Mount Donna Buang

Mount Donna Buang
Mount Donna Buang

Location in Victoria

Elevation 1,250 metres (4,100 ft) AHD
Location
Location Victoria, Australia
Range Donna Buang Range, Victorian Alps, Great Dividing Range
Coordinates 37°42′23″S 145°40′52″E / 37.70639°S 145.68111°ECoordinates: 37°42′23″S 145°40′52″E / 37.70639°S 145.68111°E

Mount Donna Buang is a mountain in the southern reaches of the Victorian Alps of the Great Dividing Range, located in the Australian state of Victoria. Approximately 80 kilometres (50 mi) from Melbourne with an elevation of 1,250 metres (4,101 ft), Mount Donna Buang is the closest snowfield to Melbourne.[1]

Location and features

In winter, it usually receives snow suitable for snowplay and tobogganing, and during the non winter months the area is well visited by bushwalkers and cyclists. The summit of Mount Donna Buang is surrounded by Alpine ash trees and Sub alpine snow gums, and at nearby Cement Creek there is a raised walkway through Myrtle Beech (Nothofagus cunninghamii) and Mountain Ash (Eucalyptus regnans) trees known as the Mount Donna Buang Skywalk.

Mount Donna Buang is part of the Yarra Ranges National Park (formed in 1995) in which there are a number of species that have become rare or threatened, including the Slender Tree Fern, and the Geebung Tree. It contains a number of native mammals including the endangered Leadbeater's Possum, and is home to 120 different species of native birds. Some examples include the Pink Robin, Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo and the Crimson Rosella.

The nearest serviced town to the mountain is Warburton.

Flora and fauna

The rare and possibly endangered Mount Donna Buang Wingless Stonefly (Riekoperla darlingtoni) is endemic to the area.[2]

History

In the 1860s, “Mount Acland” was the name given to the 1,250m high mountain by a Police Magistrate called Joseph Anderson Panton. The name it has today, “Mount Donna Buang”, came from the Wurundjeri Aborigines.

A walking track to the summit of Mount Donna Buang was cut during the 1890s and the much wider Donna Buang Bridle Track, which the current road from Warburton to the top of Mount Donna Buang follows, was opened in 1912.

In 1924, the Ski Club of Victoria built an 8-foot-wide (2.4 m) track for skiers on the top of Mount Donna Buang. Being the nearest location to Melbourne where you could ski, the mountain was well patronised and both the Ski Club of Victoria and the Melbourne University Ski Club built huts on the mountain to cater for their members. During the 1930s the Warburton Ski Club was officially formed as well. The first observation tower was erected shortly after the bridle track was opened.

Cycling

The road from Warburton to Mount Donna Buang is a challenging cycling route, averaging 6.2% over 16.6km[3] and has also become a popular destination for recreational driving, motorcycling, and in the summer a challenging training route for endurance cyclists and triathletes.[4]

The main public roads on Mt Donna Buang are:

Panorama from summit of Mount Donna Buang

See also

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mount Donna Buang.