Rachel C.
Yelp
After walking for hours through Centennial Park we wound our way to the information centre. Finding a map, we traced our way around what we thought had been a complete circle of the park. It had not been. Rather, we realised that despite trekking for hours through the parklands, stumbling upon what seemed like at least eight different parks in the one, we had really only discovered less than a quarter of what Centennial Park has to offer.
Centennial Park is massive. And beautiful. In each new section we were greeted by shimmering ponds with fluffy ducks, rows of old paperbark trees whose canopies housed hundreds of sleeping bats, tiny bridges arching over a flock of black swans and wide open lawns full of big fat geese - geese that did not run at, attack or intentionally intimidate us in any way at all!
Walking through an arched hedge, we found the perfect Alice in Wonderland park, almost expecting to get our heads knocked off with flying hedgehogs/croquet balls. With wild lilies, symmetrical rows of stout trees and an open green all surrounded by thick hedge, this area is fit for a queen (of hearts) and has inspired our next (mad hatters) tea party.
Crossing into another world (seriously, this is what it feels like as you leave one area of the park and enter the next), we stumbled upon our doggy-heaven - or doggy-hell, as one struggling dog-walker corrected us. Dodging falling pine-cones along a dirt track surrounded by pine trees, we came across three different packs of dog-walkers along with a string of solo dog-owners (a good 20 dogs between them). With dogs leaping and running all over the place, this off-leash area is the perfect rugged escape for otherwise city-bound dogs.
Centennial Park gives you a comprehensive list of reasons to go back. Whether it's to join the joggers lapping the fields, picnic amidst gaggles of geese, taking your kids (or someone else's) to the Mum's clubs/playground near the information centre, playing petanque in the parks or riding a horse along the tracks, you'll find a reason to return. I'm going back just to play with the puppies again, and to see if it's actually possible to see all that Centennial Park has to offer.