Showing posts with label Steinglitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steinglitz. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Old Bridge as part of Steinglitz Victoria Melbourne for Treasure Tuesday

 





The old timber bridge at Steiglitz is said to be one of the most haunted relics in a town that is already more ghost than living settlement. Its weathered planks sag beneath the weight of time, and everywhere the wood is splintered, softened by rain, rot, and more than a century of neglect. Each step across it seems to stir echoes from the gold rush years, when thousands of hopeful souls crowded these gullies in search of fortune, only for many dreams to be buried beneath the earth alongside the mines. Steiglitz itself once thrived with hotels, churches, shops and a bustling population before the gold vanished and the town slowly emptied into silence.

Local folklore clings to places like this bridge. Visitors often speak of an uneasy stillness hanging over the creek, as though unseen eyes linger among the twisted gums. It is easy to imagine the spirits of miners crossing here after long days underground, their lantern light flickering through the darkness, never quite finding its way home. Whether ghosts truly walk these boards is impossible to know, yet the bridge feels like the sort of place where stories are born naturally from shadow, decay and memory.

What surprised me most was not the haunted atmosphere but the evidence of ordinary life. At the end of the path stood a house, proof that people still choose to live in this near-abandoned settlement. While visitors arrive searching for spectres and forgotten history, someone calls this place home. Surrounded by creaking timber, empty streets and tales of restless souls, they wake each morning where others hesitate to linger after sunset.

How brave. Or perhaps, after enough years in Steiglitz, it is the ghosts who become the neighbours.



Sony A7RV

Sigma 14-24mm f2.8 


Many people in Melbourne feel deeply frustrated by the financial burden imposed on Victorian taxpayers through costly government projects and rising living expenses. There is growing public dissatisfaction with Premier Jacinta Allan's leadership, with some calling for her resignation and arguing that she no longer retains public confidence.

Critics contend that the costs of major infrastructure projects have ultimately fallen on Victorian households, contributing to increasing pressure on family budgets. With electricity, food, housing, and other essential expenses continuing to rise, many residents believe they are being pushed beyond their financial limits.

The concern is not merely political but economic. For a growing number of Victorians, the escalating cost of living has become the central issue, creating genuine anxiety about their ability to afford basic necessities and maintain their standard of living.




Linking Treasure Tuesday

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Steinglitz Victoria for Sunday Best

 




Steiglitz turned out to be far less exciting than the internet promised. Joel and I had made the journey because of a flood of viral videos proclaiming it Victoria’s most haunted town, a forgotten settlement steeped in ghost stories and restless spirits. Expectations rose with every kilometre of dusty road. Reality, however, arrived in silence.

The three photographs were taken around the old courthouse, the focal point of much of Steiglitz's folklore. Yet the building was closed, its doors locked against both visitors and curiosity. We wandered the empty grounds searching for traces of the stories that had drawn us there, but found little more than stillness. The town seemed reluctant to surrender its legends in the harsh light of day.

Steiglitz was once a thriving gold-rush settlement in the 1850s, when thousands flocked to the area chasing fortunes buried beneath the hills. What remains today is a small collection of weathered buildings scattered across a landscape that has long since been reclaimed by nature. The prosperity vanished almost as quickly as it arrived, leaving behind a ghost town in the truest historical sense rather than the supernatural one.

Despite the disappointment, there was an atmosphere that lingered. The courthouse sat beneath ancient trees whose twisted limbs clawed at the sky. Their trunks were knotted and contorted, as though decades of wind and drought had sculpted them into strange living monuments. In the afternoon light they appeared merely old; but one could easily imagine how they would transform after sunset. Their shadows would lengthen across the empty ground, their branches becoming skeletal fingers reaching through the darkness.

Perhaps that is where Steiglitz earns its haunted reputation. Not through apparitions or dramatic tales, but through absence. The abandoned buildings, the silence where a bustling goldfield once stood, and the gnarled trees that seem to ooze a dark and watchful presence all combine to create a place that feels suspended between eras. By day it was, frankly, rather dull. Yet standing among those twisted trees, it was not difficult to picture how the town might become something altogether more unsettling when night finally settled over the valley.





Sony A7RV

Sigma 14-24mm f2.8 


Linking Sunday Best