From
Hughenden, we go north on the Kennedy Developmental Road to
Porcupine Gorge National Park. The first
lookout in the National Park is sixty kilometres from
Hughenden, with the Pyramid being a further eleven kilometres.
There are a number of signed points of interest along the road from
Hughenden. These include Whistling
Bore, where a
capped bore can be heard humming or whistling as air rushes out according to atmospheric pressure. It was put down to provide water for a stock route. There is now a large
dam with windmill nearby.
At Eagle Hawk
Gorge Lookout, the southern start of the Porcupine Creek
gorge can be seen.
The gorge runs for 100 kilometres northwards from here.
Basalt formations are attributed to Mount Desolation, an extinct volcano located nearby. This basalt tableland has both red and black volcanic soils.
Covering an area of 5,410 hectares,
Porcupine Gorge National Park extends for more than 25 kilometres along Porcupine Creek.
The gorge takes its name from the echidnas (also called porcupines because of their spiny quills) inhabiting the surrounding scrub. The canyon has been carved by Porcupine Creek out of basalt lava capped
sandstone, with soft colours of the walls towering 150 metres over the creek. Red and black basalt rocks can be seen.
Porcupine Gorge Lookout
A walk can be taken down into
the gorge where 964 steps have been cut into
the rock on the trail down to the valley floor.
In this wider section of
the gorge the eroding action of the creek has created the pyramid shaped monolith of multi-coloured
sandstone rising from the floor of
the gorge. The creek forms a
pool as it turns at the base of the pyramid.
The Pyramid at Porcupine Gorge
Read more detail about this trip and see all the photos in our
2009 Travelogues