Mount Imlay National Park

Mount Imlay National Park
Mount Imlay, 886 metres above sea level
Mount Imlay National Park
LocationNew South Wales
Nearest cityEden
Coordinates37°10′48″S 149°44′06″E / 37.17994°S 149.73506°E / -37.17994; 149.73506
Area48 km2 (19 sq mi)
Established21 July 1972
Governing bodyNSW National Parks and Wildlife Service
WebsiteOfficial website

Mount Imlay is a national park in New South Wales (Australia), 387 km south of Sydney, named after the Imlay brothers, who were early pioneers to the district. It is accessed from the Princes Highway, south of Eden, New South Wales. The mountain is called "Balawan" by Bidwell and Yuin peoples, and it is very important for their culture and spiritual teachings.

The vegetation is mostly eucalyptus forest. The Imlay Mallee and Imlay Boronia are rare plants growing near the mountain's summit. However, there is a 2-hectare (4.9-acre) rainforest remnant surviving in a fire-free gully. It consists mostly of Black Olive Berry trees. The park contains large populations of wombats and superb lyrebirds.