Celebrating Local Community

The Strathbogie Tableland is located on an elevated plateau in the Strathbogie Ranges. Two hundred kilometres northeast of Melbourne, it is surrounded by forests, farmland and granite hills. The environment is beautiful with its native bush, birds and animals. Read our local community newsletter, Tableland Talk, to learn about the issues at the heart of our community. While many people have spent their entire lives on the Tableland, others are increasingly choosing to leave city life and move up to live here permanently. Access by car is easy (map). The Hume Freeway runs past Euroa, the nearest town (which can also be reached by bus and train), and the Maroondah Highway offers an alternative route from Melbourne.  Snowfields and rivers are close. Strathbogie remains somewhat hidden away but is a special part of the world. Take a tour of our site and find out why.

About the website

This website has been created by the STAG Communications sub-committee.  The original website was established with funding from the Strathbogie Shire.  It’s a great way for residents and landholders to stay in touch and communicate with each other.  We may be a small and scattered community but, with increasing use of computers and email, this site offers the opportunity to keep informed about events, to comment about Tableland issues, to contribute ideas, to catch up with each other, to buy and sell, and to show off our creativity. Anyone can freely browse all the pages shown on the menu at the top.

About the Area

Strathbogie Tableland is part of the Shire of Strathbogie which also includes the communities of Avenel, Euroa, Longwood, Nagambie, Ruffy and Violet Town. Euroa Gazette is our local newspaper. Tableland Talk is the local newsletter. We welcome and encourage your feedback via email bogieweb@strathbogie.org

We acknowledge that we are on Taungurung Country.
We hereby express our respect for the Taungurung people, who are the Traditional Owners of the land on which we are based.
We pay our respects to their leaders and Elders past, present and emerging, for they hold forever the memories, traditions, culture and hopes of all Taungurung people.
We express our gratitude for the sharing of this land, our sorrow for the personal, spiritual and cultural costs of that sharing and our hope that we can walk forward together in harmony and the spirit of reconciliation.