'The Vale of Belvoir is a limestone karst and basalt-filled grassland valley, forming the northern and westernmost edges of Tasmania's rugged mountainous country known as the Central Plateau. Black Bluff's long ridge-flank, stretching all the way to Mount Beecroft, forms the north-western boundary. The near-impassable country around Reynolds Falls marks its southern extremity. It sits rather quietly, overshadowed by the bustling brouhaha of nearby Cradle Mountain with Bond Range's unpretentious violet lines protecting it from the world's view.' (Introduction)