Highway Towns

Dubbo
Ballimore
Dunedoo
Cassilis
Merriwa
Sandy Hollow
Denman
Jerry's Plains
 
 

Friends and Neighbours

Aberdeen
Armidale
Bylong
Capertee Valley
Coolah
Coonabarabran
Gulgong
Gunnedah
Kandos
Mendooran
Mudgee
Murrurundi
Muswellbrook
Rylstone
Scone
Singleton

Wellington

 
 
 

 

 

KANDOS

on

The Bylong Valley Way

 

 

Location

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235 kms. from Sydney, a comfortable three hour drive.

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7 kms. from the small town of Rylstone and

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60kms from Mudgee, home of the Mid-Western Regional Council.

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Easily accessible from Muswellbrook, the Hunter Valley and the Central Coast, via the Bylong Valley Way, now completely sealed and suitable for caravans.

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 1 hour from Bathurst and Lithgow.

 

Climate

Kandos, being 762 metres above sea level, has a cool temperate climate which produces stunning roses and abundant fruit, including grapes and olives.

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Winter nights can bring heavy frosts but days are sunny and crisp.

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 Summer days are hot with a pleasant humidity.

Kandos weather can be both dramatic and changeable with sunshine, wind, thunderstorm and rainbow all on the same day.

 

Gateway to the Wollemi

Kandos, nestled at the base of Coomber Mellon Mountain on the western edge of the Great Dividing Range, provides an entry to the magnificent Capertee Valley and the Wollemi National Park, home of the Wollemi Pine. The old gold districts of Sofala and Hill End are close by.

 

 Nature Overshadows Industry

View from the Rotary Lookout

Approaching Kandos from Sydney you see an aerial ropeway carrying buckets of limestone across a valley to the lego-like cement complex huddled into Coomber Melon Mountain.It is a rare image of nature overshadowing industry.

Drive up to the nearby Rotary Lookout and enjoy the vista: the geometric mountain range along the horizon, the vineyards and grazing lands, the avenue of poplars, the majestic mountain backdrop to a town built on cement; the cement that built the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

 

 A Unique History

Kandos sprang from the imagination of a group of men who recognized that natural deposits of limestone, coal and shale near a railway line could grow into a cement industry; and that a hill covered with dense scrub could grow into a town.

After purchasing 100 acres they subdivided it into quarter acre blocks, yankee grubbed the streets and named their ‘private village’ Kandos, using the first letter of each of their names. Then they lured other enterprising men to the first land sale on August 14 1915.

Within a decade Kandos, one of the youngest centres in New South Wales, had a population of three thousand and a cement works that was the largest in the Southern Hemisphere, employing 450 men.

Quarry trucks mark the town's entrance

 

A Distinctive Architecture

Bicentennial Museum

 

Most of the shops, institutions and houses were built in the first two decades of the 20th Centaury.

The Bicentennial Museum in Buchanan Street began in 1919 as a Methodist church. This unique building is now on the Register of the National Estate. Built of concrete in the Californian ‘mission style’ it was furnished with comfortable sea-grass chairs. On a hot day it is the coolest place in Kandos.

 

St. Dominic's Convent

 

Five or six blocks away in Fleming Street is the former convent of the Good Samaritan nuns, a fine spacious sixteen-room building of early Spanish design with handsome arches, Gothic pillars and wide verandahs, designed to catch the sun in winter and the shade in summer.

The scout hall in Dabee Road is a good example of an ash brick construction. Generations of children dashed through the turnstile and down the cement path, then stood to attention beneath the grand little entrance with its awning and pillars, green and yellow trim and proud scouting symbol.

Built by the cement works, the scout hall is one of many leisure premises which the cement industry provided for the workers and people of Kandos over the nine decades it has been here.

 

To learn more about Kandos buildings look for the book ‘A History Tour of Kandos’.

 

 

The Ambience of a Small Country Town

Enjoy The Sights

 

There is more to see in Kandos than a few fine buildings. Contained within forty streets, where there are no traffic lights, and no two houses are the same, Kandos is a town of idiosyncratic delights.

 

A display of quarry trucks greets you at the entrance. Opposite is a sturdy double-brick Court House and Police Station. The heritage ‘Railway Hotel’ (sadly no longer operating) is on your right. The railway line, which you cross to enter the main street (Angus Avenue), brings cement trains to the cement works, and occasionally tourist trains.

 

The Rotunda on your left awaits a Sunday afternoon brass band and the town clock ahead, donated by appreciative migrants, is a reminder of the multicultural make-up of the town.

 Don’t make the mistake of thinking the Business area is contained in the first town block. Businesses are spread out along three blocks of Angus Avenue, interspersed with houses.

  

Watch the

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sun rise over the Coomber Mellon Range

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the limestone buckets gliding across the valley to the Kandos cement works.

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brilliant night sky

 

Sit and watch the birds.

You are likely to see king parrots, galahs, cockatoos, koels, friarbirds, sparrows, blackbirds, wedgetail eagles, fairy wrens, spotted pardillos, double-barred finches, willy wagtails and the incomparable magpie. Magpies strut imperiously in parks and on verges. Sparrows hop and dart across lawns into Banksia rosebushes.  White cockatoos send up a communal screech. Brilliant red and blue parrots cavort on bare grey branches.

 

Enjoy The Sounds

You will notice that Kandos is alive with the sounds of human endeavour.  They are isolated sounds very different from the indistinct drone of the city – a door slamming, a vacuum humming, a car revving, a garage door opening, a magpie warbling.

Tune into our local community radio for a country viewpoint.

 

Enjoy the Flavours

International food companies have not discovered Kandos. You’ll find our fast food outlets are better, and there is plenty of choice.

For sit-down meals there is a range of restaurants, mainly informal. Small country prices for large country servings.

Taste-test the wine and oil of our local vineyards and olive farms. Seek out our local products at licensed premises and business outlets. Don’t go home without a bottle or two.

 

Walk the Streets

Pick up the brochure ‘Come For a Walk Around Kandos’ available from many local outlets, or download from www.rylstone.com.

 Enjoy the idiosyncratic features of our small town:

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the diversity of housing - in ash brick, cement render, fibro, hardiplank, timber and brick (note especially the substantial ash brick houses in Buchanan and Campbell Streets);

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classical revival features on public buildings, for example arches and Greek columns; concrete electricity poles (we were the first in Australia to have them); original front fences in ash brick, concrete, wire and a combination of these;

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circular and triangular symbols on the front of some houses;

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distinctive and curious house names,

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letter boxes and garden pieces;

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interesting gardens and plants.

 

 

 

 

Town Facilities  

 Recreation

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 Henbury Sport & Rec Club 18hole par 70 championship golf course with grass greens  No hold-ups, no pressure, no-one overtaking. Watch kangaroos bounding across fairways as the western sun hits the rocky escarpment.

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Tennis Courts  Henbury Sport & Rec Club

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Bowling greens

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Sparkling heated olympic-size swimming pool with lawns, shady trees, paddling pool and outdoor furniture.

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Football field

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Cricket pitch

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Athletics field

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2 clubs

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cycle & walking tracks
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7 km to Rylstone

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in the opposite direction to Charbon

 

 

a fairway at Kandos"s   Henbury Sport & Rec Club Golf Course

Country Shopping

 

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old wares,

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homewares,

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clothes and gifts,

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‘two-dollar’, vintage.

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A unique millinery shop

Accommo-dation

Kandos district has a variety of accommodation options including

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hotel,

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motels - Kandos Fairways Motel,

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bed and breakfast,  -RooTreat B&B (10 mins) Lansallos B&B (15 mins)

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self-contained, - 24 Dabee Road

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camping.

 

Schools

Students from Kindergarten to Year 12 as well as pre-schoolers are catered for in Kandos.

 

Hospital

In the nearby town of Rylstone there is a district hospital. Two doctors provide medical services. There is a pharmacy and aged-care facility.

 

Museum

Kandos Bicentennial Industrial Museum in Buchanan Street overlooking Jacques Street contains much of the town’s history, including the production of cement and coal, railway travel, domestic life, war history and local history.

 It is open Friday afternoons, Saturday, Sunday and Public Holidays; and week days on request.

 

 

 

 Special Events

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Kandos Hot Rod and Street Machine Show is held on the Australia Day weekend. 

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St Lawrence’s Community Markets are held on the third Saturday of each month.

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Shine Fashion Shows are held twice a year at Henbury Club.

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 Henbury Sport & Rec Club  conducts a full golfing program from the beginning of March to the end of November. Veteran events are played on the second Tuesday of each month with two special events in March and October.

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The Rylstone Kandos Agricultural Show is held on the third weekend of February.

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Christmas Lights Competition and Rotary Christmas Carnival run in December.

Street Machine show

 

District Website

At www.rylstone.com you can find further information and download the following:

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Come For A Walk Around Kandos

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Community Capers (the Rylstone-Kandos district newsletter)

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Town Map of Kandos, Town Map of Rylstone and District Map

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Rylstone Kandos and Surrounds Visitor Guide

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Rylstone Region Scenic Drives

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What To Do: Kandos Rylstone District

 

 

 Whether a tourist or a tree-changer you will find Kandos is a great place to come. Our welcome is warm and friendly, our voluntary spirit is strong. 

 

 

These Kandos / Rylstone businesses are partners in promoting the Golden Highway  

  ...............a part of Your Inland Adventure Trail

 

From the Golden Highway to

the New England Highway and the Bylong Valley Way

 

 

 

 

11/4/2009 - 30/6/2012

 

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