Bli Bli Provisional School opened on 2 April 1901, becoming a State School in 1909.
The first Bli Bli post office opened by March 1903 (a receiving office had been open from 1898) and closed in 1954. The current Bli Bli post office opened on 1 October 1987.
Sunshine Castle
Bli Bli is in the heart of a sugar cane growing region, close to both Maroochy Wetlands and the Petrie Creek. William Peter Clark, a timber leaseholder, first experimented with sugar cane growing near Bli Bli in the mid-1860s. Twenty years later several sugar cane farms were surveyed and taken up.
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Image Courtesy of Maroochydore Info |
The Maroochy River impeded access to Bli Bli, and although comprised of good farm land, the lack of ready access stunted development. In the 1950s former Maroochy Shire chair and state parliamentarian David Low advocated the development of tourism in the area, which (along with farming) required better roads and bridges. The David Low Way road access and bridge (1959) across the Maroochy River became the coastal entry point to Bli Bli; its 'Fairytale Castle' tourist attraction, opened in 1973, an incongruous medieval fantasia in a tropical tourist setting. More prosaically, there were numerous cane tramways converging on the town, which served the sugar mill in Nambour until its 2004 closure. Since the Mill's closure, cane farmers have turned to the production of 'cow candy', a form of cattle fodder processed from sugar cane.
Bli Bli's population doubled to over 3300 from 1986 to 1996. The town boasts a caravan park and a retirement village, together with a primary school (opened in 1901) and a local shopping centre. The Maroochy Wetlands Sanctuary, just outside Bli Bli on the Maroochy River, offers boardwalks and walking tracks.
Development plans were begun in 2012 to construct a 27-hole golf course at Bli Bli to replace the Horton Park course in Maroochydore's CBD, which had been sold to the Sunshine Coast Regional Council for redevelopment. The Bli Bli course, named the Maroochy River Golf Club, was due for completion in mid-2015.
Information directly from Queensland Places.
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