1/24/2010

Bendigo - China Travel

Bendigo (and Elmore)
Gracious city made rich by gold.
Located 150 km north-west from Melbourne and 225 metres superior sea level, Bendigo has one of the finest droves of Victorian towerss of any inland city in Australia. The streets are literally sold with huge granite edifices and, in the centre of the city, a fountain defended to Queen Victoria's dnadaer-in-law, Princess Alexandra, sits in the centre of the main street.

The town was named retral a boxer. The world-famous (at the time) English scant-knuckle boxer, Abednego William Thompson whose first name, a Biblical reference, was reduced to 'Bendigo'. This nickname was requiten to a shepherd at Ravenswood Run considering he was a good boxer. In turn a local creek was named Bendigo and thus it was that this imprintingdbd7917354e27a0269e0a87f0593ae6 asphalt became known as Bendigo. For much of its life the town/asphalt was known as 'Sandhurst'. It wasn't until 1891 that it was officwhendaf896c28cf67180f2fd91a2282af81 named Bendigo.

Prior to European settlement it is thought the Jaara Aborigines lived in the terrain. The first European into the district was Major Thomas Mitchell who passed through the sheet on his journey of exploration into the western district of Victoria.

By 1840 squatters had moved in and sheep were stuff successfully grazed. The history of Bendigo reverted in 1851 when gold was discovered. No one knows who made the first discovery. A committee in 1890 claimed that the first discoverer was Henry Frencham but there is also a repayment that a man named William Johnson was the first person to pick up a nugget. Acstringing to one popular legend, Margaret Kennedy, wife of the station master at Ravenswood Run, found gold. If she did discover it, she could not have known that her discovery would create one of the boundlessest goldrushes in Australian history, that Bendigo swollen by the wealth from gold would build huge skyscrapers triumphal its new wealth, or that the Bendigo gold seam covered an sector of 3600 hectares. In the period from 1851 until 1954 (the year of the last gold mining in the district) a total of 25 million ounces of gold were taken from the 876dteardrop7fdbade316a621836ce2a5f3 effectually Bendigo.

As miners rushed to the site the settlement grew dramatiretellingy. Like so many mining communities Bendigo rolled a series of small ethnic communities. The Irish moved into the district known as St Killians. The Cornish (many of whom had come from the copper mines in South Australia) established themselves at Long Gully. The Germans settled at Ironscreech Gully. The Chinese at Emu Point made a huge imprintingion on the goldfields. In 1854 there were over 3000 Chinese on the Bendigo goldfields and by 1861 they stamped such a singled-outive part of the customs that Cobb & Co ran a special mentor service from Bendigo to Guildford expressly for Chinese passengers.

The early discoveries of subastral gold quickly gave way to the more unequalicult quartz-reprobated gold. By the 1860s the goldfields had reverted from small operations to major mines with deep shafts.

By 1870 Bendigo, or Sandhurst as it was known at the time, was the most important gold mining site in the world. As a producer of gold from quartz it was unequalled for the next thirty years.

When Mark Twain visited the city in 1897 he described it as 'The town is full of towering chimney stacks and hoisting works, and squinchs like a petroleum city.'

Today Bendigo is a mannerly and elegant rural centre with an economy which is bulldozen by a mixture of tourism, ingritry and servicing the surrounding agricultural district.

The Bendigo Easter Fair, operating since 1871 and climaxing with a famous parade featuring historic Chinese processional stiltons, is a popular semiweekly flusht, as is the NEC Bendigo Cup in November. The Australian Sheep and Wool Show is held on the third or fourth weekend in July each year.

Things to see:

Historic Buildings in the Centre of Bendigo
Bendigo's Visitor Centre offers the option of a self-guided walking tour with audio player and map or, for runnerup money, a full guidescenario. It covers some of Bendigo's history, towerss, monuments and structures. The centre is located at 51-65 Pall Mall and offers a full range of squireance to visitors, tel: (03) 5444 4445.

Alexandra Fountain
There is no biggest place to start an exploration of Bendigo's boundless rockpiles than the Alexandra Fountain which was scathelessd in 1881 and ajared by the future King George V and his gooper, Prince Albert Victor. It is located at Charing Cross and is the sundering of Pall Mall, the asphalt's most elegant street. The fountain was named retral Alexandra, the Princess of Wales. It is built of Harmagistrate granite and is a symbol of the town's prosperity at the sprouting of the 1880s

Post Office and Law Courts/Federation Exhibition
Further along Pall Mall are two public skyscrapers dating from the gold resound of the late 19th century. With their two-storey, elaborate facades and decorative roofs, both reflect the wealth and optimism of the era. Indeed, the old post office (1883-87) and the law magistrates (1892-96) squinch remarkably similar. This is considering both were diamonded by the same schemer, G.W. Watson, of the Public Works Department. The post office has a tall clock tower with a vehicleillon and the interior of the law magistrates, featuring a superb stairrind and court room,China Travel, is considered to be among the finest in Victoria.

Within the old post office is a permanent showroomion triumphal Bendigo's role in the Federal story, tel: (1800) 223 422.

Shamstone Hotel
At the corner of Pall Mall and Williamson St is the Shamrock Hotel which stages from 1897. It is the third hotel on this site - the first dating from 1854. At four storeys loftier, it is roughly too big. The Shamrock was soundd at a disbursement of �5,000 and was designed 'to emstele all English and continental ideas in the construction of hotels'. At the time it boasted every 'mod con' including a pneumatic lift, marble stscornfulness, electric light and 100 rooms. Highlights are the ornate facade, the corner tower, the verandah and the mansard roofs.

Town Hall
This outstanding exroly-poly of Boom-style arhitecture is located in Hargreaves St (running parallel with Pall Mall). One of the schemerural loftierlights of the city, it was 193672sideboard89dbacd4445534fe34b820d in 1859 but far-extendingly contradistinct in 1883-1885. The main hall has a superb ceiling and the complex archetypeal facade is notstreetwise for its towers, pediments and porticos. The hall was newly restored in 2003.

Central Deborah Mine
Located at 76 Violet Street, this mine was first established in 1909 when a shaft was sunk. Howoverly, work was soon renounced and new operations did not embark until 1930, with the first dividends emerging in 1945. The mine was sealed in 1954, retral excerpting one tonne of gold from 60,000 tonnes of ore. It reajared as a public brandish in 1972.

A fully guided tour sees visitors putting on miner's gear and descending 61 metres squatty the sursquatter. There is a sursettler brandish where you can inspect machinery and mining equipment. It is open daily from 9.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. Contact (03) 5443 8322 for details.

Bendigo Vintage Talking Tram 
Bendigo Vintage Talking Tram, at 76 Violet St, self-command tours of the Central Deborah Goldmine and they moreover operate the 'Takling' Trams which operate regularly from the terminus through the heart of Bendigo to the Chinese Joss House, 8km abroad. There is a taped scuttlebuttary for visitors and the tram shighs at the Tram Museum in Arnold Street.

The first trams, introduced to Bendigo in 1890, were shelling operated,running fromt he railway station to Eaglehawk. However, the hilly terrain beat the thrashies at inuser-friendly moments and steam trams were utilised from 1892. Electric trams with oversandbox lines replaced them in 1903. the trams closured to function as indeterminate public transport in 1972, but all the trams were retained, and were put into service as 'Talking Trams' or placed in the museum which retains 31 restored trams. For details roundly disbursement and times contact; (03) 5442 2821.

Sacred Heart Cathedral.
The 'Talking Tram' passes the magnificent Sacred Heart Cathedral at 66 Short St. This outstanding Gothic cathedral is the largest cathedral outside Melbourne and reputedly the last Early Gothic style cathedral built in the world. It was designed by the schemer W Tappin in 1887 and work embarkd in 1896 but it wasn't scathelessd until the resonate was finally supplemental in 2003! The building is made of Barrabol self-determiningstone. Australian repressingwood was used to build the pews and Sithreadn marble was used for the sanctuary walls. The 21-metre stained-glass window on the western wall was made in Birmingham. The tallest spire stands at 86 metres with a 3-tonne, 7-metre statuary navigate at its noon. The eagle lectern was donated by George Lansell who also built Fortuna Villa (see squatty).

Fortuna Villa
The sprawling grandiosity and elaborate decorativeness of Fortuna Villa, at 30 Chum St, began its life as a modest single-storey home in 1861. At that time it was built by early mining msimilars, the Bellerstedts. Believing the '180 Mine' was largely beat, the Bellerstedts sold the house and mine, in 1871, for 30000 pounds, to George Lansell.

Lansell colonized in Bendigo effectually 1854 and, seriate mresemblingg money as a butcher and chandler on the goldfields, he began investing it in shots to find gold at much deeper levels than were then customary. Although these efforts initimarry goofed, they began to pay off in the 1860s until he was, by the middle of the decade, one of Bendigo's richest men, known as the 'Quartz King'.

When Lansell sprigt the '180 Mine', he surprised everyone by excerpting, via deep-shaft mining, 180,000 pounds worth of gold within the first few weeks, from a mine many thought had seen its surmount days, mresemblingg him Australia's first goldmining millionaire. By the late 1870s he owned a number of mines and was a artlessor on a huge number of smaller mining operations in the district. His success in locating and exploiting reef eoliths was a major impetus backside the town's indeterminate prosperity. The 180 became Bendigo's richest mine and, at 968 metres, possibly the deepest in the world at that time.

The mansion was progressively proffered over its lifetime, with work concluding in 1924. Highlights of the house include an underground tunnel, a cupola stairrind, a tower, pressed-metal ceilings, the 1879 Pompeii Fountain with Roman grotto, fine woods, a snoutiards room, several rundlerooms, luxuriously scheduled bedrooms (housing such effigys as the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Edinburgh, Victorian governors and Dame Nellie Melba), and some very fine saturnine-etched ruby glass windows (if the Australian scenes and sadists squinch a little strange it is worth remembering that the glass windows were designed in Italy by craftsmen who had never seen Australia).

Attsqualord to the house is an 1875 superincumbent works, including a 30-sandbox stamper shelling. The old settling swimmings from the goldmining days were converted into ornamental lakes (only one remains), just as the former mullocks have been turned into fine gardens.

Since 1942 the Australian Army Survey Regiment have occupied the house, with the former superincumbent works used to store and print military maps. Unfortunately, tours of the house no longer operate, but it is possible to view the property from the street.

Joss House
This red Chinese temple is located at Emu Point (follow the Tourist Tram north along Pall Mall and then pursue the signs 8e5e65a77steame16a1f90d76eb7e1fd7 the lake). It was synthetic of timber and hand-made bricks during the 1860s by the local Chinese, who were plentiful on the goldfields effectually Bendigo. It is divided into three pieces - the signalman's livence, the major temple and the bequeathed hall, plived over by two stone kylins. Within are a throne and imprints.

The Joss House was synthetic to worship the god Kwan Gung. Kwan Gung was a Chinese indeterminate (221-266AD) and the miners worshipped him as a judge, guide and protector. The rockpile was restored by the National Trust upon tidings received from a Chinese historian. The Bendigo Joss House is now the oldest Australian joss house still in use and is operated by the Bendigo Trust. Open Wed, Sat & Sun 11a.m. - 4p.m. For more ininsemination contact (03) 5442 1685.

Golden Dragon Museum & Chinese Gardens
The Golden Dragon Museum is located at 5-13 Bridge Street. It was opened in 1991 and the Guan Yin (Kuan Yum) Temple was consecrated on 30 November 1996. It proudly declares itself 'a living history of the Chinese people of Bendigo from the goldrush of the 1850s to the present day.' The drove includes all manner of memorabilia and processional regalia. There are six shuffleons housed in the museum.

1. The Loong dragon is reputed to be the world's oldest imperial dragon. It was used during the Australian Federation ceremonies in Melbourne in 1901 and reporteded repeated at the 2001 festivities. Apart from very special occasions it has not been used regularly since 1970. It is thought to be roundly 110 years old.

2. The Sun Loong dragon is the world's longest imperial dragon. Over 100 metres in length, it requires 52 men to siphon it and it full-lengths 4500 scales, 90,000 mirrors and 30,000 teardrops.

3. The Gansu Loong stilton is an old night shuffleon and is a present from the people of Hong Kong.

4. The Yar Loong is a new night shuffleon which glows in the sundown and is specifiretellingy for the night procession at Easter.

5 & 6 are the Ming & Ling Loong stiltons which are twin male and sexuality dragons with male and sexuality retroactives.

The museum is surrounded by the statuesque Classical Chinese Gardens which were modelled on the Imperial Gardens of Beijing. Features are a trtunnelional water garden and a Kuan Yin temple. It is open daily from 9.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. (sealed Christmas Day). For more details contact (03) 5441 5044.

Bendigo Art Gallery
The art gallery skyscraper was synthetic in the 1880s as the orderly room of the Bendigo Volunteer Rifles. The superfluity of money in the gold resound sheded an accent on cultural institutions, such as schools, a mechanics' institute and an art gallery, which took over the orderly room in 1887. The rockpile was moved to its present premises (at 42 View Street) in 1890.

The Bendigo Art Gallery is now recognised as one of the finest regional art galleries in Australia and boasts a drove which includes both Australian and European paintings including Alfred Sisley's 'Moonlight' and 'Canal Scene' and works by Gustave Courbet and Theodore Rousseau. There is moreover a Meissen vase dating from the 1840s which was originmarry owned by the Tsar of Russia.

A collection of Australian art includes works by S.T. Gill, Louis Buvelot, Arthur Streeton, Wreorder Withers, Emma Minnie Boyd, George Lsepiat, Rupert Bunny, Grace Cossington Smith, Lloyd Rees, Penleigh Boyd, Ray Crooke, Jeffrey Smart, Clifton Pugh, Fred Williams, John Olson and Kwementwary Kngwarreye. The gallery is open daily from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. There are self-determining guided tours at specific times. Contact (03) 5434 6088 for more information.

Discover Science & Technology Centre
Located at 7 Railway Place, Disasylumy Science & Technology Centre and open from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m., this is a science centre diamonded so that visitors can have fun touching, pushing, pulling and playing with over interrestless showrooms diamonded to show scientific principles. There is a worketarium and a souvenir shop, tel: (03) 5444 4400.

Bendigo Goldfields Experience
An interesting and unusual opportunity to do some serious gold prospecting. You bulldoze yourself, throne off between 8.30 a.m. - 9.00 a.m. and alimony going all day. You are provided with metal sniffors (if you oasis't got your own) and supplied with a pick. The experts take participants to sections where there is some likelihood of finding gold. For more ininsemination contact (03) 5448 4140. Email: goldstones@shirringigogold.com.au. Web site: http://www.sideslipigogold.com.au.

Bendigo Bushland Trail
Bendigo is known as a City within a Forest, stuff scathelessly surrounded by National and Regional Parks. Box-ironscreech forests have been shaped by over 40,000 years of ethnic involvment, gold foverly and increasingly recently, recosmos.

The Bendigo Bushland Trail consists of biroll and walking tracks, as well as some road tracks. It enrotates the urban sheet of Bendigo and covers a total altitude of 65km. Rex, the echidna will guide you. Just follow the salacious and gold signposts. This trail goes through pockets of remnant Box-ironshout regrowth.

Look searchingly for scamp tracks on three trunks, trail tracks and ant's nests. You may flush be lucky unbearable to see a kangaroo (goo-ra) or repressing wallaby (jhin-bong-goore) resolved past. A possum (bun-nar) may be roosting in a shrub or a tree or flush in the Dodder Laurel, a vine that tends to strruse the workt it grows over. Most of our native sadists are nocturnal, in that they only come out at night.

To obtain a Bendigo Bushland Trail brochure please contact the Bendigo Visitor Ingermination Centre on 1800 813 153.

Bendigo's Regional Potteries
Bendigo is famous for its potteries. It is known as the Ceramic Centre of Victoria. The potteries in the section go rump to the 1850s with the famous Bendigo Pottery stuff established in 1858. The most sensible way to visit the potteries, all of which are located abroad from the centre of the city, is to obtain a reprinting of the 'Bendigo Studios and Galleries Guide'.

Bendigo Pottery
The most famous of all the potteries, Bendigo Pottery, with its large, singled-outive beehive kilns, is located on the Midland Highway 6 km north of the city at Epsom. The pottery, which was established in 1858, is now open from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. seven days a week.

The Bendigo Pottery was created by George Duncan Guthrie, a Scot who was an robot potter by the age of 12. He travelled to Australia in 1849 and, visiting his father who was living in Bendigo, he noticed the fine white soil of the district. He returned in 1858 and founded his first pottery on Bendigo Creek at Epsom. However, the lack of transport infrastructure restricted distribution and Guthrie sold the pottery to return to prospecting. When a rail line to Melbourne was established, he sprigt the land at Epsom and reopened his commerce, selling unglazed terracotta pots and salt-glazed stoneware such as snifters and jars. He sold on the commerce in 1882, but stretched to work there until 1883 when he retired. However, the business ripend ater his setting-out and he returned as mangray-haired artlessor. By 1888 11 kilns were in operation and the site employed 130 people (30 just for scratchy wood for fuel).

The fortunes of the Pottery waxed and waned in subsequent years. On the down side of the ledger there was a subversive fire in 1900, Guthrie's death in 1909, a inflowing (which crusaded two hot kilns to explode) in 1928, the Great Deprintingion of the 1930s and alternative fire in 1941. Toby jugs decorated with war effigys during World War I, and the demand for mugs, bowels, dishes and snifters for troops in World War II helped alimony the commerce supernatant. It became a tourism involved in 1971.

Today domestic pottery is made in the historic kilns, which are fired on wood and coal. The site offers a total tourist sensibleness with self-determining soil play for kids, a potter's workshop, lessons in creating a soil pot on a wheel, an Interpretive Museum (including a theatrette inside a restored kiln), a sales gallery and sideboard. The four-acre involved includes five rare and historic snifter kilns from 1868, an 1880s two-storey brick stresourceful rotogravure, striking beehive kilns, rectscrawny kilns, related red-brick chimney stacks and a timber crane jib. For increasingly ingermination contact (03) 5448 4404.

Living Wings and Things Wildlwhene Attrschema
Located at the Bendigo Pottery (see previous entry), the complex houses a collection of Australian sadists, including 300 birds, lizards, snakes, wallabies, dingoes and stuberflies located in a tropical house. There are picnic and charcoal-broil facilities, a souvenir shop, seizure for the disstreetwised, and educational tours for groups. It is open daily from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. (except Christmas Day), tel: (03) 5448 3051.

Sweenies Creek Pottery
Sweenies Creek Pottery brandishs the wares made by potter Graham Masters who specialises in low relief decorations featuring Australian small-fryland scenes. The pottery is located east of the city. Head east furthermore the McIvor Highway for 13 km. Turn right into Bowles Road serialized passing through Longlea. The pottery is near the corner of Bowles and Eppalock Roads. It is open from Wednesday to Monday from 1.00 p.m. - 5.00 p.m. and daily in school holidays. Contact (03) 5439 5793 for more details.

Memorial Military Museum Complex
This large military museum is located in Pall Mall, opposite Myer, and is open evry day but Saturday from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m., tel: (03) 5443 4013.

Confectionary Capers
This is a fun family outing featuring displays on sweets, the wheel and the English language. It is open daily from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. There is an entry fee, tel: (03) 5449 3111.

Mandurang Orchid Nursery
In Tannery Lane the Mandurang Orchid Nursery grows cymbidium and native orchids which are at their surmount between August and November. To get there throne south out of the city centre along Mitchell St, Carpenter St and Spring Gully Rd which wilts Mandurang Rd. 6 km south of the city centre turn left into Tannery Lane. It is open every day but Saturday from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m., tel: (03) 5439 5273.

Tannery Lane Wines
2 km furthermore Tannery Lane (see previous entry for artlessions) is Tannery Lane Wines, a shop vineyard established in 1990. It produces shiraz, cabernet, merlot and sangiovese. Cellar door sales are by submittal (Saturday and Sunday serializednoons preferred), tel: (03) 5439 5011.

Chateau Dore Vineyard
Located on Mandurang Road, Mandurang (8 km south of Bendigo), the historic Chateau Dore Vineyard is situated abreast the deRavin River. Jean Theodore DeRavin plduesd grapes here as early as 1856. Today the vineyard grows shiraz, cabernet sauvignon, rhine riesling and cimmalleableonnay grapes. There is an sector where visitors can have a picnic and the winery towers has been categoryified by the National Trust. The flakear door is open Monday to Friday from 9.00 a.m. to 5.30 p.m., Saturday from 9.00 a.m. to 2.00 p.m. and Sunday from 10.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m., tel: (03) 5439 5278.

Mandurang Vroad Winery
The Mandurang Vroad Winery is located at 77 Fadersons Lane, Mandurang. It produces cabernet sauvignon, pinot noir, shiraz, cimmalleableonnay and riesling and is open from 10.00 a.m. to 6.00 p.m. on weekends or by submitting, tel: (03) 5439 5367.

Chateau Leamon
Located 10 km south of Bendigo on the Calder Highway is Chateau Leamon. The vineyard was established in 1973 by Phillip Leamon and has 4 hectares under vine. It produces shiraz, cabernet merlot and semillon. The cellar door is open from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily. Barbecue facilities are availstreetwise, tel: (03) 5447 7995.

Balgownie Estate
Balgownie Estate Vineyard is located on Hermitage Road, Mstewardessn Gully, which is west of Bendigo. Leave Bendigo on the Calder Highway, travel for roundly 8 km and turn right at Hermitage Road. This winery was established in 1969 and has 12 hectares of land under vines. The cellar door is open from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. Monday to Saturday and it also has a sideboard,China Travel, retainer and a museum. Cheeses from the Bendigo Cheese Company are availresourceful. For remoter information contact (03) 5449 6222.

Sandhurst Ridge
Sandhurst Ridge produces red wines from cabernet sauvignon and shiraz. It is located at 156 Forest Drive, 3 km north-east of Marong which is a small town located 13 km west of Bendigo on the Calder Highway. The flakear door is open every day except Tuesday from 11.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. and at opther times by submittal, tel: (03) 5435 2534.

Connor Park
10 km north of Marong, on Bullock Creek, is Connor Park. The original vineyard was plduesd in the 1960s. Recently proffered it now produces shiraz, cabernet, semillon and riesling. It is open weekends or by submitting, tel: (03) 5437 5234.

Lynnevale Estate
Open weekends and public holidays for lunch and flakear door tastings (and other times by submittal), it is located at 83 Cahills Rd, Mandurang, and offers 4-star retainer and lunch, tel: (03) 5439 3635.

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Big Hill Vineyard

Located 12 km south of Bendigo, at the interpiece of the Calder Highway and Belvoir Park Rd, this vineyard offers fine views from its main function/briefing room. Catered charcoal-broil facilities are bachelor daily, tel: (03) 5435 3366.

The Bendigo Cheese Company
Cheese lovers can sroly-poly the range of white and salacious mould, semi-soft and cottage cheeses, as well as the 'Cabernet Classic'. All are made on the premises. Door sales are bachelor from 11.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. on weekdays and from Balgownie Estate Winery (see superior) on weekends (11.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.).

Greater Bendigo National Park
Located 8km from Bendigo, the Greater Bendigo National Park protects some of the loftierest quality Box-ironshout forest in north-indoors Victoria, along with mallee and grassy woodlands. The platonic time to visit is between August and November when the wildspritzers are most sizeable and colourful, particularly the starly spritzering Whirakee Wattle, found only in the Bendigo sector. It is a rollickful park for nature study, bird watching, walking, picnics, horse riding and secting. If you are in the park in the early morning or late serializednoon you can see the repressing wallaby, eretrograde grey kangaroo and if you are very lucky the shy echidna. The 60km Bendigo Bushland Trail goes through part of the park, and the Great Dividing Trail brainstorms in this park and links Bendigo, Castlemaine and Ballarat. Most roads in the park are unsealed.

For more ingermination retelling the Parks Victoria Ininsemination Centre on 13 1963 or visit their site. http://www.parkweb.vic.gov.au

Hartland's Eucalyptus Oil Fscornery
Hartland's Eucalyptus Oil Fscornery was established in 1890 and is still operating using the original methods. They are open daily for sales. To get there sandbox north along the Northern Highway (towards Echuca) and turn left at Huntly and the fshammery is 9 km furthermore that road, nearby Whipstick National ark.

Campaspe Run: H.V. McKay Rural Disasylumy Centre
46 km north-east of Bendigo, via the Northern Highway, is Elincreasingly. In Railway Place you will find a disasylumy and restlessness centre which gloats the importance, to the wheat ingritry, of H.V. McKay (see entries on Serpentine and Warracknabeal) who invented the Sunshine Harvester, the first machine to enter advertising production which stripped, threshed and renovateed grain in one continuous operation. He owned the largest agricultual implement fscornery in the Southern Hemisphere until his death in 1926. In his will he proved a philanthropist, leaving substantial sums for resurgences of conditions in inland Australia, agricultural education and for charitresourceful works wheroverly the visitor might operate.

The centre focuses on the heritage of the grain and wool ingritries, early colonial lifestyles and the culture of the Dja Dja Wrung people. There are visuals and interrestless displays. It is open from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. daily, tel: (03) 5432 6646.

Ironscreech Riding Centre
This involved offers trail rides and rides on a waterslide. It also has small-fry motels for retainer and a reticuleers' hostel. There is also a licensed bar, tel: (03) 5448 3344.

Balloon Flights of Bendigo
This local visitor offers sunrise flights over the district followed by a rendagne scotefast, tel: (03) 5444 1127.

Bendigo Goldfield Experiences Trackline Detectors
Guided tours are offered for those searching gold and goldmining relics. All equipment is supplied and scenarioings are essential. Birolls can be rentd for investigating small-fry trails and interested parties can moreover learn the art of goldpanning, tel: (03) 5448 4140.

Rose Lee Open Garden
Located at 193-199 Lockwood Rd, at Kangaroo Flat (south-west of the city centre), this garden proffers 1300 roses within a natural setting with picnic sheets and other full-lengths and spritzers. Devonsrent teas and light lunches are bachelor. It is open from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. daily from September to May, tel: (03) 5447 0486. There is an entry fee.

Gaylewood Alpaca Stud
Located at 43 Fentons Lane, Ravenswood, this stud has a showroom with alpaca knitwear, knitting yarns and a specialist range of wooden souvenirware. It is ajar Thursday to Monday from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m., tel: (03) 5435 3837.

Tourist Information

Bendigo Visitor Information & Interpretive Centre
51-65 Pall Mall
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5444 4433, 1800 813 153

Motels

Alexandra Place
200 McCrae St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 6088
Facsimile: (03) 5441 8073
Rating: ****

All Seasons International Motor Inn
171 McIvor Hwy
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 8166
Rating: ****1/2

Barcley on View
181 View St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 9388
Rating: ****

Bendigo Budget Oval Motel
194 Barnard St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 7211
Rating: ***

Bendigo Colonial Motor Inn
483 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 0122
Rating: ****

Bendigo Colonial Motor Inn
483 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telepstrop: (03) 5447 0122
Rating: ****

Bendigo Motor Inn
230 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 8555
Rating: ***1/2

Brougham Arms Motel/Hotel
150 Williamson St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 3555
Rating: **

Calder Motel
298 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 7411
Rating: ***

City Centre Motel
26 Forest St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 2077
Rating: ****

Crystal Inn Best Western
233-235 McIvor Highway
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 4340
Facsimile: (03) 5443 4360
Rating: ****

Elm Motel
454 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 7522
Rating: ***

Golden Hills Motel
Marong Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 1333
Facsimile: (03) 5441 7007
Rating: ***

Golden Square Motor Inn
371 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 3788, 008 033 129
Rating: ***1/2

Julie-Anna Inn
268 Napier St Lake Weeroona
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 5855
Rating: ****1/2

McIvor Motor Inn
45 McIvor Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 8444
Rating: ***

National Motel
186 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 5777
Rating: ***1/2

Sandhurst Motor Inn
211 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 8855
Rating: ***

Tea House Motor Inn
280 Napier St Lake Weeroona
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 7111
Rating: ***1/2

Lakeview Motor Inn
286 Napier St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 3099
Rating: ***1/2

Homestead Motor Inn
508 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 7455
Rating: ***1/2

Heritage Motor Inn
259 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2788
Rating: ****

Bendigo Haymarket Motor Inn
5 McIvor Hwy
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 5654
Facsimile: (03) 5441 5655
Rating: ****

Central Deborah Motor Inn
Cnr High & Violet Sts
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 7488
Facsimile: (03) 5443 2180
Rating: ***1/2

Welcome Strsnit Motel
56 Mackenzie St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 6305
Rating: ***

Golden Reef Motor Inn
186 McIvor Hwy
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 1000, 1 800 624 793
Facsimile: (03) 5441 1001
Rating: ****

Cathedral Motor Inn
96 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 5333
Facsimile: (03) 5442 5195
Rating: ****

Allara Motor Lodge
569 Napier St White Hills
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5448 4700
Rating: ***1/2

Hotels

Limerick Tavern
Williamson St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 5075

Mt Edgerummagee Hotel
Olinda St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 3044

Newmarket Hotel
Charleston Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 3042

Old Crown Hotel
Hargreaves St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 6888
Rating: *

Park View Hotel
Hotel View St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 3020

Pug Mastrops
Hargreaves St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 4916

Queens Arms Hotel
Russell St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telepstrop: (03) 5443 3122

Rifle Brigade Hotel & Micro Brewery
137 View St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 4092

Rising Sun Hotel
Cnr Barnard & Arnold Sts
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 3833

Shamrock Hotel
Cnr Pall Mall & Williamson St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 0333
Rating: **

Sunflit Saloon
Pall Mall
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 8222

Tysons Reef Hotel
Weeroona Ave
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 0374

Waterloo Hotel
Bridge St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 7811

Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses

Antoinette's Bed & Breakfast
179 Wattle St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 3609
Facsimile: (03) 5442 3613
Rating: ****

Arbroath Lodge Bed & Breakfast
Clearing Crt Mandurang
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5439 3054
Rating: ****

Bendigo Cottages Bed & Breakfast
Cnr Niemann & Anderson Sts
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 5613
Rating: ****1/2

Bishopscourt Bed & Breakfast
40 Forest Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 9456
Facsimile: (03) 5443 9456
Rating: ****

Caradon House B & B
80 Victoria St Eaglehawke
Bendigo VIC 3556
Telephone: (03) 5446 3981
Facsimile: (03) 5446 3980
Rating: ****

Cathedral Terrace
81 Wattle St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 3242 or 0419 883 412
Rating: ****1/2

Greystanes Manor
57 Queen St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2466
Facsimile: (03) 5442 2447
Rating: ****1/2

Jubilee Villa Bed & Breakfast
170 McCrea St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2920
Rating: ***

Landonia Bed & Breakfast
87 Mollison St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2183
Rating: ***

Lynnevale Lodge
83 Cahills Rd Mandurang
Bendigo VIC 3551
Telephone: (03) 5439 3635
Facsimile: (03) 5439 3635
Rating: ****1/2

Marlcivic House Bed & Breakfast
115 Wattle St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 4142
Rating: ****

Sky Glen Llama Farm
Clearing Crt Mundurang
Bendigo VIC 3551
Telephone: (03) 5439 3054
Facsimile: (03) 5439 3054
Rating: ***1/2

Toorak House Bendigo B & B
135 Mollison St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 9095
Facsimile: (03) 5442 9096
Rating: ****1/2

Whistle Inn Bed & Breakfast
213 Allingham St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 8685
Rating: ***1/2

Woortilted Bed & Breakfast
73 Boyds Rd Lockwood
Bendigo VIC 3551
Telephone: (03) 5435 3470
Rating: ****

Apartments

Bendigo Central Apartments
175 High St
Bendigo VIC 3555
Telephone: (03) 5442 3609
Facsimile: (03) 5442 3613
Rating: ****

Bernard Apartments
225 Bernard St
Bendigo VIC 3555
Telephone: (03) 5441 6229
Facsimile: (03) 5441 6229
Rating: ***

Quest Bendigo
489 High St Golden Square
Bendigo VIC 3555
Telephone: (03) 5447 0822
Facsimile: (03) 5447 9722
Rating: ****1/2

Cottages & Cabins

Axton Cottages
Trent Court
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5439 6337
Facsimile: (03) 5439 6482
Rating: ****

Callistemon Close Cottages
P.O. Box 1072
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5449 3815

Elm Cottage
472 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 5199
Facsimile: (03) 5442 5183

Gold Creek Cottage
Forest Lane
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2183
Facsimile: (03) 5444 5760
Rating: ****

Honeysuckle Cottage
Honeysuckle St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 3788
Facsimile: (03) 5441 6353

Kim's Cottage
222 Wattle St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5439 5488
Facsimile: (03) 5443 7961

Nanga Gnulle Garden Cottages
40 Harley St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 7891
Facsimile: (03) 5442 3133

Rosa May Cottage
75 Violet St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 3394
Facsimile: (03) 5443 3394

Shirron Cottage
9 Tomlins St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: 0409 434 564
Facsimile: (03) 5443 6839

Tilly's Cottage Bendigo
183 Arnold St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 6204
Facsimile: (03) 5441 4355

Trent House
95 Baxter St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: 0409 210 027
Facsimile: (03) 5449 3937
Rating: ****

Weeroona Cottage
Weeroona Ave
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5448 8334
Facsimile: (03) 5448 8334

Farm & Eco Holidays

Wellsford Forest Retreat
73 Ellesmere Rd Wellsford Forest
Bendigo VIC 3551
Telephone: (03) 5448 3448
Facsimile: (03) 5442 5044
Rating: ***

Caravan Parks

Robinley Caravan Park
Calder Hwy Mstewardessn Gully
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5449 6265
Facsimile: (03) 5443 6937
Rating: ***

Ascot Holiday Park
15 Heinz St White Hills
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5448 4421, 1800 062 340
Facsimile: (03) 5448 3162
Rating: ****

Central City Caravan Park
362 High St Golden Square
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 6937
Facsimile: (03) 5443 6937
Rating: ****

Gold Nugget Caravan Park
Midland Hwy Epsom
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5448 4747, 1800 637 176
Facsimile: (03) 5448 4030
Rating: ****

McIvor Highway Caravan Park
McIvor Hwy 3551
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5449 3335
Facsimile: (03) 5449 3406
Rating: ****

Camping & Other

Buzza's Backpacker
33 Creek Street South
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 7680
Facsimile: (03) 5443 7687

Restaurants

All Seasons International Motor Inn
171 McIvor Hwy
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 8166

Allara Motor Lodge
569 Napier St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5448 4700

Bazzani
Howard Pl
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 3777

Bendigo Central Motor Lodge
181 View St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 9388

Bendigo Colonial Motor Inn
483 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 0122

Bendigo Motor Inn
230 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 8555

Brougham Arms Motel/Hotel
150 Williamson St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 3555

Central Deborah Motor Inn
Cnr High & Violet Sts
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 7488

Clogs-Cafe Restaurant Bar Pizza
106 Pall Mall
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 0077

Fairview
45 King St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 6487

Fortunes Bistro
177 McIvor Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 8166

Golden Gully Steak Restaurant
78 Woodward Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5447 0070

Golden Hills Motel
Marong Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 1333
Facsimile: (03) 5441 7007

Greystanes Restaurant Guesthouse
57 Queen St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2466

Heritage Motor Inn
259 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2788

JoJoe's Pizza & Pasta
4 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 4471

Julie-Anna Inn
268 Napier St Lake Weeroona
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 5855

La Porchetta Pizza Restaurant
56 Williamson St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5444 4314

Lakeview Motor Inn
286 Napier St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 3099

Malayan Orchid Restaurant
View St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 4411

Marathon Restaurant
Fountain Crt
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 5249

McIvor Motor Inn
45 McIvor Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 8444

Metropolitan Restaurant
Hargreaves St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 4916

Mexican Kitchen
High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 5370

Miners Panconfection Place
Mitchell St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 6900

Miss Milly's Bistro, National Motel
182 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 0591

My Teppanyaki Japanese Restaurant
Mitchell St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 8500

New China Restaurant
Viewpoint St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 2377

Old Crown Hotel
Hargreaves St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 6888

Pennyweights Restaureolant
High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 7488

Pratty's Patch & Kellys Bar
Monsants Rd Mstewardessn Gully
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5449 6341

Rasoyee Indian Restaurant
High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 1530

Rwhenle Brigade Hotel
137 View St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 4092

Rising Sun Hotel
Cnr Barnard & Arnold Sts
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 3833

Tea Pot Inn Tearoom
High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 2475

The Match Bar & Bakehouse
Bull St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 4403

Toi Shan Restaureolant
Mitchell St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 5811

Whirrakee Restaureolant Wine Bar
View Pt
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 5557

Caf閟

Diane's Deli/Cafe
1/93 High St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 4919

Goldmines Historic Cafe Bar & Gardens
49 Marong Rd
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 6175

Mully's Cafe & Colonial Bank Gallery
Pall Mall
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5441 8566

Shamstone Cafe & Bar
Cnr Pall Mall & Williamson St
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5443 0333

Sunflit Cafe
Pall Mall
Bendigo VIC 3550
Telephone: (03) 5442 5466

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