Goobang National Park is a NSW national park in the Central West of New South Wales about 30 minutes south from Dubbo.
The area where the park is now was named Herveys Range by John Oxley in 1817, the area was reserved in 1897 as state forest because of its importance as a timber resource. The park was designated a national park in 1995 as it protects the largest remnant forest and woodland in the central west region of the state, where interior and coastal New South Wales flora and fauna species overlap.
The park is mostly flat on the outside, but the Herveys Range runs through the center of the park.
There are 459 species of flora recorded in the park, several that are threatened. Some of the most prominent are eucalyptus trees, as this park protects one of the last remnants of them in the central part of the state.
There are also 31 species of reptiles, 14 species of frogs and 31 species of mammals recorded in the park including echidnas, wallaby, kangaroos, possums and bats. Unfortunately, pests such as rabbits, cats, foxes, goats, sheep and dogs are also found in the park.
Goobang National Park hasa temperate to semi-arid climate with hot summers and cool winters with temperatures ranging from 4 to 15 °C during winter and 17 to 32 °C (63 to 90 °F) during summer.
Rainfall is generally rare, and the heaviest rainfall happens during summer and can range from 645 mm (25.4 in) on the east side of the range to 564 mm (22.2 in) west of the ranges.
From both Dubbo or Parkes, head south (from Dubbo) or north (from Parkes) for 48 km (from Dubbo) or 70 km on the A39 Newell Highway, a good national highway where you could easily go 110 km/h. Then head east/southeast on Gundong Road for 16 km. After 16 km, turn right onto the unpaved Nickos Trail, and you'd have entered the park.
Goobang National Park is not a fee collecting park, meaning you can enter for free!
Pretty much every single road in the park is not paved, but driving yet remains the easiest way to get around the park. There is one main trail running north-south, and is the primary trail linking most of the park's points of interest, but you may have to deviate a few kilometers to reach the lookout and the campground in the northeast of the park.
There is only one thing to do in this park, and that is to walk the Burrabadine walking track – it's only a 4 km bushwalk (round-trip), but the walk is rated as Grade 4 and takes at least 1.5 hours to do as you're walking up a peak. The walk starts just a few hundred meters south of Greenbah campground, and from there, you'll be heading west and up slowly towards the peak.
Once you're up the peak, there are some great views of what rural NSW is like, that is not in the midst of the desert. You'll also see a good range of vegetation, as the park itself was protected only because of its good mix of coastal and inland vegetation.
There are no shops, cafes, kiosks, bars, restaurants, pubs or anything in Goobang National Park.
There is no lodging in Goobang National Park.
Like with all other NSW national parks, camping is only really possible in designated campgrounds.
There isn't anything to be concerned about in Goobang National Park, except that snakes are common like in pretty much every other national park in the state.
You'll need to first head back to the Newell Highway (A39), and you can either go up north to Dubbo, or south towards Parkes.
2nd-order administrative division
Primary administrative division