The sad, potted history is that Marriniers Falls was closed after a girl suffered severe head injuries by a falling tree a few metres short of the actual falls. PV requested Google remove all references — written and photographic — from or associated with, maps. Oh boy, did they open up the floodgates to a fight...
The government of the day employed geotechnical advisors who, curiously, determined the area to be too dangerous for walking in, and recommended either a) re-routing the walk (impossible due to the terrain) or b), closing it. It is true historically that timber falls occurred, particularly on the early riverside approach, but so do did tree falls occur onto cars parked along the foreshore of A/Bay, and nothing other than a trim here and there was done. Over time, tree falls have occurred most often at Beauchamp Falls (Otway Forest Park), Kaanglang Road and Benwerrin-Mount Sabine Road (outside Forrest, connecting road to Lorne) and Triplet Falls (the scene of criminal vandalism —
"The Triplet Chainsaw Massacre" — by disgruntled, locked-out loggers who took their chainsaws to tall trees along the rainforest walk in 2003
).
And so... Marriners Falls was quietly closed in 2011, and A/Bay erupted.
Rangers were confronted, their cars hit with eggs and paint, arguments broke out, fists almost came to blows. The danger of falling trees is no greater than at e.g. Triplet Falls (many tall timber falls!), Little Aire Falls, Beauchamp Falls (Otway Forest Park) and generally throughout the Otways, National Park or not (Kawarren being a hotspot for tall timber falls). The fence is an ugly steel cyclone with barbed wire (last I saw of it), and locals are not shy of pulling it down! A landslip a few years back that blocked the well-known left hand approach track, necessitated the locals make a crude track across the river, and cut a new track before re-crossing the river beyond the landslip. That initial crossing near the car park, which was facilitated with home-made steps down the cliff, has been obliterated and replaced by an large cliff to discourage investigative walkers. To add insult to injury, somewhat unfriendly locals who live down there right where the walk to the falls used to start, aren't particularly welcoming of visitors or stickybeaks.
It is likely the Highview section of the walk to A/Bay is through private land — not particularly interesting scenery wise; walkers (in the defunct group) have done that walk, presumably in full knowledge of the land owners; otherwise, a bit of road walking is in order, but the scenery will be just as vast looking out over A/Bay, unless per chance you happen to be struck by a bout of gloomy weather (hopefully not, it is summer!!).
You mustn't perve at the graceful curves!
It's a Sassafras in this case, festooned with ferns and mosses and fungi, growing in the peaty streamside soil beside Youngs Creek. Thousands of people have walked right past that tree, oblivious to how powerful it is as an image of an untouched rainforest. I stopped and stayed there almost 5 hours (I had a small flask of gin and lamingtons with me, so!
), sizing it up before committing the image to film and printing it to a metre tall. I do have photos of the middle section of the Cumberland River. Yannathan Cascades and Falls are accessed by TW Spur Track (GPS plot of route on alltrails). The track appears and disappears in many places; should be ribbons in place.
Serenity Reach can still be accessed by walking down the road from the campsite to the bridge (over which is Halls Ridge Road) and left, walking carefully (use a trekking pole) over variable depth sandstone-base river keeping close to the edge of the forest, and the scene I pictured will soon smack you in the face and command attention. The walk-on-water, rather akin to the great man hi'self, is 70m like this.
Yes, the coordinates tally (roughly) with the campsite on Sabine. There was nothing up there at all when I last visited (in a typical Otways pea-souper) in June.
Photo shows
Marriners Falls a very long 21 years ago — printed then to Ilfochrome Classic ['Ciba'] print media, museum-grade conservation framed and in four private collections, the master 35mm transparency here.