Ph: (02) 6336 0666
Int: 61 2 6336 0666
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The town of Oberon is
180 kilometres and under three hours drive from Sydney
and situated
on the western fail of the Great Dividing Range. At 1,113 metres
above sea level, we enjoy cool summers, balmy autumns,
cold
crisp winters and lush springs
For visitors the occasional snowfall is a bonus.
Due to its location Oberon has a true mountain climate, so changeable
that even in summer, visitors should remember to bring a sweater.
Oberon was proclaimed a village in 1863. The
name Oberon comes from Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's
Dream'.
Oberon has grown to a shire population of 4,600 in 1998 - of
whom 2,600 live in the town.
Oberon has good shopping facilities with most
goods and services available in the town. It has a number of
restaurants, cafes and takeaways while visitors staying in self
catering accommodation will be well serviced by supermarkets,
butchers and bakeries.
Shops selling clothing, accessories, fishing
gear, gifts and collectibles may also interest the visitor.
Most professional and trades services are available in Oberon.
The Oberon Council has undertaken a town beautification
program beginning with landscaping and plantings in the main
street and Apex Park. Roadside tree planting is a feature of
Oberon. The Common, Edith Road, (opposite the Oberon Visitor
Centre) has picnic facilities, band rotunda
and a small lake.
Visitor accommodation ranges through hotels,
motels, bed and breakfasts, farmstay and caravan park. There
are also several camping grounds in the shire.
Carter Holt Harvey and Highland Pine are the
two major industries, sourcing their raw material from large
NSW State Forests radiata pine plantations and those of private
forest growers.
Prime lambs and beef cattle are the main rural
industries. Brussel sprouts, broccoli, potatoes and peas are
the main horticultural industries, although there is some diversification
in this area. Tree nurseries, nut tree plantations, wineries,
bulb farms, new ventures and experimental enterprises are developing.
Jenolan Caves and Kanangra Boyd National Park
and Abercrombie River National Park are in the shire and contain
much to interest the visitor besides
spectacular scenery.
The town is ringed by interesting villages
and, further afield, larger centres, which allow visitors to
use Oberon as a base from which to enjoy a variety of day excursions.
Lake Oberon on the outskirts of the town is
a renowned trout-fishing water. Unauthorised boating or swimming
are not permitted as this water is used for domestic supply.
Wonderful streams offer excellent trout fishing in season.
There are 250 kilometres of pipeline which
service as far as Glen Davis to the north and Leura to the south.
As well as the people of Oberon, Lithgow and the Upper Blue
Mountains, the pipeline supplies Mount Piper and Wallerawang
power stations and small consumers along its length.
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