Showing posts with label Buderim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buderim. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 December 2018

Serenity Sundays - Buderim Falls

Sneaky Piece Of Paradise In Buderim


Unbeknownst to many, there is a beautiful little slice of heaven in the middle of Buderim, known as Buderim Forest Waterfall.
 

It sits within a 45 hectare park, and the boardwalk is wheelchair friendly (about 600m), if you have someone who would like a mini-fix of tranquility?

Click the image below to check out full details and directions!

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Image courtesy of Visit Sunshine Coast

Monday, 19 November 2018

Mystery Mondays - The Buderim Beast

The Buderim Beast

This is a great mystery that comes up from time to time....well documented sightings in various yards and even the local Buderim Falls. There is a lot of speculation about the Buderim Beast, and if you google it, you will see that when the Sunshine Coast Daily featured it, 36% of voters believe it to be a Thylacine (Tasmanian Devil - now extinct). 

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Image by Sue Smith via the Sunshine Coast Daily
Naturally this gets people pretty excited (most of us just WANT to believe it of course - still getting over Santa not being real, sob), but the fun part is not just the online research, but looking for it every time you step out in the bush around Buderim! Hikers beware........

Sunday, 7 October 2018

Buderim - Did You Know?

* Before the arrival of timber cutters the Buderim district was inhabited by the Kabi Kabi Aborigines. It is believed that their language included a word, sometimes spelt 'Badderam' and 'Budderum', which they used to describe the mountain.

* The first Europeans to explore Buderim were timbercutters looking for beech and cedar. In 1854 a man named Richard Jones explored the mountain looking for timber for Pettigrew's Mill. He was followed in 1862 by Tom Petrie, who spoke the local Aboriginal language and is probably responsible for the town's name. Petrie was the first European to extract timber.

* William Henry Guy first surveyed the district in 1869 and in 1870 settlers started purchasing and clearing the land. They planted crops of sugar cane, citrus fruits, bananas, beans and tomatoes.

* The district grew slowly but by 1875 there were nineteen children and that was enough to justify the establishment of a provisional school.

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* The town seemed to come of age in 1876 when a sugar mill was built and John Burnett built the Pioneer Cottage, now the home of the Buderim Historical Society. It was around this time that Kanaka (South Pacific Islander) near-slave labour was used on the local sugar plantations. This is not a happy memory for the local community although one citizen, a Quaker named Joseph Dixon, built a slab-and-shingle shed near the sugar cane mill which was used by the Kanaka children as a school and Sunday school.

* The first crops of Buderim bananas were harvested in 1883-84. They were grown by James Lindsay who transported them to the coast where they were shipped to Brisbane. This was always a problem as often ships did not arrive and the bananas would rot on the wharves.

* By 1881 coffee was being grown on the mountain. In 1907 Buderim produced 18,300 kg of coffee beans.

* Transportation was an ongoing problem. When the rail reached Landsborough Buderim farmers turned away from the coast. Eventually in 1914 a tramway was built between Buderim and Palmwoods. It operated from 1914-1935.

* The biggest boost to the local rural economy was the discovery of the region's ability to grow ginger. From 1916 until the present day it has been a vital part of the district's economy.

Information copied directly from the Aussie Towns site which contains other amazing links for exploration!

Sunshine Coast - Was 80s Mecca for Nightlife and Live Bands!

 There are no words for how good we had it!  Let's start with this video/pictures courtesy of the Sunshine Coast Daily/Courier Mail and ...