| If you are heading west go
the wild route and forget the traffic lights, shops and tedium
of suburbia. There are two roads over the mountains leading
to the western plains of New South Wales. There's the aforementioned
traffic light nightmare or the Bells Line of Road (the northern
road) through ...BILPIN .. -where you'll travel through a
diversity of mountain scenery with great walls of sandstone
and endless canyons, combined with charming orchards |
 |
 |
and fruit and vege stalls offering all
local varieties of stone fruit in season and autumn apples
Visit local artisans in metalwork, ceramics, art, opals,
wonderful dried flowers (combined with Russian antiques!)
and woodwork, combined with numerous charming coffee stops
all featuring home made apple pies, jams, local honey and
our proudly made Bilpin Apple Juice and Apple Cider Vinegar.
|
There's stacks
of quality accommodation - from self-cater cabins through
to completely serviced in-the-home bed and breakfast. There's
half a dozen wedding venues and a bus to transport guests
to and from their function to their beds. Visit the cold climate
Mt.Tomah Botanic Garden and enjoy lunch on the deck and Mt
Wilson and Mt Irvine for world renowned private, open gardens.
See the real Australia with people working their orchards
and walking their wilderness.
Come to BILPIN and enjoy a mountain climate
along with spectacular scenery and quality, honest produce.
|
HISTORY
The first journey along what is now Bells Line
of Road was first undertaken by Archibald Bell in 1823(Sensibly
he used the knowledge of the local Aborigines who had been
crossing the mountains for tens of thousands of years. Although
the mountains has been crossed at Katoomba a decade earlier,
there was still no satisfactory route through the mountains
from Richmond at this time. |
 |
In his diary Archibald
Bell recalls that, upon his return to Sydney, he reported
the richness of the soil in the Bilpin area which inevitably
led to the arrival of settlers eager to grow fruit trees in
the area.
In 1851 gold was found near Bathurst and Bells
Line of Road became a 'human foot-plodders' road towards chancy
fortune'. In 1831 the population along Bells Line of Road
numbered twelve or thirteen families - a far cry from today.

Click here to download a PDF map of Bilpin.
|