Wattamolla, also known as Wattamolla Beach, is a cove, lagoon, and beach on the New South Wales coast south of Sydney, within the Royal National Park.
Wattamolla | |
---|---|
Beach | |
Coordinates: 34°08′15″S 151°07′04″E / 34.13750°S 151.11778°E | |
Location | Royal National Park, New South Wales, Australia |
Dimensions | |
• Length | 150 m |
Hazard rating | 4/10 (moderately hazardous) |
Access |
|
Geography
editWattamolla is the junction of two creeks: Wattamolla Creek, which flows in from the northwest, forming a lagoon behind the beach, and the smaller Cootes Creek, which joins the lagoon from the west via a waterfall. A rocky outcrop lies behind the beach between the main channels of the two creeks. Due to the interaction of waterflow from the two creeks as well as tidal forces, the size of the lagoon and the configuration of its outlets to the sea change continuously. The outcrop in between the channels of the two creeks is usually, but not always, connected via the beach to either or both banks of the cove.[1] Works completed in 2022 have created a fenced lookout area above the waterfall, and a newly landscaped picnic area. Road access is to the southwest of the lagoon, and access to the beach from the car parking area is usually via stairs that descend to the outlet of Cootes Creek in the east, but (where the outlet is carrying large volumes of water) sometimes change to a seasonally placed bridge across the west of the lagoon.[2]
History
editWattamolla is the local Aboriginal name of the area, meaning "place near running water".[3] That name was recorded as Watta-Mowlee by Matthew Flinders, but is today spelt Wattamolla.
Matthew Flinders, George Bass and a boy, William Martin had been exploring the south-coast from Port Jackson as far as Lake Illawarra, in a small boat named Tom Thumb. Returning on the evening of 29 March 1796, a southerly gale forced them to seek shelter.
At ten 'o'clock, the wind, which had been unsettled and driving electric clouds in all directions, burst out in a gale at south, and obliged us to get up the anchor immediately, and run before it. Matthew Flinders
Flinders, "steering with an oar", thought the dark outline of cliffs ended and believed he saw breakers, so he turned the boat towards shore. Catching a large wave, they "shot across a sandbar" and in moments were in the calm sheltered water of the lagoon, which in relief they named Providential Cove.[4]
On 15 May 1797, three members of the crew of the Sydney Cove were spotted by a fisherman on Wattamolla Beach, having trekked from the Ninety Mile Beach Victoria on route to Sydney, to seek help rescuing their crew.[5]
The headland to the south of Providential Cove is named "Providential Point", but was previously named "Boy Martin Point".[6][7] The headland to the north is named "Martin Head".[8]
Gallery
edit-
Panorama of Wattamolla. Click to enlarge.
-
Waterfall
-
Lagoon with beach in background.
-
Closeup of lagoon
-
The beach
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ NSW Department of Education - Virtual Fieldwork - Wattamolla
- ^ Bundeena Info - Wattamolla Upgrade Completed 2022
- ^ Sutherland Shire place names, fact sheet by the Sutherland Shire Council, August 2003
- ^ The Life of Captain Matthew Flinders, by Ernest Scott at Project Gutenberg
- ^ "Sydney Cove shipwreck an epic tale of adventure and survival in 1797". ABC News. Australia. 30 May 2017. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
- ^ NSW GNB - "Boy Martin Point"
- ^ NSW GNB - "Providential Point"
- ^ "NSW Place and Road Naming Proposals System".
External links
edit- Historical images of Wattamolla on Trove