top section of the early rail incline can be clearly seen. Although research of a book by Eardley at the Wollongong City Library tends to suggest that the section shown in the photo, was used just to deliver loaded wagons from the portal to the incline section. The very first rail line in the Illawarra commenced at the bottom of this incline section around the late 1850s to transport coal down to Wollongong Harbour. The line was operation well before the government of the period had got around to built the main railway line down from Sydney.

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Opened in 1857 and originally called the Osborn Wallsend (Mt. Keira) Colliery, Kemira was not only one of the first coal mines in Australia but it was also one, if not, one of the longest running coal mines to operate within the country's short European history.

In October 1982, the mine appeared in news media all around the world as 30 miners staged a 15 day sit-in strike in protest against retrenchments at the colliery. While the Southern District Miners' Federation Womens' Auxiliary fed the men from a kitchen at the entrance of the mine, a reported 2,000 protesters from the region turned up to voice their anger at the nation's Parliament House in Canberra. At the time, there was little Canberra could really do as people at that time were loosing their jobs in many of the industrialised countries all over the world due to the global economic conditions.

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After a quick look around, I went back to the main track and continued up to the ring track. After another hour of wandering around, it was time to call it a day. 

 
 

 
 

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Peter Andrews © 2001. All Rights Reserved.