ESPERANCE, WESTERN AUSTRALIA
'Esperance' is a town in Western Australia, located on the south coast around half-way between Albany and the South Australian border. Its population is around 14,000 people, and its major industries are tourism, agriculture, and fishing.
| Contents |
| Attractions |
| Climate |
| History |
| Esperance Port |
| Education |
| Twin town |
| References |
| External links |
Attractions
Approximately 7.5 hours' drive or a 1.5 hour flight from Perth, the state capital, Esperance is a popular destination for medium term trips for families based there. It is also around 4 hours' drive south from the Goldfields mining town of Kalgoorlie, and offers a convenient get-away for weekends for the mine workers.
Near the town itself are many attractive beaches, offering surfing, scuba diving, and swimming. Also nearby are a number of salt lakes, including the Pink Lake, which gains its rosey hue from red algae living within its waters.
There are five major national parks near the town. A major nearby tourist attraction, 56 km from the town center, is the Cape Le Grand National Park, which offers a picturesque coast of largely granite terrain and sheltered white sand beaches. The park is a popular spot for recreational fishing, as well as four wheel drive enthusiasts and hikers.
Climate
Esperance has a Mediterranean-type climate with warm, dry summers and cool, wet winters. It is subject to wide variations in the weather, from hot summer days when northerly winds arrive from the interior of the state, to cold, wet winter days with southerly winds from the Great Southern Ocean.
History
European history dates back to 1627 when the Dutch vessel ''Gulden Zeepaert'', skippered by François Thijssen, passed through the blue waters off the Esperance coast.
French explorers are credited with making the first landfall near the present day town, naming it and other local landmarks whilst sheltering from a storm in this area in 1792. The town itself was named after the French ship, the ''L'Espérance'', commanded by Bruni d'Entrecasteaux. Esperance, roughly translated, is French for 'hope'.
In 1802, British navigator Matthew Flinders sailed the Bay of Isles, discovering and naming places such as Lucky Bay and Thistle Cove. Whalers, sealers and pirates followed, as did pastoralists and miners, keen to exploit the free land and cash in on the gold boom in the gold fields to the north.
The area of the Esperance townsite was first settled by the Dempster family in the 1870s, and in 1876 a telegraph station was opened here. The formal gazettal of the townsite did not occur until 1893.
In 1979, pieces of the space station Skylab landed in Esperance after the craft broke up over the Indian Ocean. The municipality fined the United States $400 for littering.[1]
In January 2007, Esperance was struck by two highly unusual events.
First, a torrential storm with wind gusts of up to 110km/h brought 155mm of rainfall within 24 hours, causing significant flooding. More than 100 homes were damaged, several boats were destroyed, trees were felled and 35m of bridge on the South Coast Highway, the main road linking Esperance to Perth, was washed away. The Western Australian Government declared the area a natural disaster zone. Over 37,000 sheep were killed in the storm. Esperance declared a natural disaster zone [2]
Secondly, commencing just before the storm, thousands of birds (including wattle birds, yellow-throated miners, New Holland honeyeaters and singing honeyeaters, and some crows, hawks and pigeons) fell dead from the skies. Thousands of birds fall from sky over town Subsequent tests on bird samples collected from the Esperance townsite revealed the deaths had been caused by lead poisoning from dust escaping during loading of Magellan Metals product at the Esperance Port Authority. Isotope tests show lead from Magellan
Esperance Port
The only port in the south east of Western Australia, the Esperance Port Authority completed an A$54 million dollar upgrade in 2002. The upgrade made the port one of the deepest in Southern Australia, capable of handling Cape class vessels (up to 180,000 tonnes) and fully loaded Panamax class vessels (up to 75,000 tonnes).
Exports for the year ending June 2005 were 7,394,155 tonnes, including 1.7 million tonnes of grain, and 5.3 million tonnes of iron ore which is railed from Koolyanobbing.
Education
Esperance has a wide range of primary and secondary school choices such as:
★ Our Lady Star Of The Sea Catholic Primary School (students - 255) - Located up in West Beach
★ Esperance Primary School (students - 600) - Located in the town centre
★ Castletown Primary School (students - 800) - Located in Castletown, the suburb
★ Nulsen Primary School (students - 400) - Located in Nulsen, the suburb, across the road from the Esperance Senior High School
★ Esperance Christian Primary School (students - 50) - Located behind the Esperance Senior High School in Sinclair, the suburb
★ Esperance Senior High School (students - 1200) - Located in Sinclair, the suburb, across the road from Nulsen Primary School
The Anglican Schools Commission is in the middle of building an Esperance Anglican High School, so that parents can have another choice for secondary schooling for their children. The school is planned to open in February 2008.
Curtin University of Technology also has a micro-campus located in Esperance, providing tertiary education facilities.
Twin town
★ Saint-Martin-de-Ré
References
1. Space.com - Australians Take Mir Deorbit Risks in Stride
2. Esperance area storm kills 37,000 sheep
External links
★ Shire of Esperance
★ Esperance Visitor Centre
★ esperance.yourguide
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves
Featured Companies
| Dancing Moon Travel | |
| Selloffvacations.com Oakville |
Newest Companies
Esperance, Western Australia Travel Deals

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español