Moondog55 wrote:Roads were brilliant and it did seem to be trail bike heaven.
I did wonder if the hole was a natural occurrence or simply the result of lots of hot fires and continual spalling as there is a big rock on the High Plains with similar features
Yes, we haven't had all that much rain up here to make things a right royal bog, though wet/sun/cool/dry/wet...rinse and repeat... here now. I can tell you the difference between now and in Spring, when the highest actual ridge of Fryer's Ridge is absolutely exploding in colour with wildflowers. It really is a sight to behold. Many years now (25+) since I have been up there, as there are other area of prolific wildflower area too, sadly some of which were decimated for new housing estates (along Fryers Road, Campbells Creek). For the better sights, you have to get well and truly off road into the sticks to appreciate the untouched areas now (Fryers Ridge is also approachable via Fryerstown, or a walking/MTB track that leads off the road at Irishtown (at the signpost marking the spot), past 1850s Cornish wattle-and-daub ruins then up and up and up! Only point of interest there is the old ruins and a few very lonely, isolated graves.
Lots of theories about Oven Rock, the wildest being that it is a convenient, hidden pick-up point for nefarious goods of meth dealers (just like the sliding bluestone block in one of the supports of the Taradale Railway Viaduct!) So, two hitherto interesting places I don't really fancy visiting too often.
Reckon on somebody, at sometime in history (no, not indigenous people), having found the rock with a small hole and hacked it to make a primitive (but effective) oven.

Not sure but I think a similar objet d'art exists at the Butts Reserve below Tarrengower in Maldon.