Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Fossickers Way

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Type
  
Highway

Length
  
303 km

Fossickers Way

Route number(s)
  
None Nundle – Tamworth B95 Tamworth – Warialda B76 Warialda – Glen Innes

Former route number
  
State Route 95 (?? - 2013)

North end
  
New England Highway (A15), Glen Innes, New South Wales

South end
  
Nundle, New South Wales

Major cities
  
Barraba, Bingara, Manilla, Warialda

Major settlements
  
Barraba, Manilla, Inverell

Manilla nsw to tamworth on fossickers way


The Fossickers Way is a series of country roads located in the Northern Tablelands region of New South Wales, Australia that, when joined together, come to form a 379-kilometre (235 mi) scenic and tourist drive. The road's southern terminus is located in Nundle with its northwest terminus in Warialda; thereafter the road joins the Gwydir Highway and heads east to Inverell before reaching its eastern terminus in Glen Innes. The majority of the Fossickers Way is designated as B95.

Contents

The scenic route draws its name of Fossickers Way due to the many deposits of gold and the variety of gemstones that have been found in the area (mostly by Europeans) since the early 1850s. Prior to this time, local Aboriginal tribes such as the Werawai people of Nundle and its surrounds were known to use local minerals and stones for the purpose of making tools, such as axe heads. Fossickers Way transverses the western slopes of the Northern Tablelands and passes through some of the world’s richest gem areas. In these parts, sapphires, zircon, jasper, prase, rhodonite, crystals and even gold may be found. The highway passes through open wheat and grazing lands and deeply wooded slopes, through country towns rich in gold rush history.

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Route

Towns along the Fossickers' Way include Nundle, Tamworth, Manilla, Barraba, and Bingara, Warialda, Delungra, Inverell and Glen Innes. The Fossickers Way, a scenic drive that incorporates seven shires in northern NSW The Fossickers Way is an alternate route between Sydney and Brisbane.

In this area, sapphires, zircon, jasper, prase, ridonite, crystals and even gold may be found along various quarries, rivers and creeks, such as Swamp Oak Creek, just out of the town of Nundle where gold was discovered in 1851 by a local squatter, Nathan Burrows It has been reported that he made the discovery, then immediately informed folks in nearby Tamworth and the gold rush began thereafter. The Gwydir Highway passes through open wheat and grazing lands and deeply wooded slopes through country towns, rich in gold rush history.

Tourism

Many events occur along Fossicker's Way throughout the year, including the annual Tamworth Country Music Festival in January. The Fossicker's Way Treasure Hunt is also an annual event which takes participants through all eight towns on the trail.

References

Fossickers Way Wikipedia