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Sunday, August 24, 2025

Mathias track, Dandenong for Sunday Best

 






Mathias Track holds both natural and human history woven into its length. Stretching seventeen kilometres through the Dandenong Ranges National Park, it traverses forests of towering mountain ash, groves of tree ferns, and pockets of dry, open woodland. In winter, the land is drier than one might expect for a mountain range; the undergrowth thins, the soil hardens, and the bare forms of the hills emerge more distinctly, giving the track an austere beauty. Lyrebirds often scratch along the forest floor, and the air carries the scent of eucalyptus and damp earth.

The track itself carries a trace of colonial history. It was originally surveyed as a service road, named after Carl Mathias, an early forester who worked in the region when logging of the mountain ash was at its height in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Alongside its natural splendour, the path retains echoes of human endeavour—abandoned huts and remnants of early forest camps stand as silent witnesses to the men who felled timber and sought shelter here.

Walking along Mathias Track today is thus both a communion with nature and a dialogue with the past. The stillness of the bush contrasts with the faint relics of industry and settlement. To step into the remains of a hut and sit upon its weathered timbers is to momentarily inhabit another life—that of the bushranger, the forester, or the itinerant wanderer—while the surrounding ranges remind one that the land itself endures, vast and unyielding.


Sony A7RV

FE 70-200mm f2.8 GM


Linking Sunday Best



21 comments:

  1. The imagery of towering trees, lyrebirds, and eucalyptus makes the walk feel alive, while the remnants of huts and camps add a haunting, human touch. A perfect blend of nature and history.

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  2. Must indeed feel a bit like "time travelling", I suppose!

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  3. I love the green 💚 in your first photo. Wonderful series.

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  4. Nature is beautiful, I love the last two photos.
    Take care, have a great weekend.

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  5. Es sorprendente el hermoso verdor de la primera foto.

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  6. Looks like an interesting place to explore.

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  7. Did you see any lyrebirds? Are they in danger of disappearing?

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  8. I enjoyed seeing all of these photographs but must mention the very vibrant green in your first one.

    All the best Jan

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  9. How beautiful are your words and photos. I imagine it changed much during the era of logging.

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  10. Wonderful.
    have you gone into one of those abandoned huts for a break and drink?

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  11. How interesting, and there appears to be a planted grove of birch trees.

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  12. It's good to see some trees have been planted there, used to love walking in the bush.

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