The Nature Conservation Trust now has two significant properties on the market – Hartwood Station near Deniliquin in the Riverina region and Carwell Station north of Warren in Central West NSW. Both are mixed farming properties with important conservation values, as well as impressive European and Indigenous cultural heritage.
Established in the 1840s, Hartwood Station is an iconic 6,768 ha property. The property contains a number of endangered ecological communities, including White Cypress Pine Woodland, Buloke Woodland and Weeping Myall Open Woodland. It also provides key habitat for threatened native species, such as the plains-wanderer and grey-crowned babbler.
Hartwood Station abounds with historically significant buildings including a 13-bedroom homestead, an Edwardian era manager’s residence, stables and woolsheds. The property has substantial grazing and irrigation country, and single and double frontages onto the Yanco and Billabong Creeks.
Carwell Station is an 8,071 hectare grazing property which has retained significant conservation assets. Two ecologically endangered communities, the Weeping Myall Open Woodland and Coolibah-Black Box Woodland, are found on the property. Both communities are a part of the Darling Riverine Plains Bioregion, which is the most under-represented reserve system in the State.
Carwell Station also contains habitat for a potential 41 threatened species, including the blue-billed duck and grey-crowned babbler, and notably over 70% of the property remains native grasslands.
Carwell Station has an impressive homestead and original timber cottage, as well as extensive agricultural infrastructure including a ten-stand working shearing shed, large steel machinery sheds and grain silos.
To find out more about these amazing properties, go to Properties for Sale , or contact Adam Dawson, NCT Property Sales Manager, on 0448 801 391 or by email.