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This is a secluded property, preserved as a natural habitat by the original/current owners of 40 years. This is a bird-watcher's paradise, as well as a haven for Australian fauna icons ... kookaburra, kangaroos, koalas, goannas and rainbow lorikeets at home in the natural bushland that is Eumarella. The 300 metres of actual lake frontage (a rarity in Noosa) provides private beach and picnic areas, shaded by ancient Melaleuca (paper bark) trees, gradually ascending a 4 metre rise through original timber. This gradual elevation provides natural drainage and wonderful views of Lake Weyba. Eumarella was the first land subdivided around Lake Weyba.
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This large, shallow salt-water lake was declared an important fish-breeding habitat at the time of subdivision. The property overlooks Rocky Point, a natural rockery ... home to pelicans, prawns, and crabs... to say nothing of whiting, flathead, bream and mullet ('Weyba trout'). Because the lake is shallow it has never been 'exploited'. Today only passive recreation is allowed, eg. sailboarding, kite-surfing, canoeing, sailing, and small motor boating ('tinnies'). Remember: this is the only property on Lake Weyba permitted to have both jetty (wharf) and boat ramp.
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As you look across the lake, the preponderant impression is more privacy, as the view takes in kilometres of 'green corridors' preserved by the surrounding shires as National Parks. Your protected view directly across the lake is of sand dunes and trees. Beyond that corridor lie the white sands of the Pacific Ocean. The property boasts a larger-than 180 degree view around the lake: to the north, Noosa Hill and Weyba Island; directly across the lake to the east, the National Park; to the southeast, Emu Mountain; and Coolum Mountain to the south.
