Same Sky, Different Ground

The field guide

How to read the country

This is the whole skill, laid out and free to use: a quick method for reading any patch of this coast at a glance, a few tricks for seeing more, and a tour of where to go. Read it here, or print it and take it outside.

One word before you go. This country is alive and forever rearranging itself: tracks wash out, gates close, seasons open one place and shut another, and tides, fire and flood can rewrite a day's plan without asking your leave. Check current access, tides, conditions and park rules before you set out, and treat what you find on the ground as the last word over anything printed here.

Respect private land and closures, tread lightly, take out what you carry in, and take honest responsibility for your own safety — the bush is the best of company, but it will not look after you. A little planning is the whole price of a good day out, and it's a small one.

How to read any landscape in five minutes

Stand somewhere — anywhere — on the Sunshine Coast, and ask these five questions in turn. Run them and you'll know, within a few minutes and before reading a single sign, roughly what you're standing in, why it's there, and what it's been through.

  1. 1

    Read the shape

    What's the lie of the land? A lone, steep, sharp peak is a volcanic plug — the hard core of a vanished volcano, left standing while everything softer wore away. A flat-topped range with a steep rim is a basalt cap. Low rolling hills are the soft foundation rock. Dead-flat coastal ground is young sand or river flat. The shape tells you the rock, and everything else follows from the rock.

  2. 2

    Read the soil

    What colour is the ground? Deep chocolate-red means basalt clay — the richest soil there is. Thin, pale, mixed soil means the softer foundation rock. Dark, fertile flats mean river alluvium. And bright, bleached, bottomless white sand means the oldest, poorest country of all: the wallum.

  3. 3

    Read the water

    What colour is any water you can see? Clear and cool off a green range is basalt water. Brown and turbid is sediment-laden floodplain water. Clear-but-tea-stained — dark and still, like cold black tea — is the acid blackwater of the sand country.

  4. 4

    Read the vegetation

    Closed, dim, multi-layered forest on red soil is rainforest. Tall or open gum forest over grass is eucalypt country. Pale, papery-trunked trees standing with wet feet are paperbark swamp. Low, hard-leaved heath that flowers in spring is wallum. Trees breathing through snorkel roots in tidal mud are mangroves.

  5. 5

    Read the fire and the history

    Blackened trunks fuzzed with green regrowth, or grass-trees in flower, mean a recent burn. Rainforest creeping into a gully means country long unburnt. A straight drain, a giant old tree marooned in a paddock, a thicket of lantana: these are the marks of clearing and disturbance.

That's the entire method, folded down to something you can do from a lookout. Explore the relief map, or keep this page in a pocket for exactly this.

The art of looking

The five-minute method tells you what to read. A word now on how to look — because the country gives up far more to a patient watcher than a hurrying one, and most of that is technique you can learn.

Slow down, and stop. The single most useful field skill is also the simplest. Most of what lives here won't show itself to a walking human, but a great deal of it resumes its business within a few minutes of your going still. Pick a log or a rock, sit, and let the bush forget you're there: the pademelon edges back out, the small birds return to the low scrub, the skink comes back onto its sunlit stone. Ten quiet minutes in one place will nearly always show you more than a brisk hour covering ground.

Go at the edges of the day. Dawn and dusk are when the country is busiest — the daytime animals feeding hardest, the night ones beginning to stir — and, not by coincidence, when the light is kindest and the heat least. On a summer walk, a dawn start is at once the most rewarding and the safest.

Read with your ears. Much of this country announces itself in sound long before you see it. Listen for the explosive crack of a whipbird and the answering note from its mate; the rich carolling of a magpie; the soft, continuous sigh of wind through a she-oak, heard before you find the tree; the shriek of lorikeets tearing through blossom; and, on a warm wet night, the layered chorus of frogs, each species calling its own line. You'll hear much of this country before you see it, and some of it you'll only ever hear.

Carry two small tools. A pair of binoculars pulls the honeyeaters, the fruit-doves and the far-off whale-spout into reach; a simple hand lens turns the ground at your feet into a whole other landscape — the sundew's glistening traps, the workings of a wildflower, the lichen crusting a rock. Most of the country's detail is either too far off or too small for the naked eye.

Don't always turn for home at dusk. Much of the coast's cast — the gliders, the owls, the possums, the frogs — comes out only after dark, and a still night in the bush is a different country from the same place by day. A quiet wait near a flowering tree, or a slow walk with a dim, red-filtered torch, may show you gliders working the blossom or an owl on a branch; a warm, wet night beside a wallum swamp is the frogs' great hour. Keep it gentle: a soft or red light, a low voice, no beam held on an animal more than a moment, and nothing touched.

The one-day gradient

If you do only one thing with all of this, make this drive: from Maleny down to the coast at Mooloolaba, reading the gradient as you descend. It's the best classroom on the coast, because it crosses nearly every ecosystem in one short traverse, in order — and it's far easier to start in the cool of the range and coast down with gravity than to climb.

Start high, in the rainforest of the Blackall Range — Mary Cairncross Scenic Reserve is the classic stop, a surviving fragment of the big scrub, cool and dim and dripping on deep red basalt. Then point downhill and watch the reading change beneath you: rainforest thinning into tall eucalypt forest; the forest opening into drier grassy woodland; the slopes flattening onto old floodplain, with its cane, its drains and the occasional lonely forest red gum left standing; the ground turning to sand, with paperbark in the hollows and heath on the rises; and finally the mangroves and open water of the Maroochy mouth, where the tide runs in and out. That's six worlds in one short drive. Do it slowly, stop often, and run the five-minute reading at each change of country.

A reader's tour — where to go

Where to go to meet each kind of country, roughly from the range to the sea. (Always check current access, conditions and park rules before you go; some sites are seasonal or sensitive.)

A reader's calendar

This country reads differently through the year, and timing a visit well can mean the difference between an empty heath and a blazing one. It runs on weather, not the calendar, so treat these as cues, not a timetable. (For what to look for this very month, see This Month.)

Three fixed highlights are worth planning a trip around: the spring wildflower flush in the wallum, the whale migration (north through winter, south through spring), and the frog chorus on the first warm, wet nights of summer.

Before you go: stay safe

Beautiful country, and parts of it are dangerous to the unprepared.

Tread lightly

Once you can read a landscape, you tend to want to keep it in one piece.

Lend a hand

Most of the looking-after on this coast is done by volunteers, and they are always glad of another pair of hands. Local Landcare, bushcare, dune-care and rivercare groups, catchment and "friends of" associations, and community nurseries work patches of bush, creek, dune and wetland right across the region; turn up and they will find you a job. Citizen-science projects will take your frog calls, bird lists, koala sightings and wildflower records — noticing things, which you will be doing anyway, made useful. And there is always planting to be done, from rainforest framework plantings down to a single birdwing vine in the backyard. That counts too.

Now close the page and go outside

The country is waiting, and it's far better company than any screen. If you'd like the deeper story behind all this — how the coast was made, and the science under every cue — that's what the book is for.