UPPER YARRA STAR MAIL
Home » Opinion » Healesville’s Parks and Gardens

Healesville’s Parks and Gardens



Healesville is blessed with attractive, long-established public parks and gardens, enjoyed by generations of tourists and ‘locals’ alike.

In 1865 Government-Surveyor, George McDonald set aside a large area, centrally located, designated as ‘Recreation Reserve’ and now known as Queens Park. Although essentially still a park, with magnificent trees, shrubs, a rose garden and a creek forming its eastern fringe, it now also houses many recreational and sporting facilities.

As early as 1901 its amenities were recognised beyond Healesville when 4000 Post Office employees and their families, travelling in 7 special trains, spent their annual ‘trade picnic’ there. The Healesville Golf Club played its early years on a part of the park with members having to contend with grazing cows, tussocky grass, an uneven surface and, in winter months, very swampy surfaces. Visitors can be assured that no such hardships will now confront them!

By far the most extensive park is Maroondah Reservoir Park. The dam wall, 41 metres high, offers a scenic lookout to the reservoir lake itself and the spectacular spillway’s waters cascading into the river below. The work on the dam began in 1920 and was completed seven years later. The park area contains an extensive array of trees – including towering native eucalypts and many exotic deciduous specimens – and flower beds, lawn areas, winding walks and a great variety of bird life. Although it experienced in recent years the loss of many well-established trees from storms and wild weather as well as a considerable reduction in garden maintenance staff, volunteers are working hard and successfully to restore some of its former botanical glory. Maroondah Reservoir Park is still a very attractive place to visit in its natural and rather spectacular setting.

Badger Weir Park and Donnelly’s Weir replete with creeks, weirs, bush walks and extensive treed areas on Healesville’s outer areas are popular spots for visitors who may be able to enjoy the presence in Badger Weir Park particularly of goannas, rosellas, other wildlife and even lyre birds. Badger Weir Park suffered severe damage in the wild storms of 2016 but after more than two years work the park and infrastructure are fully restored and again open to the public.

Healesville’s public parks and gardens provide a backdrop to the town’s attractive setting, nestling at the foothills of the Great Dividing Range – a far cry from one traveller’s description in its earliest stage in 1865 as ‘a township consisting of four or five shanties in the course of being erected – a detestable hole in which nothing to drink was to be had except gin, and nothing to eat but damper’!

Digital Editions


More News

  • Camps, Sports and Excursions Fund applications now open for Yarra Ranges families

    Camps, Sports and Excursions Fund applications now open for Yarra Ranges families

    Grants to assist Yarra Ranges families can now apply for assistance through the Camps, Sports and Excursions Fund (CSEF) with the start of the 2026 school term. The Nationals’ Melina…

  • Vale Joy Aldham

    Vale Joy Aldham

    The Selby CFA community is mourning the loss of a beloved member, Joy Aldham, who passed away in January, just a week before her 75th birthday. Ms Aldham who was…

  • Outer East youths charged after aggravated burglary

    Outer East youths charged after aggravated burglary

    Police have arrested four people following an aggravated burglary in Wantirna South this morning, 31 January. It’s alleged four offenders entered a Wallace Street property around 4am. The residents, a…

  • Horse Talk

    Horse Talk

    A huge weekend of showing this weekend, with the Yarra Glen Agricultural Show being held on Saturday. Although it was pretty warm, everyone had a great time. There were lots…

  • Big wins for Warby bowls

    Big wins for Warby bowls

    The Warburton Bowls Club recorded wonderful results on the weekend with both Pennant sides winning comfortably in vital games leading up to the finals. The Burras top side played third…

  • Outpouring of community support leaves woman thankful

    Outpouring of community support leaves woman thankful

    When Mena Buckley’s beloved greyhound, Tassie, crawled off the couch and collapsed on the floor, she knew it was time for her dog to go. She called her NDIS worker…

  • Justice of Peace appointments with Cr Child available

    Justice of Peace appointments with Cr Child available

    Yarra Ranges Council O’Shannassy Ward councillor Jim Child is offering Justice of the Peace services on Monday 2 February. Appointments can be made by calling 9294 6106 or dropping in…

  • ‘Incredibly grateful’: Community Bank donates $40,000 to local CFAs

    ‘Incredibly grateful’: Community Bank donates $40,000 to local CFAs

    The Community Bank Wandin-Seville donated crucial funding to four local CFA brigades on Monday 26 January. The $40,000 boost was presented at the Rotary Club of Wandin’s Family Fun Day…

  • Bushfire preparedness

    Bushfire preparedness

    Our community knows the unforgiving and unpredictable nature of bushfires all too well. Living in the bushfire prone Yarra Ranges and neighbouring the dense bushland of Murrindindi and Baw Baw…

  • A sequel even better than the first

    A sequel even better than the first

    28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Starring Alfie Williams, Ralph Fiennes and Jack O’Connell MA15+ 4.5/5 Directed by Nia DaCosta, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple is an even better…