About Erskine Falls
To Julie and I, Erskine Falls was probably the most impressive waterfall amongst the cluster of waterfalls around the town of Lorne in the Angahook-Lorne State Park (part of the larger Great Otway National Park). It possessed a 30m drop (some signage here might have suggested it was 38m tall) though it looked slender probably because it was a little bit on the light side in terms of its flow. That said, the recent rains that seemed to have precipitated in most in the Otway Ranges appeared to have momentarily fought off the drought that really impacted our waterfalling experiences during our November 2006 trip. We also saw the falls in a similar condition on a more recent November 2017 visit, where Western Victoria was hit by a few storms prior to us showing up. Had the rains and the wild weather not occurred, then who knows whether the falls would have looked anything close to the condition you see in the photo above?
This was one of the easier waterfalls to visit as the route to its car park was all paved, the walk encompassing both the upper and lower viewing areas was short and easy to follow, and everything was well-signed. Overall, Julie and I spent about 35 minutes to check out both viewpoints and all the walking in between. We also had the option to visit Straw Falls, which was further downstream. Given that it involved a bit of a detour on a much rougher track and it wasn’t a necessary part of a visit to Erskine Falls, I made a separate writeup describing that experience, which you can read here.
The upper viewpoint, which was a mere 80m from the car park, provided us with a top-down view of the Erskine Falls. Unfortunately, there was a lot of foliage that was in the way that kept this viewpoint from being anything special. In fact, it left us wanting more so we continued on the walkway for the remaining 140m, which went down several steps eventually getting down to the level of the Erskine River. That was where the main track terminated at the second lookout area yielding a more frontal view of the falls (as pictured at the top of this page). Although the official track ended somewhat set back from the waterfall, we witnessed numerous people continue the scramble to get all the way up to the plunge pool and base of the falls. We didn’t pursue this in either of our visits, but we’ll leave it up to you to decide if you want to do this or not.
Finally, being a Triple J Radio listener since our first trip to Australia back in June 2006, it’s worth noting that Erskine Falls has the distinction of being the waterfall referred to in the annual Falls Festival (a very popular music and arts event taking place around the New Years holiday). The original location of the festival was located in Lorne though the more recent venues in the area were off the Erskine Falls Road (not far from the waterfall above the Lorne Township). The event had grown from the single-day “Rock Above The Falls Festival” in 1993 into the multi-day, simultaneous-multi-location event that spans Australia in places like Byron Bay, Marion Bay, Freemantle, and others.
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