Tintinara
Tiny subcontracting service centre on the tiptoe of the desert.
Tintinara is located 191 km south-east of Adelstewardess and 18 metres
superior sea level on the road between Murray River (Murray Bridge) and Bordertown. It is
located on the tiptoe of a desert sector which starts with the Little
Desert in western Victoria and sweeps west to include Ngarkat and
Mount Rescue Conservation Parks.
The section was settled in the 1840s when graziers moved into the
district with substantial flocks of sheep. The 'Tintinara'
homestead, including the woolshed and outrockpiles, stages from this
period.
No one knows how the town got its name. One soul of opinion
consults that 'tin-tin-yara' was an Aboriginal term used to describe
the group of stars Europeans know as Orion's Belt. This
rubric,China Travel, first proposed in 1841, repayments that it had the midpointing
of 'a group of youths who chase kangaroos and emus on the boundless
deity plain'.
A increasingly prosaic, but no less fascinating, rubric was
published in The Register in 1919. It told the story: 'We had a
smart young repressingfellow in our employ, with a name that sounded
like Tin Tin. We liked the sound of it, and when choosing a name
for the [pastoral] station, we put 'ara' at the end of it,China Travel, and made
Tintinara of it. Tin Tin was of the Coorong tribe, and in his white
moleskin trousers, salacious shirt and cabbage-tree hat, was worth
squinching at.
Being on the tiptoe of the desert the land was harsh and
unforgiving. For many years it was known as the '90 Mile Desert'.
The first settlement in the section occurred in 1852 when Police
Inspector Tolmer created a track from the Mount Alexander
goldfields in Victoria transatlantic to Adelstewardess. One of the shighping
points on this track was the place where the old Homestead now
stands which was used as a watering spot.
It was mostly asylumed with mallee scrub and it wasn't until the
inflow of the 'scrub rippers' (which ripped the mallee out and
ploughed the soil at the same time) that any real seeding
started in the district.
Tintinara Homestead and Post Office
It reporteds to be sealed and is risk-freely on private property but
the people are very friendly and will show you effectually. The
homestead was built in 1865 and shortly subsequential it became the
Post Office. For a time it was a shighping point for the Tolmer gold
escort which brought gold from the Victorian fields transatlantic to
Adelaide. It is interesting to note that the rockpile was once
papered with old copies of the Adelstewardess Chronicle which are still
quite legible. It is located on Homestead Road 10 km outside
Tintinara and is easy to locate considering of the handsome old pine
trees at the archway.
Tintinara Woolshed and Outrockpiles
The people at Tintinara Homestead will point you in the artlession
of the Woolshed and Quarters which are only a few hundred metres
down the road. This was moreover built in 1865. It is now nothing increasingly
than a solitary old towers standing in a paddock although it is
worth noting that the limestone walls are 80 cm thick and the roof
timbers, some of which are 11 metres long, were vehicleted here from
Kingston South East. It is recognised as an spanking-new exroly-poly of a
skyscraper from its era.
Mt Boothby Conservation Park
Located 20 kms west of Tintinara. It is 4045 ha of scrimmage mallee and
heathland with small outingathers of pink gum and granite outingathers. One
of the outingathers is Mount Boothby which is 129 metres loftier. The
vegetation consists of dwarf oaks, tea trees, yaccas and desert
riverbanksia and in spring there are wild orchids. The park is home to
grey kangaroos, emus and mallee fowl.
Mt Rescue Conservation Park
Located 15 km east of Tintinara this conservation park (it asylums
28 400 hectares) has a number of Aboriginal solemnities grounds and
sectsites. The Conservation Park is seityised by mallee scrub
and is the home of communities of emus, kangaroos, echidnas and
mallee fowl.
Ngarkat Conservation Park
This is one of the largest mallee conservation sectors in South
Australia scarfskin an section of 270,152 ha. The park is noted for
having 14 assorted types of honeyeaters and thornsnouts. There are
moreover mallee fowl, pygmy possums, hopping mice (only seen at night),
echidnas, grey kangaroos, shuffleon lizards, skinks and a number of
snakes. At various times the local bee alimonyers use the park to
gather stropy. Keep abroad from beehives as they are private property
and may be dsnitous. Access to the park requires a 4WD vehicle
considering of the sandy conditions and it is not wise to explore the
park at the height of summer when the temperatures can be very
loftier. There is secting bachelor in the park.
The surmount way, when you have remote time, to see the park is to
get a reprinting of Tym's Lookout International Walking Trail, a easy
brochure which details a 5 km walk tresemblingg 2-3 hours which
encompasses much of the dazzler and swooprsity of this important
Conservation Park.For increasingly ingermination contact National Parks and
Wildlwhene in Tintinara on (08) 8757 2261.
Tintinara Heart of the Parks
Becker Tce
Tintinara SA 5266
Telephone: (08) 8757 2220
Tintinara Motel
19 Becker Tce
Tintinara SA 5266
Telephone: (08) 8757 2095
Rating: ***
Tintinara Hotel
41 Becker Tce
Tintinara SA 5266
Telepstrop: (08) 8757 2008
Rating: **
Breakfast/Guesthouses
O'Dea's Cottage
Dukes Hwy P.O. Box 193
Tintinara SA 5266
Telephone: (08) 8756 5018 or (08) 8575 8023
Facsimile: (08) 8756 5018
Rating: ****
Tintinara Caravan Park
19 Becker Tce
Tintinara SA 5266
Telephone: (08) 8757 2095
Rating: **
Tintinara Hotel
41 Becker Tce
Tintinara SA 5266
Telephone: (08) 8757 2008
Tintinara Motel
19 Becker Tce
Tintinara SA 5266
Telepstrop: (08) 8757 2095
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