My Bunya Mountains Meditations

MeditationI recently had the opportunity to ‘get away’. Some people think I’m crazy when I tell them, but yes, I went camping by myself.

No I didn’t get bored, I wasn’t scared and I wasn’t worried about the many things that could have gone wrong. It was 4 days and three nights of bliss.

I love my computer and the many wonderful things it can do, but no achievement by man has come close to the efforts of Mother Nature. She combines a million factors in balance and no where is the cycle of birth, life, death and rebirth more apparent.

For some of you the perfect holiday may be sitting beside a pool on a deck chair ordering a few fancy drinks. And don’t get me wrong – that would be lovely too, but let me tell you quickly about the Bunya Mountains.

The Bunya Mountains

The Bunya Pine tree is huge. The pine cones are as big as a football and way 10kg / 22lbs. It’s wise to take notice of the signs that say, ‘Do Not Loiter between December and March’ because they will do serious damage.

And as I walked through the ever-changing foliage that a sub-tropical rainforest provides, I sat for lunch overlooking the pastures that ran to the horizon and read the back of the back of the National Park map. The Bunya Pine was a favorite food of the Dinosaurs!

Peace MeditationAs I sat in meditation that fact sank in. These trees had covered these lands for over two million years. Now when man first walked the earth is debatable – but to put it in perspective, we only started counting just over 2000 years ago. Just think what we have done to the earth in just 0.001% of the time that these trees have been here. But then I read further. The dinosaurs loved to munch on the Pine Cones, but the trees were here before them. Try… 20 million years before!

When the tectonic plate under Australia joined South East Asia, China and Russia, the Bunya Pine was one of the most prolific forms of foliage covering the Earth. For 20 million years they stood tall and proud – helping to create the balanced environment we enjoy today. Then the dinosaurs came and went, and then man came…

The Bunya Mountains National Park in South East Queensland, Australia, is the last refuge of this amazing tree. As the early settlers made inroads into the new frontier… (Australia was discovered by the English in 1788 – though Native Aboriginals had lived here for over 40,000 years in relative harmony with nature) …The Bunya Pine was an excellent source of quality timber. Entire forests were flattened in the name of progress, and sheep and cattle were left to graze where mighty rainforests once stood. With reckless abandon and no thought of preservation, the landscape and wildlife habitat was decimated. The only concerns of the times were the basics of having shelter and food.

On my third day I did a 22 km walk. The trail transversed and scouted a plateau. The vegetation was continually changing to suit the conditions of the available light and moisture. I would duck my head under a branch and look up to a new forest. It was continually amazing … Until I rounded one bend to the unfiltered bright light above. The trail popped out of the damp, lush forest, into a baron sun-burnt paddock. My heart sank. A little tear glistened in the corner of my eye.

What had we done! How could a paddock with a hand full of cows be more important than a thriving rainforest!? I looked to the horizon and realized that at one stage not long ago, the rainforest would have stretched farther than I could see. The Bunya Pines, which had been prolific for 22 million years, were now just a few scarce specimens clinging to the top of a rocky outcrop.

Meditation Paradise

nearly at Meditation Paradise

My meditations were indeed insightful on my vacation. Some gave thoughts of the perspective of existence and the fragility of our planet. I thought a lot about time… comparing 20 million years to my lifetime (not even a breath). But with 4 days without disturbance or chore, gave me the opportunity to look deep within. Sometimes I meditated to connect with the energy of nature, and then to ponder the marvel of live, human development, and of course, to clear my mind. It was an amazing experience I had to share with you.

On the way back home I stopped at a community run museum. It housed antiques and equipment from yesteryear. I met a 90 year old lady who was just a toddler in the photos on the wall. Her father was a pioneer. I could tell how proud she was of his efforts. It gave me the opposite perspective of what had happened to the forest. The early settlers were ingenuitive and determined, resourceful and skilled. They created lives for themselves and futures for the generations to follow.

Environmental conservation did not get a mention when discussing the quest for survival in a wilderness. I love nature, but also love human passion. I actually drove past the museum, and was prompted to go back. I didn’t know why at the time, but that stop over gave me a different perspective on my recent meditations and revelations, and was a balance that was needed for me to find peace within. Let’s live for today and tomorrow, having learnt from the past.

The Bunya Mountains will be in my heart forever. It was a magical spot that gave me an amazing experience. If you would like to contribute to the community, leave a short note below telling us about a place in the world that has changed your life.

In love and Light, We Explore!
Nigel Coates


External Resources…
Queensland National Parks – The Bunya Mountains


More Articles by Nigel Coates





16 Responses to “My Bunya Mountains Meditations”

  • Jasmine Dale said:

    That sounds so beautiful! There is bushland near me I escape to when I need some space. Life can be so noisy – constantly, i like getting back to nature. I also find a greater earthly connection… energetically.

  • Reuben said:

    Bunya Mountains sounds really amazing! I’d love to spend some time there, recharging and reconnecting with nature.

    There is beautiful area of land here in NY, USA known as the Adirondacks. I had always enjoyed the time I had spent there, and felt recharged. Also, I grew up on a farm, and there was a small waterfall on the property. It was always so peaceful being near that waterfall. I love the sound of running water and singing birds!

  • Zanneta said:

    An awesome experience Nigel, & very grounding.
    I too love nature. Often I start off at a beach where I sit & let all tension & troubles be released out over the yonder horizon, the lapping waves re-energizing & filling me with a peace beyond measure. From there I venture along the beach, around a bend, to a lagoon where I wander in through natural fern & bush to a glade filled with light. It is my refuge, & here I spend many an hour getting back to natures wonderful healing & grounding.
    I’m so enjoying your meditations & your journies. Thank you for sharing so openly & honestly.
    Have an awesome day.

  • Chris said:

    Thanks for sharing your “get-away” Nigel.
    I recently discovered my own “get-away” place and i’m lucky enough that it is less than 10-minutes away from my work so I get to escape to it every day for my 1-hour lunch break.

    My “get-away” place is a 500 acre natural area called the Dishman Hills Natural Area in the Spokane Valley, WA USA. I hike the many trails that criss-cross through the woods and hills. It’s a great place to disconnect from the modern world.

    I find so much peace comes over me when I’m hiking on those trails that I find myself thinking about God and my place in this world. I never really thought about God or nature much in my life until I found this place. I am becomming more and more spiritual by the day as I have found this beautiful place to escape to on a daily basis.

    I have lived near this area for the last 32 years and have only just discovered it 3-months ago. It has truly made me a more spiritual person, and a more patient, peaceful, simple-minded and joyful person. I look forward to every-day things. And I truly believe all this daily hiking is going to help me reduce the mild depression I usually feel during the winter months.

  • Nigel Coates said:

    Beautiful Chris… and all for your feedback. I think definitely some areas are charged with good energy. Some of my studies have covered energy grids that criss-cross the Earth (lay-lines). Old churches were usually built on the intersection of 2 positives. But apart from that, as mentioned above, waterfalls are amazing… even if they are small and tucked-away. Water is the life-blood of the Earth.
    I think it is important everyone has a favorite ‘natural’ spot. Many meditations ask you to imagine a natural environment… smell the air, listen to the wind in the leaves, feel the soft sunlight flicker on your face, feel the souls of your feet on the Earth… I always base my vision on somewhere real… then let my imagine take it further.

  • Gilbert said:

    Very nice experience Nigel, thank you for sharing! I also think that we humans have devoured the nature around s egoistically thinking only about our families. Unfortunately we never think that the nature is our family too and that the trees are our brothers and sisters, and that the rivers are our source of life etc…We just think about our close family members or friends and os we strive to kill and create what we think is best only for us and us alone…I wish that people would start seeing the beauty within and thus create it outside too! We are one and part of the whole cosmos and mother nature is really us in another form ;)

    Thank you for this amazing website and thanks for sharing your beautiful experience!

    BOOM Gilbert keep up the great work!

    • Nigel Coates said:

      Excellent points Gilbert. Nothing exists in isolation. Near me of late have been record breaking floods, inland tsunamis, cyclones, earth quakes and bush fires. The losses have been tragic, but it proves that although we may dominant the food-chain, we are temporary and nature is forever. Namaste, Nigel.

  • Kalpana said:

    Hello Nigel,
    Reading your blog reminds me of my son (he passed away a year back at the age of 21). I’d like to quote him –
    “You may worship your ‘Great Gods, Deities & Saintly Priests’. I choose another.
    I choose Nature – that which can be seen, touched, smelt & heard.
    A power that does not belong, a strength of & in existence alone.
    A simple thing.
    Not indestructible, not some ‘awesome’ invulnerable fantasy based on belief.
    Would you ‘believe’ in someone or something you have never met, seen, touched or sensed in any way?
    Remember fresh earth, green grass, crisp, clear air and remember this is not a question of belief. It is here whether you like it or not and
    living without it wouldn’t really be living!”

    • Nigel Coates said:

      Such a powerful comment Kalpana, thank you. For me, we are talking of the same things. Nature is the canvas on which God can create a masterpiece. To appreciate nature – is to worship. Much love and blessings to you, x.

  • Suzanne said:

    Kalpana’s comments were truly beautiful xx

    I have not travelled much but in the UK I love the wild cornish coastline, to just sit on the rocks and gaze out to sea, listen to the waves and feel the wind in your hair. That is the sort of place that just makes me go “aaaaaaah” and let out a big sigh of relief. The mountains, forests and lakes of the Lake District are also special to me, again walking up a small mountain, the wind in your hair tugging at you, the smell of the grasses, the silence – no cars, just birds, sheep and trickling streams. I prefer to be away from cities and towns which, whilst necessary in many ways, take away a part of my inner peace which I only ever feel when in the wild. However, even in the town, I have a beautiful garden and I love to stand there when it rains and smell the earth or smell the frost in the air or the first scent of spring. I am more at home barefoot in the earth or a wild mountain stream than I am in the town.

    Nature is Awesome.

    • Nigel Coates said:

      You have a way with words too Suzanne :) Your descriptions made me realize – to be surrounded by nature enlivens all the senses; Sight, Sound, Smell and Touch. I love visiting big cities – but I naturally close my senses down. Not everything is pleasant to see, they can be noisy, can smell of vehichle exhaust and their ‘dirty’ is not the same as getting dirty in nature. Blessings x

  • Alana Lightfoot said:

    The bushes of Vancouver Island. Sombrio Beach has by far been the most beautiful place I have ever visited, such a magical place. Towering trees that are hundreds of years old, coastline waves and even a water fall that breaks off right onto the beach! I highly recommend. I’ve found such a wonderful part of me here, the imagination of the child I used to be coming in tact as I walk through the trails and along the beach. Beautiful, true beauty is all that comes to mind to describe this wonderful place.

    • Nigel Coates said:

      Sounds Amazing Alana! The world has so many pockets of beauty – I’m glad you have found a paradise :) Nigel.

  • Grant Tighe said:

    Thankyou for reminding me of the Bunya Mountains Nigel. I had a profound moment up ther many years ago where I was prompted to make a personel choice . I am at a point of connecting with that choice in a more informed way. I was sitting in the middle of the road that you are walking on in your picture at 5 am surrounded by light the last time I saw this place. Thank you for your inspiration and know that the bunya’s have been a magical place for me also.

  • Darlene said:

    Hello Nigel. I really enjoyed your message. It reminded me of being connected and staying connected with our mother earth. A place that I recall when I was younger that was so beautiful was Heart Lake in the Olympic National Forest. I’m not sure if I’m spelling it right but my experience there was such a beautiful one where it felt like home. The trip down from Heart Lake to the Enchanted Valley was really nice too. Wishing you a wonderful week! Thank You for a really cool and beautiful website!

  • chris said:

    Hi all my heart skips a beat when i hear great stories of love for nature. I too love the freedom of the outdoors, living close to a national park i spend many hours marvelling at the beauty of our native animals, when i meditate they will stand and stare,realise im no threat and just do their thing, or move closer. A wonderful natural “free” experience, to admire the beauty of what nature has to offer, money just cant buy. thanks nigel and to everyone for sharing this.

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