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Yesterday I visited Wandoo National Park [I Love National Parks]

If you remember, my previous Park visit was the Kalamunda National Park.
Thick with impenetrable trees
A Wandoo Woodland is so totally different.
Open woodland with next to no understory. A vehicle can drive through a Wandoo Woodland as the trees are well spaced.
The Whitish mounds are defunct Termite Mounds
A defunct Termite mound with the outer layer worn away.
[image deleted]
This Woodland is the perfect habitat for Numbats though there are no longer Numbats this far North.
They have retreated southwards about 150 kms from here.
(Not my Photo)
My car amongst the Wandoo Trees
A stand of Grasstrees. Commonly known as Blackboys but now considered politically incorrect to use this name.
The small spindly tree on the right is called a SnottyGobble Tree馃ぇ
Open Woodland
A mammal that is quite common here is the Echidna - Spiny Anteater
One of only two egg laying Mammals in the world. The other being the Platypus
(Not my Photo)
Echidnas can eat 10,000 termites a day.
Here is a scratching, evidence of an Echidna in the area.
[image deleted]
Open Woodland
A large Wandoo Tree
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reflectingmonkey51-55, M
wow, super awesome pictures, is this in Tasmania ?
Gusman61-69, M
@reflectingmonkey No. this is the South West of Western Australia where I live now.
reflectingmonkey51-55, M
@Gusman oh, you used to be in Tasmania right? how do you like it there, is it very different?
Gusman61-69, M
@reflectingmonkey Yes. I was born in Tasmania and fished the wild rivers of the West Coast. Gordon, Franklin, Pieman, Arthur.
Macquarie Harbour, Hell's Gates, Trial Harbour.
Simply stunning area.
Western Australia is very different and huge
Tasmania is 64,000 sq kms. Western Australia is 2.64 million sq kms.
Western Australia is HOT, Tasmania is Mild.
Western Australia is predominately Flat, Tasmania is Mountainous.
My childhood go to Mountain for climbing.
Mt Owen
I love Western Australia, plenty of bush in the South West, Plenty of open sky to view the Milky Way.
reflectingmonkey51-55, M
@Gusman wow, thank you for the pictures and descriptions, I love travelling, its what I like most in life, and seeing pictures and reading descriptions makes me travel for a moment in my head. this last one, with the mountains and the road, is that also Tasmania? mountains are my favorite terrain, I've been in the Andes, the Alpes, the Rockies and the Himalayas.
Gusman61-69, M
@reflectingmonkey The final picture is of the Queenstown Airport. Take off heading towards Mt Owen.
I was born in Queenstown which is a mining town on the West Coast.
It was a Copper mine and had it's own Smelter.
To feed the Smelter all the trees were cut down and because of the heavy rainfall, the top soil washed away, plus the acid rain from the Smelter killed any regrowth.
Leaving what is today called a Moonscape.
The area went from this
To this in the space of 50 years.
Because of this
One of the most magnificent Steam Train rides is the West Coast Wilderness Railway through virgin temperate rainforest following the King River to the Macquarie Harbour Township of Strahan. 35 kms of beauty.
Strahan
reflectingmonkey51-55, M
@Gusman damn, what a mess humans can make sometimes. reminds me of some areas in the sierra Nevada in Colombia, I did a 4 day trek in the jungle and I learned that when the U.s. government was trying to stop the production of cocaine they sprayed the mountain with these toxic chemical to kill the coca plants. it was working, but... it also caused birth defects, skin diseases and a bunch of other stuff in the local population but also left the mountains that were sprayed totally barren, many years later you can still see where they sprayed because nothing grows there.
Gusman61-69, M
@reflectingmonkey One thing Mankind is good at is destroying nature.
The sins of the fathers are born by their offspring almost for eternity.
The Queenstown Moonscape will regrow now that the Smelter is no longer operating.
This can be seen in these two photos.
One of Mt Owen, denuded
If you look at the left of the Mountain, there are two towers, then it dips to the right then raises up again.
In that dip there is a seasonal Waterfall, Called the Horsetail Falls.
Minimal trees in this picture.
This is the Horsetail falls 40 years later. Trees are reestablishing.
In a thousand years, maybe the Mountain will be reforested.