Brisbane Forest Park
   Photo: Brisbane Forest Park

Brisbane Forest Park is now part of the National Park D'Agilar located on the same mountain range on the western tip of Brisbane. Large nature reserve stretches in the basin near the Enoggera Reserve "Mount Coot-tha."

The forest park is the source of several waterways in the region, including Sauze Pine River, Enoggera Creek Gold Creek, Moggill Creek and its tributary Gap Creek, Kebbedzh Creek and Cedar Creek. Here are the Lake Manchester Dam and the Gold Creek and Enoggera.

The first national park on the ridge D'Agilar - "Maya" - was founded in 1930. social group "Brisbane guardians of national and recreational park." In 1973, the group began to explore the possibilities of the park between the mountain of Mount Coot-tha and Mount Mount Nebo. Initially, the Brisbane City Council considered it impossible to open a public recreational area in the territory, supplies water to the whole city. To resolve the contradictions Coordination Committee was established, and in 1977 parliamentary decree declared an area of ​​25 thousand hectares of protected area. In 2009, Brisbane Forest Park was renamed and became one of two sections of the national park D'Agilar.

At the Center for Wildlife "Walk on the Bay" (located at the entrance to the forest park on the way to Mount Nebo), you can learn about the wildlife of Australia, to visit through aviary, aquarium, and enclosures with animals, including representatives of the Australian fauna night. Here you can see native birds, platypus, diabetes flying possum, wallabies, wombats, giant petauridae, spotted marsupial marten, a large opossum, snakes, lizards, turtles and fish.

To walk through the forest park, you can choose one of the many trails, laid in such a way to protect nature and at the same time allow visitors to better get to know her. The road to the waterfalls Greens Falls leads through the rain forest to the top of the waterfall.

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