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Ponds and Subiaco Creek

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(Redirected from Ponds Creek) "Ponds Creek" redirects here. For other uses, see Pond Creek (disambiguation) and Pond (disambiguation).

River in New South Wales, Australia
Ponds/Subiaco
Rock Feature at the Ponds leg of the creek
Location
CountryAustralia
StateNew South Wales
RegionNorthern Suburbs
DistrictParramatta City
MunicipalitySydney
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationCarlingford and Ermington
 • coordinates33°48′41″S 151°3′23″E / 33.81139°S 151.05639°E / -33.81139; 151.05639
MouthParramatta River
 • locationRydalmere
 • coordinates33°48′59″S 151°1′52″E / 33.81639°S 151.03111°E / -33.81639; 151.03111
Length7 km (4.3 mi)
Basin features
River systemParramatta River
Tributaries 
 • leftVineyard Creek
 • rightThe Ponds Creek, Iona Creek

Ponds/Subiaco Creek, a joint northern tributary of the Parramatta River, is a creek north-west of Sydney Harbour, located in the Northern Suburbs region of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The Creek is also known as The Ponds and the Subiaco Creek respectively. It is followed by a walking track known as 'The Ponds Walk'.

The Ponds Walk

The Ponds Walk and Galaringi Reserve from Carlingford Bowling Club

The Ponds Walk is a 7.7-kilometre walking track which follows The Ponds Creek from Eric Mobbs Memorial Park to Jim Crowgey Reserve lining the Subiaco Creek. The track passes through Carlingford, Dundas Valley, Telopea, Dundas, Ermington and Rydalmere. Leashed dogs are permitted on the walk.

Subiaco Creek leg of The Ponds Walk

Ecology

The Ponds Creek is a tributary of Subiaco Creek, having its source in Carlingford and flowing through Dundas Valley. Flora and Fauna blossom in the Ponds, including Sydney exclusive species of birds and trees. It is also the home of turtles, ducks, rabbits and snakes. It has been deduced that the vegetation of the Ponds Subiaco Creek is Blue Gum High Forest and Sydney Turpentine-Ironbark Forest, meaning protection and plan of action is required to maintain this rarity. It has been classified as critically endangered under the New South Wales government's Threatened Species Conservation Act 1995.

An additional source of Subiaco Creek is in the suburb of Ermington. The creek then flows westwards though Rydalmere before turning south for a short distance and draining into the Parramatta River. It is approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) long.

Mushrooms growing along The Ponds Walk

Bird life include the White-faced Heron, Wood Duck, Pacific Black Duck, Australian White Ibis, Laughing Kookaburra, Sulphur-Crested Cockatoo, Galah, Magpie, Noisy Mynah, Raven Rainbow Lorikeet and King Parrot.

History

The Ponds was the name given to a chain of freshwater ponds which formed the headwaters of the Ponds Creek. They were described in 1789 by Lieutenant-General Watkin Tench, who wrote "the Ponds, a name which I suppose it derived from several ponds of water".

Autumn in The Ponds Walk

Subiaco Creek flows through one of the earliest areas settled by European colonists in Australia. It was site of the fourth land grant in the colony of New South Wales which was made to Phillip Schaeffer. As a consequence, the creek was known as Schaffers Creek. Schaeffer created a property called 'The Vineyard'. This name is commemorated by Vineyard Creek to the west of Subiaco Creek. After a succession of owners the property was purchased by Hannibal Macarthur in 1813. Macarthur built a mansion called 'The Vineyard' on the land in 1836.

This mansion later became a Benedictine convent and boarding school for girls. The nuns named the school 'Subiaco', after the Italian town of Subiaco in which Saint Benedict established his religious order.

Geography

Much of the length of Subiaco Creek has been contained within a network of reserves and parks. The art historian Bernard Smith recounts memories of picking "great bunches of wildflowers" along Subiaco Creek in his youth. Some sections of the creek near Cowells Lane Reserve have been placed in culverts and covered over.

References

  1. "Estuaries in NSW: Parramatta River". Department of Water and Energy of NSW. Archived from the original on 31 August 2007.
  2. ^ "Ponds/Subiaco Creek Reserve". Parramatta City Council. Retrieved 16 December 2008.
  3. Smith, Bernard (2004). The Boy Adeodatus: The Portrait of a Lucky Young Bastard. Queensland: University of Queensland Press. p. 302. ISBN 978-0-7022-3459-0.

See also

Waterways of the Sydney Metropolitan catchment, New South Wales, Australia
Major inlets and harbours
Minor bays and coves
Lagoons
Rivers
Creeks
Canals and streams
Reservoirs
Adjoining rivers and bays
Geography of Parramatta River
Sources
Tributaries: left
Tributaries: right
Islands
Parramatta River ferry services
River crossings
River inlets and bays
Suburbs: north
Suburbs: south
River systems and rivers of New South Wales, Australia
Rivers flowing towards the Coral and Tasman seas of the South Pacific Ocean
Rivers of the Northern Rivers catchment
Rivers of the Hunter-Central Rivers catchment
Rivers of the Sydney Basin
Rivers of the Southern Rivers catchment
Rivers of the Murray–Darling basin
Murray catchment
Darling
catchment
Barwon / Macintyre / Macquarie
sub-catchments
Murrumbidgee
catchment
Lachlan
sub-catchment
Category: