Melba Gully

Melba Gully

Address: Great Ocean Rd, Lavers Hill, Victoria 3238

Phone: 03 8627 4699  

Web: parkweb.vic.gov.au/explore/parks/great-otway-national-park/things-to-do/melba-gully

Melba Gully is someties called "the jewel of the Otways", an apt description for a place where glow worms can be seen. This area is one of the wettest places in the state, with an annual rainfall over 2000mm, and plant growth is profile. The gully is a dense rainforest of myrtle beech, blackwood and tree ferns with an understory of low ferns and mosses. The 'Big Tree' is over 300 years old.

Things to Do


* Madsens Track Nature Walk, which takes about 35 minutes, is a delightful walk and gives a good introduction to the features of the original Otway forest.

* If you have a raincoat, don't let the rain deter you: it brings the rich green colours of the gully to life.

* In holiday periods there are guided night walks to see the glow worms.


Facilities


* Water, picnic tables, fireplaces and toilets are provided.

* Because of the park's small size, camping is not permitted.

* Accommodation is available in Lavers Hill, Beech Forest and Johanna.

Local directions

Melba Gully State Park is 1.5 km off the Great Ocean Road, 3 km west of Lavers Hill. The access road is narrow and steep in places, but quite suitable for conventional vehicles. (Melway ref: 526 H10P)

Facilities

  • Picnic Area
  • Public Toilet

Activities

  • Self-Guided

Additional business information

Fauna
The animals of Melba Gully are not often seen, being shy or nocturnal. Possums, Platypuses and native bush rats are some of them and there are many birds including the shy Australian Ground Thrush, Suberb Blue Wrens, Yellow Robins, Grey Shrike-thrushes and Rufous Fantails. Perhaps the most unusual inhabitants are glow worms, seen at night along the walking tracks. The larvae of a species of small fly, they make sticky threads that trap tiny insects attracted by the glow. In wet weather, you may find a glossy Black-shelled Snail along the track. Named Victaphanta compacta, this carnivorous species is found only in the Otways.

Heritage
Settlers began to take up land in the Otways and clear the forest in the 1880s. Transport was a major problem, so a narrow-gauge railway was built from Colac to Beech Forest in 1902 and extended to Crowes in 1911. Sawmills were established in the forest and timber tramways built to carry logs and timber to the narrow-gauge line. There were two such mills and a tramway in Melba Gully. The Melba Gully was purchased for Mrs Jessie Fry in 1921 and named by her after Australia's famous singer Dame Nellie Melba. Through the 1930s and 1940s Melba Gully was a popular picnic and lunch stop for bus tourists, but business came to an end in 1948 when a length limit was imposed on buses using Otway roads. The picnic area is on the site of Mrs Fry's tearooms. The large open area was established as a farm; it is being gradually revegetated with indigenous species such as Mountain Ash. The property was sold in 1958 to Mr and Mrs Axel Madsen, who generously offered it to the Victorian Conservation Trust in 1975. It is now managed by Parks Victoria.

Vegetation
Madsens Track Nature Walk, starting in the picnic area, is an adventure in a world of ancient mossy trees and cool fern gullies. The large trees in this rainforest gully are Myrtle Beech (Nothofagus cunninghamii) and Blackwood (Acacia melanoxlon). Many plants grow on trees here, including Kangaroo Fern, Weeping Spleenwort and Shiny Shield-fern. They are not parasites, but epiphytes, surviving on decaying leaves and bark. Hard Water-fern and Mother Shield-fern cover much of the forest floor. In all there are 33 species of fern in the Park. Higher up, the Park's vegetation is exposed to more sunlight and drying winds and is quite different from that in the gullies. Young Otway Messmates are dispersed among Hazel Pomaderris, Musk Daisy-bush, Christmas Bush and Satin Box. The "Big Tree" on Madsen's track is a highlight of the walk through the fern gully. This Otway Messmate is around three hundred years old and is a reminder of the giant trees that once covered the Otway ranges.

How to Get Here

Great Ocean Road