Aireys Inlet
Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Template:Infobox Australian place Aireys Inlet is a town located on the Great Ocean Road, southwest of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Aireys Inlet is located between Anglesea and Lorne, and joined with Fairhaven, Moggs Creek, and Eastern View to the west.
Many surfers holiday in Aireys Inlet to take advantage of the popular Fairhaven beach. As the inclination of the beach can change dramatically between years, the surf is regarded as unpredictable. Swimmers should take note there is a strong rip current.
Painkalac Creek, which separates Aireys Inlet from Fairhaven, forms a salt lake or inlet behind the sand dunes before it cuts through to the ocean. Due to low water levels in the inlet it is not often that the inlet breaks through.
Aireys Inlet is also famous for Split Point Lighthouse which was featured in the popular children's TV show Round The Twist.
There is also a horseshoe-shaped reef at Step Beach which forms an excellent swimming hole at low tide. The town's main attraction, the Split Point Lighthouse, overlooks the inlet. The lighthouse has made Aireys Inlet an icon along the Great Ocean Road.
HistoryEdit
In the early 19th century, before British settlement, the escaped convict William Buckley lived here in a primitive hut eating fish, shellfish, wild raspberries and sugar ants. Aireys Inlet was known to the Aboriginals of the time as Managwhawz. The town takes its current name from John Moore Cole Airey, who settled in the area in 1842.<ref>Kennedy, B: Australian Place Names, page 2. ABC Books, 2006</ref>
The Post Office opened on 1 April 1893.<ref name = "a">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
PopulationEdit
At the Template:CensusAU, Aireys Inlet had a population of 802. 83.4% of people were born in Australia and 88.3% of people only spoke English at home. The most common responses for religion were No Religion 53.9% and Catholic 16.1%.<ref name="ABS">Template:Census 2016 AUS</ref>
GeographyEdit
Fairhaven, Moggs Creek, and Eastern View are in the same postal area as Aireys Inlet.
ClimateEdit
Aireys Inlet possesses an oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb), with tepid, relatively dry summers and mild, wetter winters. Average maxima vary from Template:Convert in January and February to Template:Convert in July while average minima fluctuate between Template:Convert in February and Template:Convert in July. Mean precipitation is moderately low (averaging Template:Convert per annum), but rainfall is frequent, as Aireys Inlet receives 152.1 precipitation days annually (with a maximum frequency of rain in winter). Extreme temperatures have ranged from Template:Convert on 7 February 2009 to Template:Convert on 28 July 1990.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Beaches and coastlineEdit
While the coastline at adjacent Fairhaven is a long uninterrupted sand beach, the coast at Aireys Inlet is a series of rock shelves, interrupted by sandy swimming beaches, most of which are relatively secluded. Each beach has its own character, a result of differing lengths, orientation and nearby rock formations. Beaches include Sandy Gully, Steppy Beach and Sunnymeade.
SchoolEdit
Aireys Inlet has one school, Aireys Inlet Primary School (P-6), which until the end of 2016 was a campus of the then Lorne-Aireys Inlet P-12 College.
SportEdit
- Australian football: The Aireys Inlet Eels Football Club competes in the AFL Barwon junior competition.
- Tennis: The Aireys Inlet and District Tennis Club competes in the Geelong Tennis Association.
Literature and mediaEdit
During the early 1950s the Australian crime author Arthur Upfield lived at Aireys Inlet. His novel The New Shoe (1951) is based on the township and the lighthouse. Some of the novel's characters drew on local identities.
Many scenes from the children's television series Round the Twist were filmed at or around the area of the Split Point Lighthouse.
In 2005 the Bollywood movie Salaam Namaste was produced in Melbourne with many scenes being shot around Aireys Inlet, Fairhaven and Anglesea.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
At low tide it is possible to walk (or scramble) around all these rocks and beaches, making it possible to walk along the beach, all the way from Eastern View - the historical start of the Great Ocean Road, all the way to Anglesea.
Much like Anglesea, Aireys Inlet is served by Surf Coast Times, a local newspaper for the Surf Coast published weekly on Fridays. Television services are received via a translator in Anglesea, carrying the Melbourne channels, although TV coverage from the translator is very low. Radio services are received on AM and FM from Melbourne and Geelong.
1983 Ash Wednesday bushfiresEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Aireys Inlet was devastated by the infamous 1983 Ash Wednesday bushfires in which a large number of houses were burnt down. However, after a brief lull, interest in the area resumed and has been steadily climbing since. Properties, especially those with an ocean view, are becoming increasingly sought after, some going for greater than A$1 million.
Heritage listed sitesEdit
Aireys Inlet has a number of heritage listed sites, including:
- Great Ocean Road<ref>"Great Ocean Road (H2261)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 2014-03-23.</ref>
- Split Point Lightstation Complex<ref>"Split Point Lightstation Complex (H2270)". Victorian Heritage Register. Heritage Victoria. Retrieved 2014-03-23.</ref>
Notable peopleEdit
- John Airey, the town's founder, for whom it was named
- William Buckley, British convict who lived in the area before the town's origin
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
Template:Wikivoyage Template:Commons category-inline
- Template:Webarchive (Archived 2009-10-24)
- Australian Places - Aireys Inlet
- REIV Aireys Inlet Market Insights, Auction & Private Sale Results
Template:Towns in Surf Coast Shire Template:Great Ocean Road