In some ways I wish we hadn’t found it. Our elusive waterfall could have remained so.
When we moved to the farm over two years ago we were told there was a waterfall somewhere over the bank in the far south-west corner.
This is our bit of rainforest. You walk across our back paddock, climb through the fence and head into some partly cleared bush. The eucalypts are huge, and the weak-rooted wattles criss-cross the path.
As the ground slopes down, the bush changes: ferns appear, and wet rotting logs. The air is colder and when you breathe in you feel it deep in your skull.
There are magnificent blackwoods and manferns blocking the sun. Fungi pushes out from the dirt that’s dark and composty.
Guy decided on Sunday we were going to go looking for the waterfall that we’d heard, but never seen.
Neighbour Tom turned up in his bushwalking boots and I stashed a packet of dates in my camera bag. Bushwalking within your own boundary – we are so very lucky.
Guy found the top of the fall pretty quickly, and before I’d even managed to get my camera out he was heading down the bank, finding a way to the base.
Guy’s a much more confident bush adventurer than I: his feet rarely slip and he never comes out with a muddy behind. But I get nervous of the steep drops and take them all sitting down. It reminds me of when my mum broke her leg and could only get up the back step this way.
By the time I got to the bottom Guy was resting on a rock looking up at the spraying water and Tom was splashing through the creek, testing his new boots for grip and waterproof-ness.
While I pottered about taking pictures, Tom and Guy went looking further down the creek.
And what did they find? Another waterfall, and the entrance to a cave.
We walked out of the bush as the sun was dipping, and we reflected on how truly magical it was to be able to sit under a waterfall one minute, and then be back among the pigs in the next.
And what did they find? Another waterfall, and the entrance to a cave.
We walked out of the bush as the sun was dipping, and we reflected on how truly magical it was to be able to sit under a waterfall one minute, and then be back among the pigs in the next.