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Stealing a mountain – a warning for all of us

Writer Robert Onfray has an excellent article on the looming closure of Mt Warning on his forestry blog. This outlines in considerable detail some of the history that got us where we are today with NSW NPWS seeking to close the door on one of the world's natural wonders.  

Stealing a mountain - a warning for all of us.

Hard as you try, when travelling in the Tweed Valley or passing along the Pacific Highway (now Motorway), you cannot miss Mount Warning. It is a striking feature of the far north coast of New South Wales – the peak is bosomed in the skies!

Mount Warning offers the opportunity to see the morning sun first rise over the horizon on the Australian continent. The dominant mountain peak is visible from many points, which is unsurprising as it stands at 1,159 metres high and only 32 kilometres inland. Captain James Cook saw the mountain in 1770 as an important landmark after encountering dangerous shoals off the coast. He later wrote that mariners would always be able to know their position by this mountain, and he named it Mount Warning.

Read the whole article at Robert's blog. 

Re-open Mt Warning - summit is for everyone


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