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Wellington Park is the protected area which encompasses kunanyi / Mount Wellington and surrounds near Hobart, Tasmania. There are numerous hiking and mountain bike tracks within the park of varying difficulty.
Mount Wellington, also known as kunanyi (/ k uː ˈ n ɑː n j iː /) in palawa kani and gazetted as kunanyi / Mount Wellington, [3] is a mountain in the south-east of Tasmania, Australia. It is the summit of the Wellington Range and is within Wellington Park reserve. Hobart, Tasmania's capital city, is located at the foot of the mountain.
Mount Victoria, also known as Matairangi and colloquially as Mt Vic, is a prominent 196-metre (643 ft) hill immediately to the east of central Wellington, New Zealand. About 4 kilometres due south is a spur named Mount Albert and the two are linked by a ridge. Mount Victoria gives its name to the suburb of Mount Victoria to the west.
Mount Kaukau (Māori: [k a ʉ k a ʉ]) [1] is a large hill in the northern suburbs of Wellington, New Zealand near Johnsonville, Khandallah and Ngaio.The summit is 445 m (1,460 ft) above sea level and is the most visible high point in the Wellington landscape further accentuated by Wellington's main television transmitter mast, which stands 122 m (400 ft) from the summit.
View from Cathedral Rock. Cathedral Rock is a towering dolerite rock formation located in Wellington Park in south-eastern Tasmania. [1]Reaching a height of approximately 880 metres and accessed through a challenging walk, the craggy summit offers expansive views of southern Tasmania, particularly the Huon Valley and the Channel region.
These include the 10 km Escarpment Track, which opened in 2016, [8] and a sealed track from Invercargill to Bluff is under construction. [9] In its 2019 Strategic Plan, Te Araroa Trust said it intended to reduce the amount of road walking to 10% of the trail by 2022 and set a long-term goal to reduce it to under 5%.
Mount Wellington is a mountain located to the north-east of Licola in Victoria, Australia. [2] It is on the border of the Alpine National Park and Avon Wilderness Park. [3] The Avon River rises on its south-eastern slopes. [3] The mountain is accessible via a seasonally-open four-wheel drive track that traverses the ridge
[1] [2] In 1998 the Wellington City Council set aside 200 hectares of retired farmland in Karori southwest of Wellington, New Zealand, for a mountain bike park. Development of it began almost immediately with volunteer work parties planting trees, removing pest animals and digging new tracks. [citation needed]