Take the Keyline Trail and you will be walking along the original keyline that was ploughed by P.A. Yeomans in the 1950's. Along your journey look out for multiple dams and original tree lines. Visit the Pansy Line monument, with sandstone pillars laid like railway sleepers showing where the line once cut through the site. If you have a keen eye you can also see the original culverts crossing the creek.
Take one of three loop options here for a walk that will take 25mins, 45mins or 65mins. Pass by environmentally sensitive patches of Cumberland Forest on your way along the creek. Look for local birdlife, listen out for frogs and feel the native grasses. Visit the places along the creek that were used by Indigenous people for tens of thousands of years to hunt, meet and make tools.
A collection of new sign forms have been created to improve wayfinding across the estate and to serve as expressive statement signage for key areas including the dams. The signage construction draws of the agricultural and engineering heritage of the site from the Yobarnie period. They stand as sculptural statements in the Redbank landscape made of lasercut Corten steel with bright red bolts and triangular directional flag devices.