Myall Shores Eco Resort
By Rod
Eime
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With spacious rooms and stunning views, what doesn't this resort offer!
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The 'Kids Club' allows for all the family to enjoy
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A 21st Century eco-resort is born from a depression-era hunting retreat. Touring
around the country with my parents in the ‘60s meant the
occasional stop at a caravan park or motel. Even though motels were
‘pretty ordinary’ back then, the caravan parks reminded me
more of my uncle’s wrecking yard back home. Plywood overnight
vans and cabins were riddled with damp, spiders and cockroaches. Grumpy
managers would snap at the kids if we dared play around the yard and
the food, well that’s best forgotten. So much has changed in our
hospitality industry I shake my head and sigh when I think of the
so-called “good old days”. If
I ever want reminding about transformation of the humble campground, I
only need visit the Ecopoint’s revitalised Myall Shores Resort.
The property itself was first established as a hunting and fishing
lodge almost one hundred years ago for well-healed city-slickers to
relax and blast the bejesus out of the local wildlife. The original
guest house, completed in 1927 from salvaged timber, is still there but
now forms the basis of the restaurant, kiosk and bar. Myall
Shores Resort joined Ecopoint Management in 2003 and was immediately
the subject of a $10M renovation, focused primarily on upgrading the
accommodation and conference facilities and reforesting and
revegetating the grounds and foreshore to blend seamlessly with the
surrounding Myall Lakes National Park. Working closely with National
Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS), Ecopoint have strived for a solid
‘eco-friendly’ environment and were rewarded with a Bronze
Gumnut Award by the NSW Caravan and Camping Industry Association for
their efforts thus far. Further
billed as a family-friendly resort, I (read:we) came fully and totally
equipped to explore the facilities and activities. Away from PCs, DVDs,
Gameboys and Playstations, it would be an acid test to see if Myall
Shores’ kids activities could occupy a restless young mind with
wholesome, nature-based fun and games. Managers,
Barry and Tracey McGibbon, proudly showed us to our accommodation. The
“Presidential” villa couldn’t be further removed from
the musty crate I remember from my childhood. Polished wooden floors,
stainless, spotless kitchenette, full-sized refrigerator, solid wood
dining table, Jacuzzi, two DVD players (both of which would stay off)
and a wide-screen TV. Needless to say scallywags (M9, F11) scampered
around the four ample rooms opening and closing everything, emitting
constant chirps of “oh, look!” “over here!” and
“why can’t we have one like this?” As
you’ve already gathered, the Presidential is the select
accommodation, but Tracey was equally happy to show me the Lake View
Villas in comparison. Although slightly smaller with a narrow frontage,
they are still smartly appointed. Each cabin is of the familiar,
pre-built type, yet with a quality and finish I’ve never seen
elsewhere. No beach shack ever looked like this. Every
villa and campsite is set either directly on the sandy edge of the
Bombah Broadwater or in the native gardens immediately adjacent. The
“gardens” are really just carefully trimmed and manicured
native trees and shrubs with some judiciously placed lawn around the
paths – and I’m sure that’s the very intention.
It’s common to see big handsome goannas stroll confidently across
the beach in front of your villa in search of an evening or afternoon
snack. The
resort uses rain- and some bore water for all its needs and waste water
is carefully treated and recycled for non-consumption uses. As our stay was in one of the last weeks of January, kids of all ages
were tearing around the grounds. Myall Shores employs staff with
childcare qualifications and the infinitely cheery Amy and Miranda run
the ‘Kids Club’ that includes damper-making, a disco,
movies, karaoke nights and arts and crafts. We turned up in expectation
of freshly baked damper emerging from a crackling campfire, but alas,
it was high fire danger, so the steaming bush bread emerged from the
electric oven instead. The
expansive Myall Lakes just north of Newcastle are more than just big
ponds for boaties. There’s plenty of colonial history, wildlife,
indigenous heritage and natural beauty to be experienced and Myall
Shores Resort provide (at nominal extra cost) a set of interpretive
tours for visitors. Each tour explores a different theme and location
encompassing the local fishing industry, natural features, wildlife,
canoeing, light hiking and lake cruise. Skipper
of the MV Emily, the resort’s cruise vessel, is Mick Johnson
whose family has fished and farmed around the scenic Myall Lakes region
for four generations. Laconic, dry and unflappable, Mick now ferries
varying loads of holidaymakers and day-trippers around his beloved
lakes highlighting points of historical and natural interest. We were
treated to numerous tales from the earlier (bad old) days of fishing
and hunting around the lakes – well before any thought of
conservation. Mick’s mindset is now on the preservation of the
four main water bodies: the Broadwater, Boolambayte, Two Mile and Myall
Lakes. On each trip, he proudly points out a feature that bears his
family name: Johnson’s Hill. Previously bare and clear-felled
only two decades ago, it now sports a healthy regrowth including sturdy
eucalypts and colourful banksias. Mick
explains that commercial fishing is now carefully controlled and that
new licenses are no longer issued “willy-nilly”, but are
now coveted assets. Stocks of the commercially harvested varieties
(mullet, bream and blackfish) are carefully maintained at sustainable
levels. Bass, on the other hand, is protected and may only be taken by
recreational anglers “Fisheries
(department) now work on a one-in-one out basis, so licence numbers are
effectively frozen,” says Mick “they’re even offering
buy-backs now and then to get those numbers down even more.” This
type of first-hand narrative makes any visit to Myall Lakes much more
than a simple holiday. It’s an opportunity for kids to learn
about the then-and-now of an ecologically and historically valuable
region of our country. Apart
from the suite of interpretive tours offered from the resort,
it’s possible to join any of the NPWS’s program of tours
scheduled for holiday periods. These tours include bush tucker, bush
safety, Aboriginal story-telling and a beach safari.
Fact File Myall
Shores Resort
Occupies
16 Hectares at Bombah Point on the Bombah Broadwater and comprises 62 brand new
4 star cabins plus two Presidential Villas. Camping and caravans also catered
for. Villas
feature air conditioning, fully equipped kitchens, polished timber floors, flat
screen TV and DVD and are serviced daily. Villa
rates begin at $100 per night (6 berth Banksia Villa, low season). Other accommodation
options available. Also
available for conferences and school camps. For
more information, rates, special offers and reservations, phone 1300 769 566 or
visit the website at: www.myallshores.com
Myall
Lakes National Park
Established
in 1972 the park now protects 47,500 hectares of woodland, dunes, rainforest and
swamp that were variously mined, logged and cleared for farming in the century
prior. The
wetlands, bogs and swamps are listed by the Ramsar Convention of 1971 that lists
‘Wetlands of International Importance’ worthy of preservation. The
list of flora and fauna is extensive and includes birds, mammals, reptiles and
fish including many endangered and threatened species. Lake
fish species include silver bream, bass, mullet, eels and flathead. Prawns are
also extensively fished. Located
three and a half hours by road north of Sydney, near the towns of Bulahdelah and
Hawks Nest, the park is one of the most visited in the state and has excellent
camping, boating and leisure facilities throughout. More
Info: www.nationalparks.nsw.gov.au |
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