Sandy Point, Victoria

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Sandy Point is a township in south Gippsland, Victoria near Wilsons Promontory. Although Sandy Point’s permanent population is around two hundred, it grows to several thousand during the holiday period. It is surrounded by areas of significant natural heritage.

Sandy Point is one of the few coastal towns in this region to remain relatively unaffected by the housing boom along the coast. This is partly due to its distance from Melbourne (around 2 hours) and the fact that a lack of town sewerage has meant a ban on further sub-division.

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[edit] Surrounding areas

The Sandy Point area has a large spit system and its shoreline, on Waratah Bay, is considered of high heritage value. Sandy Point's surf beach is patrolled during the summer months and is considered good for surfing. The beach on Waratah Bay is 18 kilometres long, running between Walkerville at its northwest end and Wilsons Promontory at its the southeast end.

Three kilometres east of Sandy Point lies a river inlet known as Shallow Inlet. This sandy, tidal inlet is a popular fishing spot and a famous area for windsurfing. A speed sailing record was set here in 1993. (1). On December 13th 2005, an attempt to reclaim this record failed when the craft operated by the Macquarie Speed Sailing team suffered a structural failure.

[edit] Natural habitats

The area near Sandy Point contains a diverse range of habitats including mangroves, extensive stands of coastal heathland as well as remnant coastal grassy forest. It features a wide range of invertebrate species. There are large populations of white-footed dunnarts and koalas living in the region.

Until 10,000 years ago, Sandy Point was a underwater slope leading to plains now lying underneath Bass Strait.

[edit] History

The Bratowooloong people of the Gunai nation lived in the area before European settlement. The first Europeans to visit the area were three shipwrecked sailors in 1797. Irish convicts escaped south from Sydney and landed on Seal Island where several men were stranded and found by George Bass who put them ashore near Shallow Inlet to walk back to Sydney. No more was ever heard of them.

Sealers and whalers visited the area in the first half of the nineteenth century. However, it wasn't until the 1860's that the area was settled by cattle farmers. The arrival of the Gippsland Railway improved the viability of local farms and made dairy farming in the area.

The area was used in training by the nearby naval base and training college HMAS Cerberus especially in the first half of the twentieth century. The development of the town as a tourist location started in earnest in the 1960s but has been restricted by its natural heritage values.

[edit] References

[edit] Footnotes

(1) World Speed Sailing Records


Coordinates: 38°49′S, 146°06′E